Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, October 20, 1916, Page 19, Image 19

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    HUGHES ENDING
HIS THIRD TRIP
CContinued From Elrmt Pago]
a meeting: In Madison Square Garden,
New York, Saturday night, November 4.
Defines I/usitania Stand
Mr.. Hughes last night made an im
passioned attack upon the "Wilson ad
ministration at Youngstown, Ohio,
which, ho charged had fallen so low in
Its own estimation that it apparently
could not believe that any one meant
he said.
Mr. Hughes centered his attack upon
Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo and
Secretary of War Baker. Mr. Baker
had been quoted as comparing the sol
diers under "Washington at Valley
Forge with the bandits under Villa.
Mr. Hughes declared that these state
ments illuminated in a way nothing
else had done the whole spirit under
which the administration had faced
international affairs.
Of Secretary Baker's statement Mr.
Hughes, his voice shaken with emo
tion, said:
"I never supposed that the day
would come when the representative
of an American administration would
say that of those who gave us our
liberty.
"An administration Imbued with the
spirit of true Americanism would be
Incapable of the statement attributed
to the Secretary of War. It must bring
the blush of shame to the cheek of
every American that apologi7.es for the
deplorablo record in Mexico bo
made in this fashion."
The Hippodrome, where the address
was delivered, was Jammed to the
doors and a great crowd was unable
to gain admission. The audience was
cordial and responsive.
Mr. Hughes covered also in a com
prehensive manner his advocacy of the
tariff, his conception of the needs of
America after the close of the war,
false prosperity and the Adamson leg
islation.
Adamson Law, Americanism,
Tariff and High Living Costs
Favor Hughes, Harding Says
Philadelphia, Oct. 20. Hughes
beyond a doubt and fine prospects for
a Republican Senate."
This prediction was made last night
at the Bellevue by Senator Warren G.
Harding, of Ohio, before he went to
Camden to deliver a campaign speech.
"A scare was thrown into the Re
publican party some weeks ago, when
a Democratic Congress passed the
Adamson socalled eight-hour law," he
continued. "This will react in our
favor. It has set our men to working,
and as ft result we will carry all the
doubtful States. As a campaign issue,
the Adamson law has proved a fail
ure."
Particular interest attaches to Sen
ator Harding's review of the national
campaign, because ho voiced the Re
publican keynotes at the convention
that nominated Hughes, and has been
one of his party's most stalwart spell
binders.
From being in touch with audiences
in a great territory, the Senator has
found that some of the original cam
paign keynotes have fallen by the way
side, and that the issues that really
touch the hearts of the people are
these:
"First. A universal desire for the
protection of American lives at sea
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SORE THROAT, NEURALGIA
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GINGEROLE is better than any lini
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very penetrating and won't blister.
A package that will do the work of
BO blistering, mustard plasters costs
but 25 cents at all druggists. Get a
package to-day. Use it to speedily
banish sore throat, cold In chest, ton
a Ey e Service
Belsinger Glasses and Belsinger Eye Service means posi
tive relief from all eye disorders. Here, you'll find the hand
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with the most modern optical instruments. Those in attend
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OPEN EVE. 'TIL 9.3®
FRIDAY EVENING, '•"> v taRRISBURG TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 20, N 1916.
suits IMNGSTOH'g _ c ?^ vrs _
tills week?— That hy far outdistances any similar showing In Harrisburg— H £Th IIAIIVII MM m nif PV an ■ __ _
All the new colors and styles supreme. LB SOUTH MARKET SQ. \9 500 Coat* fa Be Oil Sab for Sailing
Prices For Saturday Only ————————————————
<n *as Suits qs 85 Suits ' A Triumphant Assemblage of Fall Fashions at High- Seal c * e * ot - ta Bl **-
$15.85 Suits $9.98 q>zo.oo Suits $1J.50 Tide m To-morrow's Exhibition of
$16.50 Suits, ..,..$10.98 $22.50 Suits, ....$15.75 w , v Women's Coats $2.98 to $45.00
$18.35 Suits $12.50 $25.00 Suits, ....$17.98 J l !™® , I SlllfS CftflfS IV Misses' Coats, $1.98 to $22.85
Mostly fur trimmed and lined with elegant silks. Alterations Free.
& mISS6S ( kJUlliJj VUIIVO u 1/1 vJJWw | Children's Coats $1.98 to $15.75
Dresses ~ Furs ' ijßy jfojt i Once Again remarkable collec- 1 Boys'and Girls'
JL-TJ. VOUVU \S Jpjj tion of Women's, II A IP
Women's and Misses' Muffs—White, Black. Red and! j .. jl f II dren'S il iI ij|f 0 0 "f" 00
Silk 9 <.rA llrflac G*ay Pox Coneys, Minks, etc. \ ° Off OfllCl J)
dim a aetgo urusjufc Sets range from $4.98 Ml P - It® V7 SI.OO Hats, .
_ x 4 tp. $50.00. Separate L $1.25 Hats, . .89<fr $2.00 Hats, $1.49 Best Selection in
choose from pieces, $1.98 and up. lf l \\ sl-50 Hats, ..
SIO.OO Dresses, $5.98 Women's, Misses' and /A-/77'"/ //' SKIRT Children's $1.50 Sweaters, 98c
$12.50 Dresses, $7.85 Children s HbT'IKX I kU \ nUJtu BARGAINS DRESSES I $2.00 Sweaters, $1.48
$13.75 Dresses, $8.98 Scarf and CaO Sets n' Ci PoDlinsandSerires 75c Dresses, 49c g?? Sweaters, $1.79
1800 Dresses <B9 98 Wal™- „ All wni g SI.OO Dresses 79c $3.00 Sweaters, $1.98,
* ' ' 50 Different Colors and — V s l - 50 Dresses 98c $3.50 Sweaters, $2.29
$16.50 Dresses, $11.50 Combinations H\\ flp* * fflfk $3.00 Skirts, $1.98 $1.75 Dresses, $4.00 Sweaters, $2.48
Straight Box-Pleated Front- £Q r f/% QQ g M s2 ' 4B SLI9 SSOO SweaterS $ 298
gome fur trimmed. l*\J *| $5.00 Skirts, $2.98 Ages 4to 15 years. Solid colors and combinations.
Men's, Yourg Men's and Boys' Men's and Young Men's Clothing Boys' Suits, Overcoats
B D r 9 O Suits and Overcoats—Pure wool In sixty styles. Materials Include rich plain _ _ _
JL jL Ji. colors, nohby striped and checked effects, in Black, Blue, Chestnut and Seal Brown, O "tKt (Tn /"l7~tj Yfrn
rich Dark Gray. dllU lHatmllaWd
SB.OO Men's Pants, $1.98 75c Boys' Pants, Swagger Pinch-Back and Neat Conservative Styles—Over
s3.so Men's Pants, $2.29 SI.OO Pants, coats are single and double breasted. $3,00 Boys' Suits, $1.98 $4.50 Boys' O'coats,
$4.00 Men's Pants, $2.48 $1.50 Boys' Pants,
$5.00 Men's Pants, $2.98 Ages 6to 17 years. rTIC©S, B ,yO tO I .DU $4.00 Boys' Suits, $2.48 $5.00 Mackinaws, $3.48
and the upholding of the national
honor.
"Second. The tariff, in which the
interest is keen Just whero it would
naturally be expected to bo apathetic
—the Northwest.
"Third. The eight-hour law, which
la beginning- to receive the calm and
dispassionate consideration of the
laboring element to the detriment of
President Wilson.
"Fourth. The high cost of living—
•with the realization by the people that
$2,000,000,000 worth of business for
the munitions manufacturers has cost
silitis, pleurisy, lumbago. It's a grand,
sensible remedy that all who use It will
praise, and money back if you don't
say its results are astonishing.
Ask for GINGEROLE. Nothing so
good for swollen, aching, rheumatic
joints, neuritis, sore muscles, sprains,
stiff neck, bruises. It draws out the
burning inflammation from sore feet,
bunions, corns and callouses over night.
GINGEROLE is for sale and recom
mended by all druggists.
them $8,000,000,000 In inflated prices
for household necessities.
V/omen 111-Treated by
Wilson Rioters With Mob .
at Chicago During Speech
Chicago, Oct. 20. President Wil
son came here yesterday to explain his
view on problems facing the nation.
Arriving In Chicago after shaking
hands with crowds in Indiana, he de
livered three speeches, participated In
several street demonstrations and
went over his western campaign plans
with his managers. He left at mid
night and will arrive at Long Branch,
N. J., at midnight to-night.
In a speech before the Chicago
Press Club the President predicted the
beginning of "a renaaissance of the
sense of patriotic responsibility," and
urged the development of progressive
ness. Speaking before a gathering of
women later, he urged more partici
pation by women in the affairs of the
nation; and at a meeting of "new
citizens" he declared for a united
America. .
Women Roughly Mamllcd
An attempted "silent demonstra
tion" by members of the National Wo
man's Party in front of the Auditor
ium developed into a near riot in
which the banners opposing Wilson
were torn from the demonstrators and
trampled, and the women were rough
ly handled. President Wilson was
settled in an automobile a few hun
dred feet away when the demonstra
tion started, but passed into the build
ing and was not a witness to the scene
that followed.
Shouting "shame," "disgrace" and
"get the banners" a crowd of several
hundred, sprinkled with women,
charged the banner holders. Um
brelins and canes were used in the de
struction of the placards.
Many of the women wore knocked
down and nearly all were roughly
handled, especially those who strove
to retain their banners.
The excitement continued until all
the banners had been seized. With
disheveled hair and soiled and torn
clothing the women marched back to
their headquarters under police guard.
Comptroller of Currency
Defends His Recent Acts
Indianapolis, Ind., Oct. 2 0. —John
Ski'lton Williams, Comptroller of the
Currency, speaking here to-day before
the "Farmers' National Congress, de
scribed the relation of the Federal
reserve law to the farmer and closed
with a personal statement brought out
by President AViison's recent allusion
to attacks on the comptroller.
"I see that our President, in an ad
dress at Shadow Lawn," said the
comptroller, "tells the country that the
bankers, or certain bankers, or some
special interests, aro after my otllcial
scalp because I, as the Comptroller of
the Currency, have enforced the law.
This Is no surprise to mo. I know
that I have been held up as a kind of
ogre, a rawhead and bloody bones, a
terror to the banking and financial in
terests of the country. Maybe the
best answer to that may bo found In
the records and indisputable facts that
the national banks of the country to
day are stronger and in better con
dition than ever before; that they are
more numerous than when I became
comptroller; aro more prosperous and
show a smaller proportion of failures
and losses than was ever known in
their history; and my office is receiv
ing a steady stream of applications for
charters for new national banks and
for permission to increase the capital
of the existing ba n ' ts '"
Roosevelt Routs All His
Hecklers During Tumultous
Meetings Out in the West
Emporia, Kan., Oct. 20. lt is
just twenty years since William Allen
White wrote a little editorial entitled,
"What's the Matter With Kansas?"
and set the prairie map revolving
slowly around the elysian town of
Emporia, an orbit which it still pur
sues.
Colonel Roosevelt celebrated the
anniversary last evening by stopping
here and talking for ten delirious
minutes to Will White, Walt Mason
and so many other residents of Boy
vllle that the Santa Fe station and
tracks couldn't hold them all.
Ho told them Wilson was danger
ous and asked them to vote for
Hughes, which, according to Mr.
Whit a. Is exactly what Kansas Is go
ing to do to the extent of a 40,000
plurality.
Roosevelt Talks In German
Shooting up the Missouri valley in
the morning, the train halted for wa
ter at Washington. Four hundred
persons were on hand. Intending to
pass on with a "Howdy-do," the Col
onel was moved to speech when a
young man, handing up a card in
scribed "Robert L. Soergel," hailed
him in German.
"We're all straight American!"
shouted Soergel.
'I know it," shot back the Colonel
in German, "straight Americans
nothing else—-and we Judge every na
tion by its conduct in a crisis. When
I was in charge, you know, we never
let the king or the kaiser put any
thing over on us."
A gray-haired German, Julius
Rembach, incased in a baker's white
apron, pressed forward to get at the
Colonel's hand. He was all a-tremble
with excitement. Here was one of
those real Roosevelt followers whose
loyalty no denuncatlon of the kaiser's
war-making customs can shake.
"I'm goot. Bull Mooser; I got one of
tho biggest families here," he confided.
"Ah!" beamed the Colonel. "How
many?"
"Seven children."
"Fine; you beat me by one."
Squelches the Hecklers
The Colonel loves to be heckled by
Wilson men. Thus far he has squelch
ed every one of them with a verbal
rlgjit jab to the jaw. At Jefferson
City, the capijtal of Missouri, whero
tho crowd was so big It spread over
the tops of freight cars, a youth
shrieked: "I wouldn't shake hands
with Roosevelt. Three cheers for
Wilson."
Leveling a forefinger, the Colonel
retorted: "Yes, and why don't you
cheer for tho dead babies of the
Lusitania? That'B about your style,
my friend."
The Wilson enthusiasts was drowned
in a chorus, " 'Ray for Teddy, good
old Teddy, he's our style."
The Colonel's message to Jefferson
City was that this country must be
a nation, not a "polyglot boarding
house," and that "when you get a na
tion that's too proud to fight, it'a just
tit enough to be kicked."
Cheers cycloned down the tracks as
the train pulled out.
Knox Proves Both of
President's Pet Laws
/ire " Dangerous Shams"
New York, Oct. 20. Philander
Chase Knox, former U. S. Senator and
former Cabinet officer, made an Im
portant address last night before a
large Republican mass meeting in the
uptown district.
He devoted his remarks mainly to
branding tho Adamson so-called eight
hour law and the recently enacted na
tional child labor law as misleading
legislation and misrepresentations or
what they are claimed to be by their
sponsors. He quoted Professor Wil
son against President Wilson In show
ing the inconsistency of tho occupant
of the White House.
"Whither does this end?" he
asked.
"So far as the Adamson act is con
cerned," 'said the former Senator, "I
have evidence to show that It tends
to tho perversion of the legislative
power by its extension to matters
which in a free government of a free
people are left to individual action.
"And in tho child labor law either
to counterfeit and ineffective pretensej
of the exercise of Congressional power |
or to the establishment of the new and I
dangerous doctrine of unsurplng th%
functions of the State by indirect leg- I
islation."
Adamson Law a Sliam
In speaking of the Adamson law I
he among other things said:
"The wage law, known as the ;
Adamson law—and as such I shall ;
hereafter refer to It—which has un- '
candidly been represented by the ad-j
ministration as an eight-hour law. Is,
of course, as has been so frequently!
pointed out, not an eight-hour law
in any sense. It contains no prohibi
tion against the employment of men
for more than eight hours, It does not
prohibit men from working more
than eight hours: it does not suggest
even the desirability, or necessity for
any such limitation: It merely legis
lates that for a period of nine months,
ten hours' wages shall oe paid for
eight hours' work, notwithstanding
existing contracts to tho contrary;
that extra wages shall be paid for
work In excess of eight hours, and the
only penalty contained in the act is
one imposed upon the employer who
refuses to pay the advance thus pro
vided." z
YALE PAGEANT TO
BE STAGED SAT.
7,(XX) Performers Will Enact
Historic Scenes Before
60,(XX) Spectators
Sixty thousand spectators will view
the production of 7,000 performers In
the Yale bowl to-morrow in recog
nition of the two hundredth anniver
sary of the removal of Yale College
from Saybrook to New Haven. The
big stadium, where in a. few short
weeks 60,000 people will again gather
to see the repetition of the historic
gridiron battles between Harvard and
\ale, will be filled to capacity to see
the dramatic review of the history of
the college and university. The par- |
ticipating actors are taken from the I
university, the city of New Haven and I
many cities in Connecticut and nearby I
states, the huge spectacle being in
charge of Francis H. Markoe, Yale, I
1903, pageant master.
Secretary Anson Phelps Stokes, of
lale University, explains in the Yale
Daily News that the four objects of the |
pageant are "to give Yale and the coun- !
try u. more adequate idea of Yale his
toid, to help bind town and gown to
gether, to aid in justifying the expendi
ture of several hundred thousand dol
lars on the bowl, to fulfill the larger
purpose of building the bowl and to
stimulate interest in the ancient art
of pageantry."
The prelude, showing the medieval
wedding procession of Margaret ap
lenkyn, the founder of the Yale fam
ily, Is followed by scenes of the found
ing of the Colony of New Haven with
purchase of the land by John Daven
port and Theophilus Eaton from the
Quinniplac Indians. Later come the
stirring scenes at the time of the Revo
lution and those characteristic of the
college In the early half of the last !
century. Yale's influence in the life
of the nation stands out in such epi- !
•sodes as martyrdom of Nathan Hale i
and that of Theodore Wlnthrop, the I
first Union officer to fall In tlfe Civil I
War. These in turn are followed by I
scenes of modern Yale, ending with a I
drill by the Yale battalion of field ar- !
tlllery, organized last winter and in
service as a part of the federalized
militia during all of the past summer. |
The whole multitude close the pageant
v.ith the singing of the Yale psalm.
VESTRYMEN ELECTED
At a vestry meeting held last night'
J. Ralph Morrison and Lesley Mc-
Creath were elected vestrymen of St.
Stephen's Church.
Your Old Tires
Made New Again
Make* no difference how old they j
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you practically n new tire—and nave !
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32x3V4 .50 3ftx4Vi K. 50 i
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Send to-day (or our tire folder.
R.K. TIRE CO.
1401 RIDGK AVE., PHII.A.
If you have no old tiros we will
furnish you with a complete double
tread tire at 20 per cent, above the
above price list.
/VKenta Wanted. Good Proposition. '
FLORIDA
"BY SEA"
Baltimore to
JACKSONVILLE
(Calling at Savannah)
Delightful Sail
Fine Steamers. Low Fare*, neat Service.
Plan Your Trip. to Include
"Finest Coastwise Trips In tlie World'*'
Illustrated Hook let on Request.
MERCHANTS & MINERS TIIANS. CO.
W. P. TURNER, G. P. A, BaltO., Md.
GOVERNOR PLEADS
FOR ARMENIANS
Asks Pennsylvanlans to Assist
Four Million People War
Oppressed
Governor Brumbaugh to-day issued
a proclamation calling upon the peo
ple of Pennsylvania to contribute to
the relief of the distressed Armenians
calling attention to the conditions
which prevail in that country and to
the arrangements made to help the
people.
The proclamation is as follows:
Whereas, It has been brought to
nnptv that more than
four million people, noncombatants,
j
432 Market St. |
UP TILL NOON SPECIALS 11
No. 1 Hams .... 18cjLoin Pork Roast 18c ( 1
Frankfurters, . . 12|c|Spareribs, 12|ci
j
ALL DAY SPECIALS 1
Pure Pasteurized Creamery Butter with Meat %
orders, 37c J
Boneless Rib Roast, Pin Bone Steak . . 19c f
Rolled ....... 22c J-^ am }- )ur g Steak . . 14c 1 (
Fancy Chuck Koast, 1
15c Lean Boiling Beef, 1 I
Round Steak, ... 18c 12£ c ( i
J
Fancy Pork Chops. Special 20c 1 |
Leg Spring Lamb, 20c Pork Liver 5c
Stewing Lamb, . . 14c Bologna 12£ c
Shoulder Veal Roast, L ivel ; ' • ] 2 Jf
1 q Head Cheese .. . 12-2-c | 1
C Veal Loaf 18c 1
Stewing Veal 14c Berliner 18c ' I
Young Beef Liver, 10c Garlic Links .... 15c i
Buehler Bros. High Grade Butterine .... 21c' 1
Buehler Bros. Special Coffee 23c i '
Markets in Principal Cities of 13 States I
Main Office, Chicago, 111. J
Packing House, Peoria, 111. f
19
war oppressed, living- In Armenia and
Syria, are to-day in dire distress, fac
ing- famine, diseaso and death as the
winter settles over their stricken coun
tries, the call of these people for re
lief should touch every philanthropic]
and patriotic heart, and I earnestly
ask the good people of Pennsylvania
to make such contributions as the
providence of God and their own in
dustry has made possible, to succor
these most deserving people.
Contributions should be made di
rectly to the American Committee for
Armenian and Syrian Relief, 70 Flftli
avenue, New York City.
JTORMANDIE CREW TjANDTCD
Copenhagen, Qct. 20, via London.—•
The crew of the Swedish steamship
Normandie lande dto-day at Freder
ickshaven, the most northerly seaport
of Denmark. Their vessel was tor
pedoed and sunk by a German sub
marine. The Normarldl'e Was of 1",|94 3
tons gross. She was 2S' " "t long, 35
feet beam and built In 1905. - •j* d