2 CENTRAL PA. NEWS Man Cat in Fight at Lewistown May Die Lewistown. Pa., Sept. 27.—A fight here on Saturday night, at first thought v to be only a drunken brawl, with a man slightly cut about the face and body, may turn out to be a serious af fair. as the injured man Is at present In a serious condition, duo to a wound in the chest, through which part of a lung protruded. The fight happened In the west end of town at the home of Mrs. Sam Smith, a colored woman. The man injured is James Havanna. an Italian, who says that he was struck first on the head by a piece of chinaware thrown from an upstairs window, which cut a gash in his head, and soon afterward was attacked and cut a number of times with a sharp knife. David Speaks, a young col ored man, has been lodged In jail, charged with aggravated assault and battery and Mrs. Smith has been locked up charged with keeping a dis orderly house. Sirs. Anna Robinson, a daughter of Mrs. Smith, was cut on the arm when she tried to stop the flgh^^e^een_the^wo^jnen^^^^^ Bell-ans Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it 25c at all druggists. SPECIAL EXCURSION TO ZOOLOGICAL GARDEN Girard Ave. (31st Street), Fhila. VIA PHI LADELPHIA Jfc READ ING RAILWAY Saturday, September 30 ROUND TRIP TICKETS, Rood only on trains noted below, will be sold at rates annexed. SPECIAL TRAIN Special From Pare Lv.A.M. HARRISBURG $2.50 6.20 Hummelstown 2.50 6.36 Brownstone 2.60 6.39 Swatara 2.50 6.43 Hershey 2.50 6.46 Girard Ave. (31st St.) ar. 10.00 TICKETS DO NOT INCI.UDE~ ADMISSION TO GARDEN CHILDREN between 5 and 12 years of age, half fare. RETURNING —Special Train will leave Girard Ave. (31st St.) 5.50 P. M. for above stations. Effective Tonic) for "Nervous Men", and Women BEFORE TAKING You have headaches, backaches, shattered nerves. Your ambition is gone, extremities cold or numb, heart flutters, kidneys inactive, vitality low, confidence gone, life seems hopeless. Despondency attacks you —your friends desert you, you're not interest ing, energetic, full of life and vitality. AFTER TAKING Your health improves, aches are banished: ambition returns; blood cir culates freely, powerfully; nervousness disappears, heart becomes normal, or ganic troubles Corrected, vitality re newed, confidence restored and life be comes brighter, your friends find you . of interest, admire your strength, your magnetism; which is another word for smiles and joy. All this comes because your nerves, blood and vital organs feel the benefi cent medicines in three grain Cado mene Tablets. YOUR SYMPTOMS tell yon that you need a powerful, vitalizing tonic to regain all that you have lost. Try I LsCUIC7n&7IC~ I They are guaranteed to help you or money refunded by the Blackburn Products Co., Dayton, Ohio. The "Best thing in the world" for "run down" men or weak, nervous women. Price SI.OO at all druggists. Six tubes for $5.00 is full treatment. GeaHarlranff V3EE&33 V f . 7 Like everything else tobacco has soared in price. J ut I j the quality of Gen. I Hartranft cigars re i| mains unchanged and i 4u the price is still a A nickel. I After all these yean I I of effort to make a IE I nickel cigar worthy Its i ■ distinguished name, we 1 M are too proud of its H jfl success to make any H mj changes that would ef- | jjjl feet Its quality, regard- 3 UftJ ,c * of the increased I W cost of tobacco. I C Ambulance Service Prompt nut efficient .rrrlM for the transportation •( patient* In and from home*, bnapltala. ar the H. K. atnttona. With apeelul owe, evperleaee* • tten<laafa aad awml a a I rhanrea. Emergency Ambulance Service 1746 K. SIXTH ST. lieU I'liouc United 272-W WEDNESDAY EVENING. News Items of Interest in Central Pennsylvania Sunbury. Harry S. Inns, aged 37, a Pennsylvania Railroad locomotive engineer, was found lying unconscious in the yard at his homs here by his wife. Inns says he was attacked by a stranger. Mahanoy City John Bart fell 100 feet down a manway et the Tunnel Ridge mine and was fatally Injured. Williamsport. Roy Waters. 19. was instantly killed by a Reading train near Montoursville yesterday afternoon. " Mt. Carmel The second automo bile fire truck for the American Hose and Chemical Company has arrived. Shenandoah Fire destroyed the hpme of John Wiliard of Lost Creek. Tlio family lost everything, including a sum of money. Mauch Chunk August Burkhart, while at work in the Central Railroad roundhouse, was struck by a sledge hammer and seriously injured. Bethlehem Thirty-six farmers attended a meeting here yesterday for the purpose of raising the price of milk to retail dealers from IS cents a gallon to 22 cents. Flsial action will be taken at the next meeting. Mahanoy City. Twelve cases of typhoid fever are under the care of physicians here and many new cases developing. The health authorities will ask the State to investigate. ! STRAW'S SUNDAY SCHOOL PICNIC ' ! Halifax. Pa., Sept. 27. Final ar- j rangements have been made for' j Straw's Sunday school picnic to be held in John Romberger's grove two and one-half miles south of the Moun tain House, on Saturday, September 30. The Berrysburg Cornet Band will furnish music, during the day and evehing. Able speakers will make ad dresses. and there will be all kinds of amusements. In the evening a ! cakewalk and social will be held. PARALYSIS BAN LIFTED Dauphin. Pa., Sept. 27. The Sun day schools of the borough will be- Kin again on Sunday, after the lifting of the paralysis ban. Communion services will be held in the Presby - • terian church on Sunday morning | and preparatory services will be held on Friday evening. i * WOMAN DIES FROM TYPHOID i West Fairview, Pa., Sept. 27.—Mrs. Lewis Elchelberger. aged 35 years, died at her home here yesterday after an illness of three weeks rrcm typhoid feveV. She is survived by her hus band. MOTORCYCLE RIDERS HURT Dauphin. Pa.. Sept. 27. On Mon day William Pennypacker of Phila delphia, about forty years old, was run down by an automobile above Dauphin while he was riding a motorcycle. Pennypacker was taken to the Har risburg Hospital In a serious condi tion. Harry Rhen was also slightly hurt while riding his motorcycle. An auto mobile ran into him at Rockville yes- J j terday. / 1 s : Today Is the Birthday Anniversary of— I v * BP *. ** SB. j, JOHN PRICE JACKSON He is the head of the State Labor ; and Industry Department. Everybody ! knows him. According to reports from Capitol Hill to-day, there was only one | telephone line working. It was con ■ nocted with the offlce of Commissioner i Jackson and was quite busy. Con gratulations also came by mail. EZRA MEI.LIXGER DIES Murrell, Pa.. Sept. 27.—Ezra Mel linger died yesterday after a long ill ness. He was 63 years old and a cigar manufacturer by occupation. His wife : and a number of brothers and sisters j survive. Catarrh Victim Could Only Sleep on Left Side j After Suffering: for Years With Con stant Headache and Indigestion Frank Brown Finds Relief in Tanlac | For fifteen years Frr.nk Brown had ! bis ups and downs at the courthouse, j where he operated the elevator, and j during that time he contracted ca tarrh, from which he has suffered for j years. He says: "I have been tortured and j tormented by catarrh for more years I'han I car. remember. So bad that I could only sleep on my left side, and j if I unintentionally turned over I would ; feel suffocated and would wake up in misery. "I had headaches almost all the time and, probably because of my catarrh, I suffered from indigestion. My stomach was in very bad shape. I had but -little appetite and food did not appeal to me, and when I did eat anything, no matter how simple, It would bloat me all up with gas and I would be in real agony for hours afterward. "I guess I tried ft hundred different remedies that I heard were good for what ailed me, but they none of them helped me a bit. and I continued to worry along feeling like the last days of summer until I heard about Tanlac and the wonderful results it had given to some otner catarrh sufferers. "I began using It and it certainly is all that is claimed for it for I feel bet ter to-day than I have felt for many years. My catarrh has gone entirely I have no mye headaches and I eat and sleep as I did when I was a boy I certainly wilt be glad to recommend Tanlac to anyone who wants to know how it has helped me." j Tanlac, the famous reconstructive I vegetable tonic, appetizer and lnvig orant, is now being specially Intro duced here at Gorgas' Drmr Sfore 16 North Third street, where the Tan lac man Is daily explaining this maoter medicine to hosts of interested In quirers. Tanlac Is also sold at the I Gorgas Drpa Store In P. R. R. Station. PRESBYTERY IN FALL SESSION Local Churchmen Take Active Part in Meeting at Gettysburg of Carlisle which , I \\\ l Vs. is the governing I body of the Pres byterlan Church : running from Leb anon on the east | Rar(l LuBnIIK *° Mercersburg, on ; the west and from north to Gettys smmmmS burg on the south, met yesterday af ternoon In Kail session in the historic Church of Mercersburg, of which Dr. J. G. Rose is pastor. About eighty five ministers and elders were in at tendance as representatives of the ; 12,000 Presbvterians of this district. ! The Rev. E. E. Curtis of the West minster Church. Harrisburg, consti- i tuted Presbytery with prayer and then handed over the gavel to the moderator-elect, the Rev. Harvey i Klaer, of the Covenant Church, Har- | risburg. Committees Named The moderator announced the fol lowing committees: Bills and overtures The Rev. F. j E. Taylor, of Gettysburg; the Rev.] C. B. Segelken, of Steelton; the Rev. j J. C. Fields, of Lebanon and elders, i George C. Glenn, of Lebanon and Mr. McCurd/. o£ Steelton. On Judicial Business The Rev. Lewis S. Mudge, D. D., of the Pine j Street Church, Harrisburg; the Rev. J. Marshall Rutherford, Waynesboro, , the Rev. D. H. Dyer, Mlllerstown and , elders, J. W. Rearlck and I. R. Spring- ! or. On assessments The Rev. T. R. ' Ferguson, of Silver Springs Church j and elder J. Lewis Heck, of Harris- ■ burg. I On narrative The Rev. R. F. Stirling, of Dauphin. On Leave of Absence The Rev. | John Lindsay, of Shifipensburg and j elder W. A. Matthews. Report on New Chureh The Rev. C. B. Segelken reported j to Presbytery the organization of the new Church at Camp Hill, September ' 21. The roll of Presbytery now has ! forty-six Churches and missions. The | Rev. C. B. Segelken. also as chair- j man of the committee on education, made a report as to the supply of ] candidates for the ministry and de- j plored the fact that Carlisle Presby- j tery had not received a candidate for two and a half years. The Presbytery sent Its greetings to : the aged stated clerk, the Rev. Robert 1 F. McLean, of Mechanicsburg, who I was too ill to attend. His duties were j temporarily assumed by the Rev. George Fulton, the temporary clerk I and the Rev. George S. Rentz, of the I Market Square Church was elected i reading clerk. At 7.30 Presbytery met and listened ! with deep interest to a sermon preached by the retiring moderator, ' the Rev. F. E. Taylor, of Gettysburg. ! Harrisburg Ministers at Annual U. B. Conference Philadelphia, Pa.. Sept. 27. The j one hundred and seventeenth session ; of the East Pennsylvania Conference of the United Brethren in Christ Church convened*to-day in the Second U. B. Church. The Conference Superintendent, Dr. D. D. Lowery, of Harrisburg 1 , Pa., made his twenty-third consecutive re | port. Advances were reported in the respective Interests of the conference. Many Churches of the Conference ! have made splendid progress. There is a handsome increase in 1 membership, many good revivals were ! conducted, and a fair percentage of the Sunday school membership unit- 1 ed with the Church. 10,000 are in the i respective societies of the Christian i Endeavor. The Harrisburg pastors, the Rev. C. E. Boughter. of First Church; the Rev. J. A. Lyter, of Derrv Street Church; the Rev. S. E. Rupp, of the Reily Stre?t Church; the Rev. E. A G Bossier, of the State Street Church; j the Rev. Joseph Daugherty, of the i Sixth Street Church; the Rev H M Miller, of the Penbrook Church and A. K. Wier, of the Steelton Church, are in attendance. DEMANDS $17,500 FOR FIRE LOSSES //I/ Jf Jll su its against as many fire insur ance companies — f °r the recovery ol sums aggregat- | n -K J 14,500 were H 6 Dau P h i n counsel for the Capital Hardware and Supply Com pany, 121S North Third street which was seriously damaged by fire June 5. 1914. Another similar action against a seventh concern is now be in prepared by Colonel Ott. The de fendants and the amounts for which suit is brought include Allen and East Pennsboro Mutual, $2000; Na tional Hardware Dealers Mutual Fire Company, $4,000; Hardware Dealers ; Mutual Fire Association of Pennsyl vania. $4,000; Dauphin County Mu ; tual Fire Insurance Company, $1,000; Springfield Fire and Marine Insurance | Company. $1,500; Lurgan Mutual Fire i Insurance Company, $2,000. The re- I malning suit which is to be brought | against the American Insurance Com- I pany will ask for $3,000. The hard : ware firm, according to the attorney has repeatedly asked for the money | due on the insurance but the com panies refused to pay. Motorcyclist Wants 85,000 Suit for $5,000 damages was begun In the Dauphin court to-day by Ell G. Miller against Lillian C. Brattan, for In juries he alleges he received a month ago when the defendant's automobile crashed into the plaintiff's motorcycle George L. Reed filed the suit. On Dead Cyclist's Estate.—Letters on the estate of Paul Hebner, the motorcyclist who was killed on the river road a few months ago in a collision with an automobile, were i granted to-day to "Squire Morris Daniel. Berrysburg. Colonel Fred M Ott was given letters of administration on the estate of Margaret Matzlnger formerly of this cltv. As To "Hardsernbble". —The Dau phin county court to-day was asked by counsel for several of the "Hard scrabble" property owners to permit re-argument on Uie question of the eighth exception to the viewers' re port on the condemnation proceedings The action Is based on the attitude of the court In Its recent opinion and raises the question of the jurisdiction of the viewers to say how the dam ages and benefits should be assessed. HABRISBUriO TELEGRAPH WORLD'S SERIES SATURDAY, OCT. 7 Johnson Certain Big Baseball Classic Will Open Ten Days Hence Chicago, Sept. 27. The world's series will open on Saturday, October 7. according to President B. B. John son, of the American League, who as a member of the National Commission is to-day ready to begin preparations for the scries. With the race as un certain as it is, no final action has been taken yet by the National Com mission Mr. Johnson said. "I am -certain that the world's series will start on October 7," said Johnson. "The contestants might be willing to begin October 6, but 1 hardly think so. The American League race closes one day earlier than the Nationals, so I do not think that would be fair to the National League winner, however, so It looks as if the opening game will be played a week from next Saturday." Flames Doom World's Largest Onion Marsh Columbus, 0., Sept. 27. The onion marsh fire in Harding county which has been burning for two days is beyond control and spreading rap idly. Company B, Ninth Battalion, Ohio National Guard (colored), was ordered out to fight the fire to-night and has entrained, with mess out fits for several hundred men and sup plies of tools for the citizens' organ ization that is fighting the flames. 500 Villa Followers Executed in Chihuahua El Paso, Texas, Sept. 27.—Wholesale executions are taking place in Chi huahua City following the Villa attack. It was announced at military head quarters here. Five hundred Villa ad- I herents have been executed since the fight, the report to General George Bell, Jr., states, and many other pris oners have been taken. TWO I. W. W. MEN ARRESTED Wllkes-Barre. Pa., Sept. 2 7.—Gullano > Frushano, who was arrested by the i Pittston police as an I. W. W. dyna miter, has given the authorities a writ ten statement In which he declares i that Joseph Pasquello and Joseph Sa i dule dynamited the home of Michael i Loughney. a miner. Frushano, in his ; statement, says he was forced to ae | company them to the Boston mine, where they stole a box of dynamite. The day following the Loughney home was dynamited, and he alleges that Pasquello and Sadule told him they de stroyed tht place. Pasquello and Sadule have been ar rested and held without ball for the grand jury. Both are members of the I. W. W. Clientele A Q! P AIN stood agliast recently wlien Her Majesty Queen Victoria Eugenia drove through the streets of Madrid in a Scripps- Bootk car. /*•> £7p /i i Not oulij Spain and Its Royalty, but most of the world has experienced a surprise at the accomplishments of Scripps - Booth cars and the wonderfully high clientele of ownership which It has acquired for itself within two short years. Kings and Queens are only as human as you r— ———— or 1, and appreciate BEST THINGS in the r> • o • -d v r Prominent Scnpps'Booth snme 'P""- Owners Abroad They have the advantage however, of Her Majesty The Queen choosing and of knowing, through previous Alexandrine of Denmark experience, what are the best things. The Her Royal Highness Princess , iC D i ii/i Margrethe of Denmark choice or ocripps-Dooth cars—which are found j Highness Prince In nearly every royal garage in Europe—by Aage of Denmark this clientele Is more than an Indication His Royal Highness Prince of the purchase-value of Scripps-Booth Andre of Greece j j. Court Marshall to the Queen productions. MolW C%. ol G,.ee. Scrlpps-Booth 1s an opportunity to add to Majordome to Her Majesty .1 • . j Queen Victoria EuAenia of your enjoyment oi motoring, and merits your Spain J e Ma Creus immediate Investigation. O '* 0/ ) jj Four-Cullnd*r Roaditar • • $825 Four-Ci)ltodr Coup* - ■ $1450 'J •' 8 Scnpjrd boot* CitjLugue a* the tincM j>tsci i 10. 'I literatw iter produced It he htvi Sy pr-sznU mppiisatiim it the Scripp*- Booth SaUsr^m. .Universal Motor Car Co. Bell Phone 2423 Service and Salesroom, 1826 Wood Avenue Main Office 1745 N. Sixth St GOVERNOR URGES CROP INCREASES Tells Farmers Food Production Must Be Given More Attention Gettysburg, Pa.; Sept. 27.—0n their third tour of the agricultural sections of Pennsylvania, Governor Brumbaugh and other State officials, with a large number of others interested In the de velopment of the rural portions of the State, yesterday told Adams county farmers food production must be given more attention. One of the large automobile trucks had been fitted up as a stand and from this Governor Brumbaugh made his address. Ha. said: "Wo are now on the third week which we have devoted to tours In the interests of the farms of Pennsyl vania and the State's highway prob lems. Unless we can develop our soil to increase our food production the time is not very far distant when we will be dependent upon outside com munities to feed tjje workers In our mills, in our factories and at Our forges, a situation which wc do not wish for a moment to contemplate. "Our highway problems are a mat ter of transportation of people and materials from one part of our great Commonwealth to another. I feel confident that I can look any man In the face and unblushlngly say that we now have better roads In Pennsylvania than we ever had before. "I see no reason why we cannot con tinue this work until we have a dust less and durably surfaced road from every town in the State, and that with out an unreasonable burden of taxa tion. "If we all work together, feeling that we have back of us the co-opera tion of the good people of our State, we can build up an efficient or right eous government of which we may all be proud, we ask the co-operation of you." Gets Box of Apples Governor Brumbaugh was in Cham bersburg three times yesterday. He stopped there with his touring party and made a speech to a crowd on Memorial Circle. He said Franklin county apples were the best In the world and got a box of Rambos as a present. He and his party visited the local apple show here. From here the party went to McConnellsburg and the Governor then came back about 6 P. M., on his way to York, eating his supper as he rode by. At-midnlght he returned westward, bound from York to Bedford. APPLE BETTER BOILING Marietta, Pa., Sept. 2 7.—An old fashioned apple butter boiling was held to-day at the home of Mrs. Martha Neff, In Wakefield, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. George Brown, of Philadelphia, who are visiting at the Neff home, fixty guests were present. SEPTMEBER 27, 1916. Store will be closed all dpy to-morrow (Thursday) on ac count of religious holiday. on Third Street HUGHES GREETS WEST PA. CROWDS Enters Pittsburgh District and Begins Tour of Industrial Towns Pittsburgh, Pa., Sept. 27.—Charles E. Hughes entered the Pittsburgh dis trict soon after noon to-day and from that moment until the tlmo for his departure for Trenton, N. J., at mid night, every hour had been carefully tilled by the Republican party leaders who made up the committee of ar rangements. Mr. Hughes was met at thq station by a great crowd of Republicans from all over -Western Pennsylvania, East ern Ohio and Northern West Virginia, and immediately began a tour of in dustrial towns. Issues Final Challenge Mr. Hughes last night challenged the administration to deny his charge that John was authorized by President Wilson in 1914 to say to "the minister from a foreign power" that Huerta would be "put out" of the presidency of Mexico if he did not voluntarily get out. Mr. Hughes issued his challenge in a speech here before an audience in Cleveland. In the same speech Mr. Hughes lauded Myron T. Herrick, sit ting on the platform with him, for the manner In which he discharged the duties of ambassador to France in the early days of the war and declared that the appointment of a man to suc ceed Mr. Herrick "in a time of great emergency" would "ever remain a blot upon the present administration." In his second address at Toledo and in his speech at Cleveland last night Mr. Hughes, renewed liis attack on the administration for the Adamson law and declared that It was the duty of tho Executive to stand "like a rock" for the principle of investigation before legislation and not to surrender to force. Mr. Hughes' challenge to the ad ministration was part of his attack on the administration for its Mexican policy. He said: "We cannot maintain our just in fluence on this hemisphere in connec tion with our sister republic unless we arc correct in our international atti tude and careful and correct in our In ternational policy. That is the de-, plorable thing about the conduct of our affairs in Mexico. We have fol lowed no Intelligible possible policy. Wo have not justified ourselves to those acquainted with international law. We have not satisfied our ideals. We have not won the friendship, but rather lost the friendship, of those who are in the sister republic of Mexico torn by disturbance. Only the other day we had a very clear statement of the principle that should govern us In this matter and In similar matters. It Is a statement which comes from the head of the administration and It Is very clearly put. It says, referring to Mexico: 'We have professed to believe that every nation, every people, has the right to order its own institutions as it wilt, and we must live up to that profession in our actions in absolute good faith." That is the principle. I deeply regret that that principle was not followed." Senator Penrose to Speak at ughes Meeting Tonight Pittsburgh, Pa., Sept. 27. Sen ator B. Penrose, who to-night will share speechmaking honors with Charles E. Hughes, Republican Presi dential nominee, arrived here last night after a record-breaking auto ride from Harrisburg. Senator Pen rose and party made the 200 miles in TYi hours.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers