Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, November 03, 1916, Page 4, Image 4

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    4
s ; turday ,B REAL SHOE Jlwifil
Evening " Hrrisburg,
Tin io p. m. 2/ 7-Market St.-217 p na .
< >■ /
Gray! Dull! Bronze! Tan!
Patent! and Mahogany!
spa Boots For Women
'W ONE & TWO-TONE PATTERNS kI; [
I f ACTUAL $6 and gP_Qn M j
$7 VALUES, AT J?'
FT F IUCT novelty patterns, Conservative yet stylish / /f* ■>
(. . ■■■•rSaP&t l\ in african, tan. patent new Fall and Winter * ry£.
M •vv.'-'SiWial \ a,ld dull, with white models, in patent colt, Ijrji HB
tops; battleship gray, dull kid and bronze, If*/.
with white tops; one- with kid or cloth tops; jr'M
tone efTe-cta. In mahojr- high lace or button A f'iMOßpW#
'-jfe.' l M any and bronze; ull models. •
101 And many other popular Fall >
eluding English walking shoes
Growing Girls' )fsPECIAL FOR WOMEN)(MEN'S FALL
Patent and Dull JZh NEW FALL AND .„- SJ Q£
Low Heel Shoes V J ™ "TIES -*} 2=
Comfortable stylish mode.l. Vi t iKr • .Jf S /X.
In patent and dull, with H ?■■ llff V " " >9
cloth or kid | . jW
an" a™ t'lfa'i /' '"•[|\ tlon °* olever
i? *• • va ' ue - Winter styles, ':•(Uf
mSHSSmi S P- /i >WW -*hlKh lace v\ \S\ '• • (fl
cial Price, V "Xj\. and button \
and chan^
soles; all sizes.
Vv / V
BOVS' SHOES CHILD'S SHOES IXFAXTS' SHOES CHILDREN'S WOMEN''®
Stout calfskin Good „ 0u n d Dongola and pat- Fu,™ ra ( a SI.IPPEHS
upper, solid soles. ma kes. in velvet .. . ... . felt tops; leather Fur and ribbon
button or lace; and du!l leather; 1 * soles; sizes 8% to trimmed felt tops;.
sizes to 13*; res- , . g . reEU i ar vet or cloth tops; -• at ...70c in all colors; flex
ular J1.50 values; sizes to 5. regular Sizes up to 8. ible sole"' iu all
pair 1.25 $1.26 grades.. .Bsc sizes to 5, at..Boc pair c sizes; pair 08t-
BOYS' GOOD SOLID 1 f BOYS'Hl a h Top SHOES % f GIRLS' PATENT AND
School & Dress SHOES cf STOtIT KMC * R(>O S D *S SS!,HES
Quality that will tops, made ° f 1) for t able, fine
outwear most stout bla c K M 1 M wearing- shoaa
S2.SO grades; solid I kangaroo with* | / that sell else-PP*TP ,,—, I
makes in tan. pat- B ®i \ good stnrdv| "Wj I f where at $2 lil *•! I
ent and dull leath- fl soles; two A j and J2.50. Dull! *® | I
era; button or blu- U 1 J*. buckles and A / and patent I —I 1
cher: all Bizes to I "®J Jtp waterproofed— I J i with cloth vel-'f I :fc
boys' BV4. IM £ga\ a real $2.25 1 vet and' fl ©#
•INMM HS/IA
MARRIAGE OF
BOY-ED HALTED
Kaiser's Consent to Wed Vir
ginia Mackay - Smith Sup
pressed at Wireless Station
New York, Nov. 3. The overzeal
ousness of an American,naval censor
blighted the romance of Captain Boy-
Ed, recalled naval attache to the Im
perial German Embassy at Washing
ton and Miss Virginia Mackay-Smith,
of that city, daughter of the late
Bishop Alexander Mackay-Smith, of
Philadelphia. Their engagement was
first reported a year before the war.
Immediately after the captain had
obtained Miss Mackey-Smith's affirma
tive answer, he filed, through Ambas
sador Bernstorff, the customary re
quest for the Kaiser's permission, an
iron-clad tradition in ' the German
army and navy. Pains were taken for
Its careful transmission through a me-
HIM!®
la the name of the world's best polish for Furniture, Pianos, Vic
troias, Autos, Woodwork, Hardwood Floors, and all varnished
•urfaces. It dusts, it cleans, it polishes at the same time. It is put
up in new patent-top bottle. All sizes from 25c to $2.50. Try it.
Absolute Guarantee
If RijßY GIDSS is not a better Polish
than I anything else of its land,
you may return the bottle and
we • will refund your s money.
Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart
We rwommtad Harden** Cadar 03 Mopt
FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH NOVEMBER 3, 1916.
dium known only to the Embassy offi
cials. This was early In 1915.
Confident that the Imperial answer
would be prompt and affirmative. Cap
tain Boy-Ed and his bride-to-be be
gan planning. It is said that even the
date was set. Meanwhile there devel
oped the series of "plot" sensations
involving the German naval attache
and his conferee. Captain Von Papen,
and culminating in the demand by the
American government for their recall.
The captain waited vainly for the ex
pected word from the Kaiser. In
stead, last December, came official
word from Berlin that the Kaiser had
complied with the American request
for recall of the two attaches.
Arriving in Berlin, Boy-Ed was
greeted by a host of friends, delighted
to see him but expressing great sur
prise in questioning him: "But where
is the bride?"
The mortified captain had only one
answer: "His Majesty ignored my re
quest for his permission." Then at
last he learned what had happened.
The Kaiser, he was informed, had
complied with the request, and a wire
less dispatch was sent to the captain.
It developed that the American naval
officer acting as censor at the wireless
station, regarded with the utmost sus
picion this message. So he promptlv
suppressed it, and Captain Boy-Ed
and his bride-to-be never heard of it.
Champion Melon Eater Is
Training For Next Season
Berkeley, Cal.. Nov. 3. Thomas S.
Vanaszk, world's champion, Is in
training. Vanaszk, a senior in the col
lege of letters and science at the Uni
veristy of California, says that next
summer he'll either break his own
record or bust something trying.
He holds the title of world's cham
pion cantaloupe eater. Last summer
he worked in Imperial valley. ' Before
his tent* he put a marker, and every
time he scalped a cantaloupe he added
a notch. A\ hen he got through there
were "S notches, an average of 28 a
day. Now he's practicing on oranges
and cup custard, just to keep his hand
in.
Wise Judge Tells Young
Couple to Bar Relatives
Sioux City, lowa, Nov. 3. The fol
lowing advice to newly married cou
ples is given by Foster G. Iddings,
Sioux Ctty police court judge:
"There's no house big enough to
shelter two families.
"Too much mother-in-law is not a
good thing for young couples.
"Too much father-in-law has the
same effect.
"A wife should Jeave her husband
to visit relatives at least two weeks
every year. On her return she appre
ciates him better.
"A young couple's place is by them
selves. Their battles are their own."
When Snakes Were Killed
Ghosts Left This House
Barboursville, W. Va., Nov 3.
The mystery that has for years sur
rounded the haunted house on the
hill b:ick of here has been solved as
a lesull of Green Simkins, a Logan
county miner, his wife and his six
children moving into the house.
Peculiar noises have emanated from
the building at night, and for months
weird stories have been told of the
wraiths holding high carnival there.
Simkins, a stranger, didn't know the
house was "haunted." Mrs. Simkins
had occupied the place only a short
time when the mysterious sound ter
rified her.
She took a gun and wefit upstairs,
where she found the cause of the noise
In the maneuvers of a dozen black
snakes that had taken charge of that
part of the building. She was so
frightened she dropped the gun and
M- reamed for help. Two men passing
killed the snakes.
nVSIKESS AXIOMS
There are certain general experiences
which must be borne in inind—
a. Trade follows leaders.
b. Trade follows convenience lines, i.
e., lines of least resistance.
c. Sections have buying powers whleh
must be considered in fixing quotas and
allotting salesmen.
d. Foreign population reduces per
capita volume of retail sales.
Theve are many other equally im
portant qualities. In the market study
it Is generally important to audit the
application to your conditions of these
f:eneral experiences.—E. St. Elmo
-ewls, In The Engineering Magazine for
.October.
HOW GOSSIP
MAKES SCANDAL
Beatrice Fairfax Points Out
Wrongs of "Knocking" on
Fellows
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX
The critical faculty is one in which
no human being is lacking. No mut
ter how lowly the station of an in
dividual or how under-developed his
mentality, he tind.s someone to look
down upon and criticise. It seems a
foregone conclusion that everyone in
the world of to-day Is going to
"knock" just about everyone else.
"How could she do this?" "How
dare he do that?" "How under the
sun could they be guilty of such
conduct?" such comments fairly liy
whenever two are gathered together.
Human beings confess readilj; enough
that they like a harmless bit of gos
sip. and fail utterly to realize that
"harmless bit of gossip" grows in <he
telling and assumes the proportions
of a harmful bit of scandal.
"With every breath a reputation
dies." Hideously true! We have
often discussed in the little circle of
ours the evils of gossip its unfair
ness to others, its cruelty to its ob
jects. But now it is worth while to
consider its greater harmfuiness
which is subjective.
None of us can be sure what we
would do were we in the position in
which some one else is placed. The
old story of John Bunyan and the
criminal who was going to be hanged
applies all through life. Said he:
"There, but for the grace of God, goes
John Bunyan." And there, but for
the grace of God, goes any one of us
In any set of circumstances, however
unimaginable, or contemptible, or
painful.
How is any one of us to know
what we would have done in cir
cumstances which tempted some one
else to wrong-doing or even to his
undoing?
Any one who has a poor heredity,
who is brought lip in a bad environ
ment, who has the handicap of
physical ill-health to swing his
mentality from the healthful, and
who meets the particular set of
temptations best calculated to break
down his own set oti defenses, is
pathetically likely to yield to
temptation.
To one of us money Is the temp
tation that is practically irresistible.
Hasn't each of us heard some sturd
ily honest individual say to a bank
cashier or to the handler of money
in any large concern, "I wouldn't
want to be In your place. Doesn't
handling all that money every day
drive you almost mad with the
longing to have it for your own?"
Now, probably, the particular in
dividual who was advanced to that
position is there pretty largely be
cause he is an individual of com
mercial honesty. Most absconding
treasurers and cashiers run away,
not because they have yielded to
the temptation directly due to their
tnoney responsibility, but because
of some outside influence the
races, cards, drink or even an il
licit love affair. And probably an
Individual who meant to be honest
and who thought he was honest
yielded to just the particular
temptation an inherited and culti
vated tendency toward a certain
sort of weakness made too big for
his power of resistance.,
Cultivating strong inhibition and
strong power over ourselves is
likely to help any one of us to re
sist temptation. But not all of us
know this. Not all of us train our
selves early in life to resist our own
weaknesses. The self-indulgent boy
whose parents let him have his own
way and who makes everybody else
let him have his own way is train
ing himself for a manhood in which
he will want something to which he
has no right, but which his own
desperate desires to have what he
wants when he wants it will make
him the victim.
How can any of us know what
set of circumstances makes one man
a thief and another an honored citi
zen? The thing for us to do is to
get at the foundations, help raise
i standards of honesty and virtue,
help make other rewards possible
for virtue than merely virtue it
self. What we need is to get at
causes of crime. So at once we
eliminate to an even greater extent
our own cruel tendency to Judge it.
And that swing* us back full cir
cle to the magnificent summing up
of it all which each of us may find
in the Book of Books:
"Judge not, that ye be not
judged."
KOOTBAM, TAUGHT THIS
YOUTH HOW TO DUCK LIFE
There is a story called "Broken Bibs"
in the November American Magazine in
which the one who tells the facts says:
"Whenever I think of the fir£t three
or four years of Burr's married life,
the same surging pride rushes through
mv veins as when I watched him, from
the grandstand of cheering people that
November day long ago, scramble out
from beneath the pile of some dozen
human beings and start out on that
record run of his. Five, ten, fifteen,
twenty yards 'would he slip by them
all?), twenty-five . . . thirty . . .
almost half way across that field, and
fall with a thud, finally tackled square
ly around hi* waist, five yards from the
goal post! With a broken rib, too, we
learned later!
"It seemed to me, durins: Burr's
struggle for Elsie's health and happi
ness, that ho was nutting up as grim
and Invincible h fight as in that game
of his years ago on the gridiron. He
bung on tight to his place in the law
firm. Doctors' and nurses' bills were
as constant an item in bis early mar
ried life as food and rent."
Must Pay $33,000 Alimony
I HARRY 5. HAPKN£S*n
Harry S. I-larkness, son of L. V.
I-larkness, the late Standard Oil mil-'
llonaire. must pay his wife $33,000
alimony each year. The judge in
Westchester county. N. Y., who gave
her a decree of divorce lixed the an
nual payment at that sum.
I
Troup 9 s Victrola Outfits
J. H. Troup Music House (TROUP BUILDING) 15 S. Market Square
Three Specials for Today
conai*tlnf of a beautiful Vic- obtainable either In oak or
.SStjHwB trola In golden oak or hand- mahogany, made up with the
some mahbgany finish, and latest style Victrola XIV,
Baal jj| -worth of records of your SB.OO worth of record of
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Mahogany Total $79.50 Any
or oak. PAY $3 MONTHLY complete T t , tucnA
with record Totftl *158.00
album -PAY $S MONTHLY "
made up of a large Victrola, SPECIAL!
style XI, in mahogany, fumed
or B0,(len oalt nlßh . an< J your These three outfits are only a few of many
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tor records—ail for have Victrolas from sls to S3OO, all sold at
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Victrola XI 1 #
Total $106.00 Delivery at once. No waiting.
Mahogany
or oak. PAY ?c MONTHLY Get yours in time for Sunday. Come today.
J. H. Troup Music House
Troup Building 15 S. Market Street
Largest Victor Record Library In the City
Ask to Hear Our Choice of the November Records
REVIEWS WILSON'S
POLICY /IS SERIES OF SHIFTS
President's Changes of Mind in Submarine Policy Cited;
Americans Still in Peril
Washington, Nov. S.—Ono hundred
and fifty men, women, and children
were killed by German and Austrian
submarines while President Wilson,
during a period of fifteen months, os
cillated from a policy of holding the
central powers to "strict accountabil
ity" to a policy of warning Americans
to shunt merchantmen of belligerent
nationality, and then back again.
Despite the President's threat to
sever diplomatic relations with Ber
lin last April, the menace to the safety
of Americans on the high seas con
tinue, to the alarm of the administra
tion and of the Democratic managers
who have devoted fourteen pages of
their campaign textbook to description
of Mr. Wilson's "great diplomatic
triumph" over Germany.
Official advices to the State depart
ment, carefully suppressed from the
public, disclose that the torpedoing
of merchantmen has continued with
steadily increasing activity ever since
the President dispatched his ultima
tum to Berlin, and Germany agreed
to modify its submarine warfare,
pending a demonstration of Mr. Wil
son's ability to force Great Britain to
lift the blockade.
Americans Still Imperiled
Only within the last week American
consuls have reported that two Ameri
cans were on the Strathtay, torpedoed
by a German submarine. Although no
lives were lost, this incident, together
with the discussion of the question in
the reichstag, arouses the fear among
administration officials that Germany
is .about to resume ruthless submarine
warfare.
Likewise, unknown to the public, a
serious situation is developing in the
relations of the United States and Aus
tria. Last June Mr. Wilson called
upon Vienna to apologize for the
shelling of the American steamship
Pctrolite, and the wounding of several
members of the crew by an Austrian
submarine, nearly a year ago. Aus
tria refused to apologize, in notes
suppressed by the State department,
and the administration now iJi hag
gling with Vienna over this question
of national honor.
Throughout the controversy the cen
tral powers have yielded in each in
stance just enough to prevent the
President at the time from breaking
diplomatic relations.
The Democratic managers contend
that the President's "ultimatum was
effective." They fail to explain, how
ever, why the solemn threat to sever
diplomatic realtlons would not have
been as potent as In April, 1916, had
it been made by the President in Feb
ruary, 1915, when Germany announc
ed its intentions, or even in April,
19' 5, after the first American had
been killed, on the torpedoed Falaba,
but before 114 American perished on
the Lusltanla.
Mr. Wilson ignored the deaths of
Americans on the Falaba and Gulf
light till after the liUsltanla tragedy
and then acted only after proclaiming
his conviction that there is such a
thing as being "too proud to fight."
Refusing to put the country in a state
of adequate defense and shifting his
attitude on the rights of Americans on
the high seas, he succeeded for fifteen
months only in convincing Germany
that, he did not mean what he said.
The vagarious course pursued by the
President in the interminable subma
rine controversy with the central pow
ers is set forth graphically in the fol
lowing chronology:
1015
February 4 Germany proclaims
submarine warfare on merchantmen.
February 10 Wilson says he will
hold Germany to "strict accountabil
ity," and do all necessary to "safe
guard American lives and property."
February 16 Germany refuses to
bo deterred.
February 20 Wilson asks Ger
many and England to abandon illegal
warfare by agreement; Germany ac
cepts, England rejects conditions. .
March 28 British steamer Falaba
sunk by German submarine; 100 lives
lost, Including one American.
April 6 Germany expresses regret
for killing of American on Falaba
while Wilson ignores incident.
April 28 American steamer Cush
ing attacked by German aeroplane,
while Wilson continues silent on Fal
aba.
May 1 American steamer Gulf
light disabled by German submarine,
at cost of three American lives, while
Wilson continues silent on Falaba.
May 7 British liner Lusitania
sunk by German submarine: 1,250
passengers, including 114 Americans,
perish; Wilson still silent on killing of
Americans on the Falaba and Gulf
light.
May 10 Wilson speaking in Phila
delphia says there is such a thing as
being "too proud to flght."
May 11—Wilson amid storm of dis
approval of "to proud to flght" speech
says he was not referring to Lusitania
tragedy.
May 18 Wilson sends note to Ger
many asking satisfaction for the kill
ing of Americans on the Lusitania,
Falaba and Gulflight and saying that
he will not "omit any word or any act"
to safeguard American rights on the
high seas.
May 17 —Secretary of State Bryan
confers with Austrian Ambassador
Dumba, who immediately reports to
central powers that administration will
not back up Lusitania note.
May 25 American steamer Ne
braskan torpedoed by Gorman subma
rine; crew and ship saved.
May 28 Germany expresses regret
for killing Americans, but contends
Lusitania was auxiliary cruiser carry
ing soldiers and ammunition.
June 1 Germany offers reparation
for Gulflight deaths.
June 2 German ambassador ob
tains consent of Wilson to delav pend
ing dispatch of Dr Meyer Gerhard to
Berlin.
June B—Secretary Bryan, fearing
war with Germany, resigns.
June 9 Wilson, In note greatly
moderated In tone following Bryan's
war alarm, urges Germany to "safe
guard Americans in its submarine war
zone.
June 28 British merchantman
Armenian sheyed In flight by German
submarine; ten Americans killed aTter
surrender of ship; incident ignored by
Wilson.
July 9 British steamer Orduna,
carrying American passengers, assail
ed without warning, hit effectually by
German submarine.
July 21 Wilson informs Germany
that further disregard of neutral rights
will be deemed by the United States
"deliberately unfriendly."
July 25 American merchantman
Leeianaw torpedoed and sunk by Ger
man submarine after crew debarks in
lifeboats.
August 18 Von Bernstorff assures
Lansing torpedoing of passenger ships
will cease.
August 19 British liner Arabic
torpedoed and sunk without warning;
twenty passengers, including two Am
ericans, killed.
September 1 Germany promises
to sink no more liners without warn
ing and safeguarding lives of passen
gers.
September 7 Germany says Ara
bic intended to ram submarine.
September 9 Germany says at
tempt to torpedo Orduna was a mis
take.
October 5 Germany disavows act
of submarine commander In sinking
Arabic and agrees to pay reparation.
November 7 ltalian liner Ancona
torpedoed and sunk by Austrian sub
marine with loss of eleven American
lives.
December 6 Wilson, in brusque
note, demands satisfaction by Aus
tria.
December 15 Austria disputes
American version of Ancona attack,
and absolves submarine commander
from blame.
December 19 Wilson In rejoinder
strikingly softened in tone expresses
hope that Austria will comply with his
demands
December 29 Austria replies thav
it has punished the submarine com
mander and will pay an indemnity.
December 30 British liner Persia
sunk in Mediterranean, supposedly by
si submarine; United States Consul
killed.
1916
January 7 Von Bernstorff ex
plains that German submarine com
manders have orders to sink no ships
without warning in Mediterranean but
that such orders apply only to passen
ger liners in British isles war zone.
January 18 Secretary Lansing;
with approval of President,
to allies that merchantmen be
bited from carrying defensive arma
ment and announces that United
States is on point of treating any mer
chantman armed, even defensively, as
a warship.
February 10 Germany, taking ad
vantage of this attitude of United
Slates, announces that after March 1
it will sink, without warning, all mer
chantmen carrying guns.
February 15 Elihu Root, in Re
publican keynote speech, excoriates
Wilson submarine policy.
February 16 Wilson repudiate#
his position on armed ships announced
January 18, and declines to settle Lusi
tania case until Germany calls off
proclaimed new submarine warfare.
February 21 Senators Stone and
Kern and Representative Flood inform
Wilson of anxiety of Congress concern
ing consequences of his shifts of atti
tude on armed ships.
February 24—Wilson writes Stone
that Germany has no right to treat
armed merchantmen as warships.
February 25 Wilson orders that
no action be taken on resolutions in
Congress to warn Americans from
traveling on armed ships.
February 29 Wilson demands ac
tion on warning resolutions.
March 3 Senate tables Gore reso
lution warning Amerirtins off armed
ships, and declaring that the sinking
of armed ships resulting in the death
of Americans, would be cause for war.
March 7 House tables McLemoro
warning resolution.
Sussex Is Torpedoed
March 24—British passenger steam
er Sussex torpedoed; several Ameri
cana injured.
March 25 British merchantmen
Manchester Engineer, Eagle Point,
Englishman and Berwindvale sunk by
German submarines; crows, including
Americans, saved.
April 10 Germany expresses
doubt that Sussex was ship sunk by
German submarine at same time and
place.
April 19—Wilson sends note to Ger
many threatening to break diplomatic
relations unless submarine warfare be
reformed or abundoned; informs Con
gress of step.
May 5 Germany admits German
submarine torpedoed Sussex; says
commander has been punished; agrees
to suspend illegal submarine warfare,
threatening to resume if Wilson fail*
to coerce England into lifting block
ado. .
May 8 Wilson accepts German re
ply, taking exception to contingency
threat.
Juno 21 Wilson "requests that a
apology by made" by Austria in
case of the Petrolite.
After the acceptance of the German
reply in the Sussex case President Wil
son caused Secretary I Jin sing to in
quire of the Berlin government in
what -manner the submarine comman
der was punished. Germany declined
to give the Information although tho
request was repeated and the adminis
tration finally dropped the matter.-
Arthur Sears Henning in Philadelphia
North American.
■ *
HOT TEA BREAKS j
A COLD—TRY THIS
Get a small package of Hamburg
Breast Tea, or as tho German folks
call it, "Hamburger Brust Thee," at
any pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful
of the tea, put a cup of boiling water
upon it, pour through a sieve and
drink a teacup full at any time. It Is
the most effective way to break a
cold and cure grip, as it opens the
pores, relieving congestion. Also
loosens the bowels, thus breaking a
cold at once.
It is Inexpensive and entirely vege
table, therefore harmless.