2 CENTRAL PA. NEWS TWO BOY HUNTERS SHOT BY COMR ADE Accidental Discharge of Gun May Cause Loss of Eye to Earl v Witmer Millersburg, Pa., Nov. 2. Law- j rence Henninger. aged 14 years, while i hunting near the school house at KU- 1 linger on Wedfiesdav, shot Karl 'Wit- i mer and Robert Jury, tho former aged 11. and the latter lu years old, by the: accidental discharge of his gun. One of the pellets of shot entered the eye of the Witmer boy and some in the body. He is a son of David Witmer, a prominent Cpper Paxton township farmer. He was taken to the Harris-! burg Hospital in an effort to save the eye. The Jury boy was not seriously l injured. TEACHERS' IXSTITITE AT III.MX Hlain, Pa., Nov 2. The teachers' 1 local institute will be held here on Fri day and Saturday, December 15-16.1 A special progrum is being prepared.; Two speakers from a distance will, lecture at the evening session. KidneyMedicineDissolves Gravel Stones Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root sells well i with us because it invariably produces', good results in Kidney, Liver and i Bladder troubles. We sold a dollar bottle to one of the inmates of our Soldiers' Home near here, and after us ing It he brought in about one dozen gravel stones, some as large as a pea. which lie had passed. He states that he obtained wonderful relief from the ! use of Swamp-Root. ERNEST A. BROWN. Lafayette, Ind. Personally appeared before me this 2Sth of July, 1909, Ernest A. Brown, I of the Brown Drug Co.. who subscrib ed the above statement and made oath ! that the same is true in substance and in fact. DAVID BRYAN, Notary Public. I.fttfr to Dr. Kllmrr A. Co.. Blnghaniton. _>. Y. Prove Wliat Swamp-Root WiU IH> tor You Sent ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co.. Binghamton. N. Y., for a sample size bottle. It will convince anyone. You . will also receive a booklet of valuable information, telling about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention the Harrisburg Daily Telegraph. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size botUes for sale at all drug stores. A LETTER FROM A SOLDIER DOWN j IN FAR MEXICO • "My grandmother gave me a supply of Wonderoil to take with me in the 1 Mexican Campaign. She said it would b-i my ( best friend and it surely provt-d itself—nil thnt and more, home of the nights here are very cold and lots of the men contract hacking coughs. 1 have not yet seen a case that Wonder oil did not cure. A few days ago I strained the muscles of my right arm and the pain was ter rible. I couldn't sleep and didn't know what to do. Then I remembered Won deroil and got up in the middle of the night and rubbed it on the muscles. It eased the pain at once and soon I was . fast asleep. In the morning the arm was almost well and I was able to take care of my camp duties without pain. Wonderoil is certainly a Godsend to me." FIRST SERGEANT C. W. WATSON. Co. L, 2nd Infantry. NOTEi WONDEROIL, mentioned in the above Utter is the old-fashioned ointment that so many Harrisburg families are now using successfully to' cure stubborn coughs and colds. It sel i dom fails to relieve even the worst cases of hacking coughs. It can be se cured in Harrisburg from Geo. A. Gor ges and other reliable druggists.—Ad vertisement. CLERK'S RECOVERY AS TONISHES HARRISBURG Harrisburg people will marvel at this clerk's recovery. His stomach i was so bad he could eat very little. Everything fermented and soured. I Had stomach cough. Doctor advised buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc.. as mixed In Adler-i-ka. ONE SPOON FUL helped him INSTANTLY. Be cause Adler-i-ka empties BOTH large and small intestine it relieves ANY CASE constipation, sour stomach or i gas and prevents appendicitis. It has QUICKEST action of anything we ever sold. H. C. Kennedy, Druggist, S2l Marke*. street. I M esh Bags Kepaired Special SI.OO This splendid offer is FOR ONE WEEK ONLY, and includes refinishing and relining with either silk or kid, and made equal to new. We quote this low price to have you acquaint yourself with our Jewelry Repair Department, where all work is executed by skilled workmen—guaranteed to give satisfaction. r t Hw they Are Keceived How thy Are Repaired V / Vs. J ■— 1 1 THURSDAY EVENING, ttAMUSBURO HjSJft* TELEOKXFB NOVEMBER 2, 1916. Erecting Ne Charters For Southern Negroes at Enola I Enola, Pa.. Nov. 2. Yesterday i morning the Pennsylvania Railroad Company started work with a large force of carpenters near Mann's woods on the erection of a large building to ibe used for another lot of Southern negroes that they expect to have her© soon. BARN AND CONTENTS BCRNED Waynesboro. Pa.. Nov. 2. A barn 1 on the farm of David H. Mentzer, at ! Blue Rock, near Waynesboro, was de ' stroyed by Are yesterday afternoon. ' The machinery, wheat and hay crops j and gears were destroyed. The loss is placed a; ?3,500. GENERAL LEE'S POCKET COMB Waynesboro, Pa., Nov. 2. The Rev. F. F. Bahner. D. D., pastor of the Reformed Salem Church at Zullinger, and of Trinity Reformed Church. I Waynesboro, has been presented with ' a pocket comb that was the property i of that noted Confederate General ; Robert E. Lee. The comb was given to Norman Funk, of Zullinger, 53 years ago by General ~.ee, while the j Confederate army was retreating from Gettysburg, after the great battle In : July, 1563. He and members of his ! staff stopped at the home of Mr. Funk, near Hagerstown and ate supper. ■l,BBl LICENSES; FEW RABBITS I Sunbury, Pa.. Nov. 2. Hunter's ! from Sunbury reported poor luck, and ; comparatively few rabbits were killed. ; Four thousand, eight hundred and j eighty-one licenses were Issued in the I county. The oldest person to receive ia license was Daniel Reedy, 81 years j old, of Berwick. GLEE CLUB MEMBERS Annville. Pa., Nov. •. Professor Sheldon has selected twenty-four j men out of the large number of ap ' plieants for the Lebanon Valley Glee Club. They are: first tenors, Gregory, Deibler, Ramsey, Greer, Hallman, Jackowick; second tenors, Katerman, Fulford, Herring, M. Morrison, Thor ton, Haines; first bass, Walters, Zeigler, Price. M. Wingard. purbrow, Ehrhart; second bass, Keim, Hilbert, Stumbach, A. Long, A. Wingard. iGever; accompanist. R. Porter Camp bell and reader, D. R. Fink. MASONIC LODGE AT MT. I NTION Mt. Union, Pa.-. Nov. 2. Mt. Union is to have a lodge of Masons in the near future. A number of men who are.high in the order have gone 'to Pittsburgh and ordered furniture j and the new lodge will be organized ! soon. A hall has been secured in the new Saxe building. CHURCH 150 YEARS OLD Wrightsville. Pa., Nov. 2.—Quickel church congregation to-day began the , celebration of their one hundredth and fiftieth anniversary as a church, and the services will continue until Sunday next. The Rev. Dr. George Enders, of York, and other prominent clergymen and former pastors are in attendance. FAMILY HAS DIPHTHERIA Parkton. Pa., Nov. 2. - A child of Mr. and Mrs. William Bruhl, last week contracted diphetherla, and since then six children and the mother and , father have contracted the disease. 1 Five of the children have died, and [the others are in a serious condition, j It is feared the entire family will be '• wiped out by the disease. LANCASTER COUNTY DEATHS Marietta. Mrs. Lydia Eshelman, ! aged 11 1 years, a native of Cumberland | county, died Tuesday night at the Ore- I ville home. She was a member of the ilennonite church sixty years. Mrs. John Sentman. of Sunnyside. ' iged S2 years, died Tuesday night.] Her husband, two children and a: brother survives. WEST SHORE NEWS) Program For Perry County School Directors' Convention New Bloomfield, Pa., Nov. 2.—Final i | preparations were announced here to- ! i day for the annual convention of the ' Perry county sihool directors' conven. ' tion. which will be held here on Fri- 1 : day nnd Saturday. James M. Snyder,! of Liverpool, is president of the asso- i ciation. Professor L. E. McGinnes, superin- I tendent of the Steelton schools, is I scheduled for two speeches. R. M. I McNeal. of the State Department of Public InstrucUon, will also make an address. The program will include: Friday morning—Devotional exer ■ i-ises. the Rev. J. Thomas Fox. of New ! Bloomfield; president's address, James M. Snyder, of Liverpool. Friday afternoon and evening Pro fesor L. E. McGinnes will make the principal addresses, and on Saturday afternoon R. M. McNeal will speak. SPAGHETTI DINNER I OR CREW Enola, Pa., Nov. 2.—Members of .the eastbound hump crew in the local ; years enjoyed a spaghetti dinner here 'on Wednesday. Those present were November! Election Day! Thanksgiving! Surely These Are Times For New Clothes HpHESE stirring days find the Bowman Store wide awake and astir—doing the largest business in all its eventful history—racks, cabinets, every nook overflowing with scores upon scores of suits and overcoats freshly styled and freshly tailored—serving the men and young men who will help to elect a president next Tuesday, and youths besides, not yet arrived at the dignity of the voting age. You Should See 77iese From A. B. Kirschbaum Co. v There are belted back coats and box • % coats; loose sweeping coats and ''' " ~ John C. McFadden, John G. Erb, E. A. Btunner, William B. Benner, Martin L. Fans, J. T. Sweeney. Mike Corni cella, R. L. Eppley, Squire George N. Horning and Philip Angelli. PAfclY AT BELL FARM Marysville, Pa., Nov. 2. — A Hal lowe'en party was held on Tuesday evening at the home of James Bell, about eight miles west of here, by a number of persons from this place. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Cunningham. Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Geib and daughter Gretchen. Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Lilley, the Rev. and Mrs. R. A. Hartman, Misses Stella Deckard, Mary White. Grace White, Katherine Hench, Elizabeth Sadler. Katherine Roberts. Emma Roberts, Eeona Bare. Mary Smith, Sara Epplev and Helen Wise, J. Frank Leonard, Edgar Smith, V. B. Donahue. A. B. Taylor, M. I>. Wise. Edgar Roberts, Park Fessler, H. .1. Deckard. Mrs. Hugh Bell, Mrs. Myra Souder, Mirses Effie, Beatrice. Susan and Jane Bell, George Bell, JK, and James Bell. MARRIED AT NEW CUMBERLAND New Cumberland, Pa., N'ov. 2.—A wedding took place at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Negley, in Reno street, on Saturday evening, when Miss Han nah B. Rhive, of Penbrook. and Charles F. Shorey, of Harrisburg, were mar r K/ . ' r YOU HAD * NECK AS LONO A 8 THIS FELLOW. I/a AND HAD /!] SORE THROAT M ffl IdWN sl TONS I LINE WOUIO QUICKLY RELIEVE IT. 26c. and 60c. Hospital Size, (V V au Dauoaiarai ried by the Rev. A. G. Wolf, pastor of St. Paul's Lutheran Church. Mr. and Mrs. Shorey will reside at Penbrook. ENDORA GI'ILD TO MEET New Cumebrland, Pa.. Nov. 2.—On [ Friday evening the Endora Guild of | the Methodist Church will hold a ; meeting at the home of Mrs. Nellie I Nelson, in Bridge street. C.VRD ON TKIP New Cumberland, Pa., Nov. 2.—On I Tuesday evening the Mixed Card Club ; motored lo Harrlsburg and toured . Through the city to take in the Hal , | iowe'eu festivities, after which they i were served with dinner at the Co i , iumbus Hotel. Those in the party were Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Coover, Mr. i and Mrs. William Ennls, Dr. and Mrs. , S. A. Kirkpatrlck, Mr. and Mrs. Sher- I man Hull, Mrs. R. R. Fisher, Mr. and [Mrs. Keyworth. Mr. and Mrs. Kelberg .land Mrs. Norris. RECEPTION FOR NEW PASTOR j New Cumberland, Pa.. Nov. 2.—A public reception will be held in the ' | Church of God. New Cumberland, for . j the new pastor, the Rev. C. H. Heiges. ■ I TWO WEEKS' REVIVAL j New Cumberland. Pa.. Nov. 2.—On 1 Sunday morning Mrs. Murphy, an evangelist, will speak in Baughman ,I..lemorial Methodist Chuccli and will conduct evangelistic services there for two weeks. FIREMEN'S FAIR New Cumberland, Pa., Nov. 2.—The fMtlzens Hoso Company will open a lair, commencing on the evening of ! Thanksgiving Day. which will con i tinue ten days. kAI'FMAN-I)AVHOI'I" WEDDING New Cumberland. Pa., Nov. 2.—Miss ; Anna Dayhoff. of Elkwood. and John Kaufman, of New Cumberland, were married on Tuesday evening by the Hev. Dr. T. S. Wilcox, pastor of the Methodist Church, at the parsonage. PLAYGROUND SOCIAL Enola. Pa.. Nov. 2. —A committee [consisting of Samuel G. Hepford, ! chairman, William H. Fordney, secre tary, Mrs. Samuel G. Hepford, Mrs. William L. Fisher. Mrs. Edward N. Bachman. Mrs. Charles Miller and i Miss Margarette Famous, of the Enola i ]P. R. R. Y. M. C. A. Public Play- I ■ j srounds Association, met at the home j jof Mr. Hepford Wednesday evening , and completed plans for the social to be given this evening in the Y. M. C. A. j SURPRISE FOR MISS LEIDIG liPiiioyne, Pa., Nov. 2.—A surprise j i ' party was tendered Nellie Leidig on i I j her tenth birthday. In attendance' were Helen Snyder, Dorothy Frazier, Nellie Leidig, Francis Dildine, Helen Sprecker, Catherine Price, Helen iShuler, Gertrude Eshelman, Ilelen j j Hamburg. Edith Snyder. Robert Haag, Richard Bents, Paul Kunkle, Foster I Lease, Walter Armstrong, Edwin j | Shulcr, Glen Coover, Hugh Mickey, j Philip Boar and Floyd Dildine. PARTY AT HIGH SCHOOL I Lemoyne, Pa.. Nov. 2. A Hal- L 1 lowe'en party by members of the Ije . | moyne high school and members of • the faculty will be held at the high , | bchool auditorium to-morrow evening. FIRE COMPANY SOCIAL i West Falrview, Pa.. Nov. 2.—Tills , evening the Ladies" Auxiliary of the i Good Will Fire Company will hold a I social In the firehouse. Social and Personal News of Towns Along West Shorfe L> Wllber Gruver, of Enola, has re- i turned home from visiting at York I and Lebanon. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Benner and family, of Enola, are visiting relatives at Newport. 1 Mrs. James A. Huston and daugh-I 1 1 'er Catharine, of Enola. have returned ! s I home from Newvllle. Mrs. Joseph Mumma, of Enola, has j 3 returned from a visit to Columbia. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Landis, of Kan- i ma City. Mo., spen,t the week-end with Mr. and MVs. George Landis at Bella s vista. New Cumberland. Mrs. Thomas Nevln and son Traver, of Steelton, are guests of Mr. and Mrs.! William Knnis at New Cumberland. Mrs. Lanebaugh, of New Cumber- j land, went to Dawson, Pa., to spend two weeks. Mrs. Hoffman, of Kort Wayne, Ind., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. John Sny- I der at New Cumberland. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Rubright and ' soil Clarence, Frank Rubright and j Miss Ida Southern, of Philadelphia, I are guests ot Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Dong I at New Cumberland. SVPPKK FOR CLASS Dauphin. Pa., Nov. 2. —Members of i the Presbyterian Sunday School class | taught by Miss Bertha Sellers will hold | a Hallowe'en supper on Saturday even ing from 4 to 8 o'clock at the rest- j dence of Mrs. J. W. Hawthorne, cor- i ner of Erie and Church streets. BELL-A §MS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it. 25c at all druggists. ; >Coal That Insures House Comfort I ! C The coal that burns through and through—the coal that is K heat-giving fuel from solid to fine ash is the coal that in- # I J sures house-comfort during the winter months—and that is J 1 ) the nutshell story of Montgomery coal. It costs no more than C m inferior grades—it goes farther. Order your winter supply now. K I J.B.MONTGOMERY ( € 600—Either Phone. Third and Chestnut Streets { IF FOOD DISAGREES DRINK HOT WATER When food lies like lead in the stom- I acli and you have that uncomfortable, I distended feeling, it is because of in- I sufficient blood supply to the stomach, combined with the acid and food fer mentation. In such cases try the plan now followed in many hospitals and j advised by many eminent physicians of taking a teaspoonful of pure bisurated | magnesia in half a glass of water, as hot as you can comfortably drink It. i The hot water draws the blood to the I stomach and the bisurated magnesia, as any physician can tell you, instantly i neutralizes the acid and stops the food | fermentation. Try this simple plan j and you will be astonished at the ini • mediate feeling of relief and comfort that always follows the restoration of i the normal process of digestion. People who find it inconvenient at times to se cure hot water and travelers who are frequently obliged to take hasty meals poorly prepared, should always take two or three five-grain tablets of Bis urated Magnesia after meals to prevent fermentation and neutralize the acid in their stomach. G. A. Gorges can sup ply you.—Advertisement. I Use Telegraph Want Ads
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers