Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, September 15, 1916, Page 10, Image 10

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    10
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J J
I PERFECTIOW
1 I ■ |^|t|f.9>9|]
v I
northwest room warm tonight, but^l^
forget ail about the weather with my
PERFECTION
| SMOKELESS OIL HEATER
' K AM. It will make things snug and cozy in a few
minutes. It can easily be carried from room to
room while lighted. You have just the right
heat, exactly where you want it. at any time f
of day or night. j|
Srf S ei r y"S?Sf"eS J here are no ashes - soot. smoke or smell. Just
kerosene, which never a fine, warmful, radiating heat that does away b
chars u with draughty corners and makes chilly bath- %
called rooms as comfy as can be.
ATLANTIC Perfection Oil Heaters burn kerosene, but for per-
Ir7\\7nl 1 rtnf , ct res^ ts always use Atlantic Rayolight Oil. A W.
large, gallon tank makes constant refilling unnecessary.
• Ask your dealer to show you Perfection
fh. o'rS°.?;"ui" 50 e ?i e w'm They reasonab ly I
Ask for it by name. —W.OU to 55.00. < 0?Z |§
TP 6 ®™™ 8 " THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY i
jft Pittsburgh and Philadelphia jfei
432 Market St.
What Would You Have to Pay For
Meats if BUEHLER BROS. Hadn't
Come to Town
Pure Pastuerized Creamery Butter 33c lb.
With All Meat Orders Saturday Only
Big Specials In Smoked Meats
Honey Cured Hickory Smoked Ham, . . 21c lb.
Sugar Cured Hickory Smoked Picnic
Ham 15c lb.
Honey Cured Hickory Smoked Bacon,
half or whole strip 22c lb.
Roberts Sweet Meats, 2 to 3 pounds,
each 25c lb.
Frankfurters (fresh from the smoke) . 15c lb.
Garlic Links (fresh from the smoke) . . 15c lb.
Thirty-five Varieties of Smoked Meats and
Cold Cuts.
Hind quarters of Genuine Spring Lamb.
Extra Special 20c
Fore quarter of Genuine Spring Lamb.
Extra Special 17 c
Rib or Loin Chops of Genuine Spring
Lamb. Extra Special 25c
Genuine Spring Stewing Lamb. Extra
Special 15c
Fancy Club Steak. Extra Special 19c
Best Cut Round Steak. Extra Special ... 18c
Fresh Ground Hamburger 14c
Center Cut Chuck Roast 15c
First or Second Cut Rib Roast 18c
Lean Plate Boil 10c
Pure Lard 17c
Buehler Bros. High Grade Butterine .... 20c
Lincoln Butterine 16c
Buehler Bros. Special Coffee 23c
Blue Bell Tea, pound box 25c
All Meats Government Inspected
MARKETS IN 13 STATES
Main Office, Chicago, 111.
Packing House, Peoria, 111.
*TKTDAY EvnsnrNG,
(BATES TO ASK COURT'S
MERCY IX AUTO CASE
In addition to Clarence Leroy Bates,
' Lebanon, who will plead guilty to
j charges of involuntary manslaughter
| and illegal operation of a motorcar,
j half a dozen other defendants will
| throw themselves on the Dauphin
| county court's mercy next Monday
1 morning.
Bates drove the car which ran down
j and crushed George Donahue on the
Hummelstown pike. Other defendants
] include William Bricker, defrauding
i boardinghouse keeper; Edward How
j ard. larceny, and Charles Stiney, fel
! onious assault, and W. E. KnJsely,
! Howard W. Shoemaker, Ed. Shrauden
; bach and Joseph Snyder, nonsupport.
PROTEST PAPER SHORTAGE
Atlantic City, N. J., Sept. 15. —A
protest was registered here yesterday
by the United Typothetae and Frank
lin Clubs, composed of master printers
against the paper manufacturers who
are shipping their products abroad
and creating a shortage in America
! which was affecting the printing and
S newspaper plants.
Quick Way to
Remove Pimples
Wonderful Rapidity of Stuart's Cal
cium Wafers In Coursing Through
the Blood and Removing
Impurities.
Send for a Free Trial
The way Stuart's Calcium Wafers get
busy in the blood Is astonishing. In
, about three minutes after entering the
I blood stream the principal active agent.
Calcium sulphide, appears in the pers
piration and other ellminative pro
cessesses. This means that it has con
verted impurities into a substance for
quick weeding out. Fresh, red, pure
blood begin>> to reform the skin, over
coming all pimples, boils, blotches, tet
! ter, eczema, blackheads, rough oily
! skin, liver spots and other skin erup
tions. If you are now using creams,
' lotions and other useless applications
In a vain hope to improve and beautify
your face, neck, shoulders and arms
with the lovely complexion you ought
to have, try Stuart's Calcium Wafers
and be sure of the results you are long
ing for. You can get them in any drug
store at 50 cents a box. Try them to
day or send coupon for a free trial
package.
Free Trial Coupon
l F. A. Stuart Co., 32ft Stuart Bids.,
I Marshall, Mich. Send me at ohcv.
: by return mail, a free trial package
of Stuart's Calcium Wafers.
Name
Street
City State
barrisburg MLEGRAPH
CONSIDER PLANS
FOR T. R/S TOUR
Will Either Go to Pacific
Coast or Stump Middle
West
New York, Sept. 15. ln making
plans for Theodore Roosevelt's west
ern campaign trip in support of
Charles E. Hughes alternative itinerar
ies are being considered. One of them
would carry the colonel to Sah Fran
cisco with speeches at Chicago, Den
ver and other cities on the way. The
other contemplates a tour to the Mid
dle States with a side trip into the
Northwest and a return by the way of
Missouri and Kentucky. Col. Roose
velt, it was leaxned to-day, told Chair
man Willcox of the Republican Na
tional committee, he was willing to go
to California, if necessary, and It is
said that this offer probably will be
accepted.
BARRIERS IN WAY
OF BORDER PATROL
[Continued From First Page]
session, the Mexican party planning
to leave for New York to-day to at
tend the celebration there to-morrow
of Mexico's national holiday commem
orating the declaration of her inde
pendence and the throwing off of
Spanish rule. They will return Mon
day when the conferences will be re
sumed.
No Satisfactory Solution
While the attitude of General Bliss
as expressed to the commissioners
has not been revealed, it is believed
he shares the views of many army of
ficers familiar with the border situ
ation that no satisfactory solution can
be found that is not based upon the
establishment and maintenance of a
stable government in Mexico. Even
the project of forming a border po
lice force to be Jointly supported by
the two governments is open to the
objection, it is pointed out, that no
matter what plan might be employed
to administer its affairs and direct
its movements, its joint character
would be hard to maintain. It has
been contended also that if the de
facto government was strong enough
to give practical cooperation in the
organization of the border police, the
need for such a force would have
passed, as Mexico could then take
care of the situation within her own
i borders.
There is no doubt that one of the
purposes of the Washington admin
istration is to arouse Mexico to the
moral obligation that it is felt rests
upon her to protect American inter
ests along tho international line from
depredations of Mexican bandits. For
this reason it seems unlikely that any
plan for policing the border will prove
acceptable that seems to relieve her of
that responsibility.
Mexico City. Sept. 15.—General Car
ranza s purposes in issuing last night
a call for the election of delegates to
an assembly to consider changes in the
constitution are set forth in the pre
amble of the decree now made public
here. The preamble refers to the plat-
; or P? , ot the Constitutionalists as set
forth in the plan of Guadeloupe, adopt
ed in 1913 before the downfall of Gen
eral Huerta and elaborated at Vera
Cruz in 1914. and says it shows clearly
that the program of the Constitution
alists provides that when their cause
was triumphant and municipal elec
tionshad taken place, the first chief
should call for the election of a con
gress, give an account of his adminis
tration and have his actions ratified or
modified by the congress. He was
then to call a presidential election and
turn over the executive power to the
legally elected president.
The first chief always intended to
carry out this program, and to that
end adopted various measures to pro
-1 vide government of and for the people,
to improve the economic situation of
the working classes and to insure a
correct application of republican prin
ciples as embodied in the consttiution.
It has been found, however, that some
of these reforms affected the functions
of the government as limited by the
constitution.
These reforms were necessary, Gen
eral Carranza points out. because there
existed the danger that if the functions
of government were limited strictly in
accordance with the constitution of
1857 the administration of public af
fairs would not meet the necessities
of the time and there would be a re
turn to tyranny through the absorp
tion of powers by the executive. An
other source of danger was that the
powers vested in the legislative branch
of the government would be a constant
.'.tumbling block in the way of bene
ficial administration.
Fought Hard
The enemies of the Constitutional
ists, General Carranza continues, have
omitted nothing to prevent complica
tion, going so far as to imperil the
dignity of the republic and engage its
sovereignty by provoking conflict with
a neighboring republic, seeking to
bring about intervention on the pre
text that there was no protection for
the lives and properties of foreigners.
They even pretended to seek interven
tion for humanitarian considerations,
appearing to lament the shedding of
blood in a necessary war. although
they'did not scruple to squander lives
and permit all manner of excesses
against natives and foreigners. These
enemies of the Constitutionalists op
pose not only the reforms already
effected, but those in prospect. There
fore, the preamble says, the only way
in which to attain the desired ends is
to provide for a Constitutionalist as
sembly, through which the whole
country will be able to express clearly
its sovereign will, putting the govern
ment on a firm basis beyond all ques
tion of legality.
As a precedent for the action of
General Carranza in calling a Consti
tutionalist convention the decree re
fers to the fact that in 1857 a similar
assembly was convoked, after Santa
Anna was deposed. The legality of
this assembly was undoubted, although
it did not follow the consttiution of
1824.
Sovereignty Vested In People
The enemies of the Constitutional
ists, General Carranza says further,
have Imputed to him motives which he
never entertained. Accordingly he de
termined to forestall attacks by a frank
and sincere declaration that the re
forms projected are not Intended to
lead to the establishment of a dictator
ship. On the other hand, the govern
ment to be established will be of such
form as to demonstrate categorically
that sovereignty resides within the
people, by whom It should be exer
cised for the public benefit. Both fed
eral and slate rights will be respected
and the spirit of the constitution will
be carried out. The only purpose Is to
purge the constitution of defects in the
way of obscurity and contradiction, or
of clauses Inserted for the purpose of
nullifying democratic rights.
Then follow the provisions deter
mined upon by General Carrania to
carry out his purpose. The election of
delegates to the constitutional assem
bly will be held October 15. Business
sessions will begin November 1 and
will be limited to two months. As soon
as a constitution is adopted a program
of action will be arranged and the as
sembly will, be djpeolved.
I I IVINGSTOIVCIH
I and Presses 1j 9S. Market Sq. k3 Clothes
..... , Hundreds who have f
This is the last week attended our "Clean-j
of oar remarkable I H B Up 8ule" have leftjll
"Clean-up Sole -LIW% f% I I IQAH | g LusHed 08 j
:r™Tr Midi uludlrUU "
gardless of cost. | SS2S!ST at° fJK ?h. I
i-ot of raw material. |
j ens ! ™ is f' Swwiw! I
II tTC 3 Special for Saturday I
H li B Serviceable for these cool Regular
1 H§l JM la I m evenings and still a good as- m „ _ \
\ MBMI M. M. sortment $ 3 - 50 B °y s Suits $1.98 j
Velvets, Felts X all to S 75 B °y s ' Suits $2.481
!!!' . . V 1 SIO.OO Suits or Coats, $5.00 Boys' Suits, $2.981||
Velours and Vel-
veteens in combination $12.48 Suits or Coats, M , c ' ' !
and solid colors. Prices $1.98 $6.7 d Boys Suits, $3.95( i
$13.75 Suits or Coats, Also complete line of!
49f%
i to $1.98 51 5,00 Suits or
$16.50 Suits or Coats, ■ ('!
I to™ at.517.98 SuiU or C.S; 98 ChUdFUI'S SCllOO!
! 520.00 Suits or Coats,' 98 DfSSSBS
Clean-Up of ffff Ages 2 6 Years
I Siik and Wool s P ecial Reductions of 98c DrSs::::::: 79$
QwmWc and Young BSzijffi
SWBHI6IS Men's Clothing -!j
Rose, Blue, Yellow, $12.75 Men's or Young CIBSR-UD nf
Orange. Green and „; Suits ... ,$7.9§ ""llU|i Ul
Combinations- or Young TrOUSSrS j!
1 57.00 Sweaters, $3.98 Joung M e „; 8 Pants . |l.4| j J
$8.50 Sweaters, $4.98 %1098 S4 ' Men's Pants "s2!isj|
!! I ' *2O 00 IVW? „v!„ $5-00 Men's Pants ~52.9S
ii $9.75 Sweaters, $5.98 20 ; 00 Men sor Young .. .
Mens Suits ..$11.50 Sizes to 44 Waist. j!
Now Showing Women's & Misses Fall Suits, Coats and Urges';
—mmmm—mm~_i_ _ j j
We arc showing "HF Our Fall Millinery j|
a Remarkable §g |Bf - t|
j Selection of Silk H AW li 1 \IM JL Vil shines anything i]
9S. Market Sq. jj
CART I.W.W. MEN I
9 MILES TO JAIL
All Kinds of Vehicles Used to
Haul 317 to Prison
After Raid
Scranton, Pa., Sept. 15. —Determined j
to break up the menace of the In-1
dustrial Workers of the World, which !
has been hanging over the borough of
Old Forge, in the southern end of the
county, for several weeks, and which
threatened to spread to other com
munities, Sheriff Phillips late yester
day engineered a wholesale raid and
aided by fifteen State police, arrested
3X7 members of the organization on a
charge of inciting to riot. Old Forge
is nine miles from this city.
The men were arrested in Schwartz's
Hall, after they had been forbidden
to hold a meeting and after the owner
of the hall had been warned not to
allow them to meet there. The raid,
which the State police say is the
greatest ever conducted in the State,
was not without its spectaculv fea
tures.
Ride Into Hall
Following orders to the I. W. W,
men. who have kept Old Forge in a
state of turmoil ever since they call
ed their strike, that they were to hold
no meetings, Sheriff Phillips learned
that a gathering was scheduled for
noon. He posted the State police in
an unfrequented portion of the
borough and waited developments.
When the strikers gathered the troop
ers surrounded the building, two rid
ing their horses directly into the
meeting.
'The troopers are here, shouted
one of the men as the front doors
burst open. There was a rush for
doors and windows, tiut the huge
doors in the rear of the hall opened
and there stood five troopers, while at
every window where liberty was
sought stood a trooper. Resistance
was useless and the crowd soon
quieted, particularly when the police
made it plain that trouble was to t
found in great quantities should any
ao desire.
For newly half an hour the men
were held In the hall until the Sheriff
could find conveyances to transport
them to the county Jail here. Private
automobiles of some of Scranton's
best citizens were followed by Jitney
busses, and they in turn by band
wagons, coal wagons and even an ice
wagon carried its quota. All the ve
hicles were loaded to capacity with
prisoners, each being under the escort
of a State policeman. When the pro
cession reached the southern city line
all of the mounted policemen of this
city Joined and helped to guard the
prlsonera.
i Some ot the men, began, ringing
SEPTEMBER 15, 1916.
when the procession left Old Forge, f
but this was quickly stopped by the j
I State police, who feared that the
j songs might start a rescue, which
could only be handled by shedding
j blood.
Beaching this city all were hustled
: into the county jail, although such an
j influx taxed the capacity of the struc-
I ture, it being necessary to place Ave
men in a cell.
In the hall where the meeting was
held I. W. W. buttons and working
cards were found strewn on the floor,
i where the men had thrown them when
! placed under arrest. A quantity of
j bullets and a number of knives were
| also found .although no revolvers were
discovered either in the hail or on any
of the men under arrest.
iff Paint Now!/# 57
I' The Fall Is the Best Time to Paint /
I /fT this season the best painting results a: ■ //
j Sjf secured. The wood is in splendid condi- a
tion, having thoroughly dried out over t
the summer. Bugs are fewer and rains are less /
frequent. Besides, Fall painting gives you the J
opportunity to cover up and seal the cracks j
1 before the cold weather sets in. I
\ As Fall is the best time to paint, so Lucas ,
\ is the best paint to use. There are 65 years
\ of practical paint-making experience in
\ every can. Since 1849, we have built up
\ the greatest paint-making organization in
\ existence and have succeeded in creating
\ the highest standard paint made. Lucas I
\ standard is law with us. Every can of A
\ Lucas paint must, after numerous and *"< l
rigid tests, meet this standard. \
\ Henry Gilbert & Son \
219 Market St.
Lightning Kills Two Cows
and Shatters Pumphouse
Mechanicsburg, Pa., Sept. 15. Dur
ing a heavy electrical storm, last night,
lightning played a peculiar prank on
| the farm of H. B. Brubaker, near Chest
nut Hill, about two miles south of town,
when It struck a locust tree beside the
pumphouse, shattering the latter, and
following the trough into the ground.
c i? v ! B in the field were also struck
with lightning and killed. This is the
second misfortune Mr. Brubaker ha
had inside a month. On August 22 his
large barn was burned to the grounn.
with the season's crops and farm im
plements, by a stroke of lightning
Three cows belonging to George Zim
merman. a farmer living near Bow
mansdale, were struck and killed bv *
the lightning last night. y