2 CENTRAL JMERRY CHRISTMAS FOR LITTLE FOLKS Mrs. Eckley B. Coxe Preparing For Usual Gifts For Thou sands of Children Hazleton, Pa.. Nov. 10. Mrs. F.ek- j ley B. Coxe, of Drifton. is buying through her representatives, thou sands of dollars' worth of presents to j bo distributed at Christmas time to] the 4,000 children of the miners at i Coze collieries of the Hazleton dis trict. Mrs. Coxe has been Santa Claus j to the boys and girls, under 14 years. \ at the Coxe operations for more than ! forty years. The gifts consist of toys j of all kinds, clothing and candies and ( are given out at the public school! buildings a day or two before Christ mas. Recent Deaths in Central Pennsylvania Waynesboro. Mrs. Lydia Bell, wi dow of Charles Bell, died at her home j here yesterday. She was 7 S years old, j and the last of her family. WrightsviUe. Jacob Adamore, aged 84, a veteran of the Civil war. j and who was in the Siege of the Seven I Oaks. Va., died Wednesday night, lie j was a member of the Grand Army, and j the Lutheran church. Six children > Jid a number of grandchildren sur- i vive. Marietta. Walter Weaver, asred 47, a native of Lancaster county, died ! at the county hospital Wednesday j night. His only survivor is a sister. Xew Holland. Mrs. Margaret A. Eshelman, aged 76, died Wednesday! night, from injuries received in a fall. A daughter and a sister survive. Florin. Mrs. Caroline Nentwig. 1 aged 86, the oldest woman in this > section of Lancaster county, died Wed-, nesdav evening. She is survived by I four children and a number of grand children. f. ' ■ ' ' ■ " "' ' " " ' " 1 1 | Your protection if against counterfeits Every package and every tablet bears 4 "The Bayer Cross—Your Guarantee / 1 of Purity'* / v ■ I >OC ket ® oxe * Bottle* of 24 guarantee that the mono- / Zi ' acetieacidesterofsalicylic- /_ . 1 mm. , -*y acid in these tablets is of |R y' R 5 reliable STERH-Rll gjTEK,:TSI 1 209 WALNUT SF. 1 ZOST~WALNUT ST. I 1 Am Neither a Wizard Nor a Wonder %* f 5 I can not move mountains nor perform mir ables; but, gee. I've been lucky to tie up with 2^ the Wjres-t wholesale Shoe Speoiali'sts in the j~ *' I'niteil .States at a time when leather is scarcest and prices are highest. They are shipping me, daily, the newest sjootls at your prtwa. | „ Jin If yon want smart Shoes at popular price#, I KBEbjjkiSfi have them for you. Ask your neighbor. styles o^f *££? Eiack ====>, Juliets Gun Metal Lace THM \ $1 AQ EngHsh Boot ' 8 - JK L 1 | / tpA#**/ inch top. New 6 : j „ heel, '\ 0 : / >tirses 1 o : I Comfort ft* O A * / l--.ee or UK ° * Button Shoes ™ I f for women; 1 * VnUSyraSQ® I_ • \ $3 quality Ladies' Black * A Arp ii C Glazed Kid 8-inch * y&ghffl Lace Boots; Gen- ) uine Goodyear ' . jC S 7 Women s * {•J.yp A'l Dressy Welts. Leather JK' // I Gun Metal // AfJk Button shoes; Louis Heel, / ' / S3 quality, at ff $5.00 value, at $2.45 $3.95 feSSS® FRIDAY EVENING, CORNWALL BLAST ! f FURNACE STARTS All of Lebanon County's Nine I Iron Plants Now in Active ; Operation ! Lebanon, Pa., Nov. 10. Yesterday j ' morning fires at the North Cornwall 'furnace were lighted and the last of j j the nine blast furnaces in Lebanon j i county was put in operation. The j 1 North Cornwall stack was practically j : abandoned fifteen years ago when the j j Lackawanna Iron and Steel Company j j took over the three furnace plants of ! ! the Freeman estate at Cornwall. But the imperative need of foun- ! J dry iron led the company to spend i ! 5150,000 to put the North Cornwall j plant in condition for operation. The j ; company is making foundry iron at I iho Bird Coleman twin furnaces at j Cornwall and ferro-mnnganese at its j twin Colebrook furnaces here. Cold* Cnime Headache nnU Grip LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE re moves the cause. There is only one | "Brorao Quinine." E. \V. GROVE'S sip:- <j nature is on box. liic.—flVdvertisesnent. I Columbia Soldier Home to Attend Mother's Funeral Columbia. Fa.. Nov. 10. George! i Buchanan, chief cook, of Company C, [ i Fourth Pennsylvania Infantry, V. S. i 1 N. G.. came home last evening from j i El Paso. Texas, to attend the funeral j | of his mother. Mrs. Amanda Turner. I He was on the way four days, and the | fare was more than SIOO. He has a fur lough of fifteen days. JUNIOR CLASS BANQUET Elisabethville. Pa.. Nov. 10. This, evening the junior class of the local high school will tender a reception I and banquet to the Freshmen class, ! their parents and directors in auditor- j ium . There will be music and ad dresses. Barrisbxtrg telegpaph Schleisner's Men's Shop Men Who Are Particular Are you in this class—are you careful of style—are you careful of appearances—are you careful of materials used in garments— are you careful of the workmanship, fit and trimmings that enter a first class Suit or Overcoat—are you? The basis of the buying in this store is to cater to men who are careful and par ticular to the minutest point. We know only one standard whether it be our 15.00, 20.00 or 25.00 garments. We are careful of the de tails, and price for price we excel in values. Try us for your next suit or overcoat. 28-30 and 32 N. 3rd St. Wife in Dream Sees Place Where Husband's Body Lay Duncannon. Pa., N'ov. 10.—A very peculiar circumstance lias been re cently disclosed regarding the finding of the body of Gustav Dill, of this place, who flrowned in the Susque hanna river almost two weeks ago. Immediately after the drowning ex perienced rivermen started to drag every possible current and eddy where the body might have lodged, but with out avail. The days of continuous effort without finding the body at last forced the searchers to forego the quest. It was then the miraculous hap pened. His wife, who had been almost frantic because of the failure to find the body, dreamed that she saw the place where the body lay. Every de tail and circumstance of the recovery of the body and the funeral appeared in the dream. Although a stranger In the com munity and totally unfamiliar with fhe river, she described a particular spot of the river with such wonderful accuracy that she finally prevailed upon two of the oldest rivermen to try onco more. Going to the place that *lie described, they dropped a grap pling hook and recovered the body in lesj than five minutes. GRADK TEACHKRS CHOSEN Mt. Union. Pa.. Nov. 10. At a meeting of the" school board a new and wise precedent was set for Hunt ingdon county, when the board elected Mrs. Guy Gambel and Mrs. Roy Krepps as teacher of two primary grades organized because of the over flow, there being 100 pupils of the first grade not provided for until the pres ent, except on half time. Both teach ers were formerly on the staff here and were considered among the best teachers of the county. YOUNG WOMEN MAY AVOID PAIN Need Only Trust to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, says Mrs. Kurtzweg. Buffalo, N.Y.—" My daughter, whose picture is herewith, was much troubled 'dwfro'jk!' month and they dpFl§^g|&jl would sometimes be bac * that %voul^ like acute in |BT| flammation of soma llsST* "||j organ. She read |!j]Wgg# II| your advertisement ' wjs - 'V the newspapers ' j and tried Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- '■&*' ■ ■ j table Compound. She praises it highly as she has been relieved of all these pains by its use. All mothers should know of this remedy, and all young girls who suffer should try it."—Mrs. MATILDA KURTZWEG, 529 High St., Buffalo, N. Y. Young women who are troubled with painful or irregular periods, backache, headache, dragging-down sensations, fainting spells or indigestion, should : take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable ' Compound. Thousands have been re stored to health by this root and hert remedy. If you know of any younar wo man who is sick and needs help ful advice, ask her to write to the J.<ydia E. Pinkhain Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Only women will receive her letter, and it will b( held in strictest confidence. NUXATED IRON Increases strength ol delicate, nervous, run ! Mjf f■ T I 1111 l down people 200 pel j I I I I cent, in ten days in ELI 1 I *** many instances. s)oc forfeit if it fails at full explanation in IHI *J J3 ■ ■ large article soon tc hHaMthkU ap^ ar in this paper, druggist about It. Croll Keller, G. A. Gorgas always carry it in stoO Mechanicsburg G. A. R. r Still Mustering Recruits • j Meclianicsburg, Pa., Nov. IP. ; ■ evening the Col. H. I. Zinn Post, No. | 41 o. Grand Army of the Republic, mus . ; tered in a candidate and held the annual • | inspection and campflre. Adjutant N. A. . | Walmer, of Post No. 58, Harrlsburg, : ! was the installing: officer and was ac • i cotnpanied by a number of comrades. ' | Following the regular business session. | j impromptu speeches were given and - j supper was served later at Bobb's Cafe, East Main street. 1 KILLS I.AUGE COOX ; j New Germantown, Pa., Nov. 10. .j B. F. Henry killed a coon which ; weighed 18 pounds, the largest one 1 killed in Toboyne township for many | years. 1 ! McMILLEN BEST SPELLER | Blain, Pa., Nov. 10.—At an Interesting ' j spelling school last evening at Stony . | i Point sclioolhouse by Miss Mae Moyer, • ' ; teacher, Ilwight McMillen was best ' _ | speller. The building was filled with; " appreciative spectators. The trap word ' j was "polls." HOTEL OWNER DIES v ] Waynesboro, Pa., Nov. 10.—Mrs.! c I Emma K. Ladd, a native of Waynes- I . | boro, and owner of the Mt. Royal Inn, ] 1 ' Pen Mar, died at the llagerstown hos ,• j pital suddenly on Wednesday from , ,-1 heart trouble. She was 48 years old 1 -1 and her husband lives at Baltimore. ! t Mrs. Ladd had been operating the ho - j tel for the past twenty years. } ! POSTCARDS FOR EVANGELIST 1 j Waynesboro, Pa., No. 10.—The Rev. | , j D. K. Clapper, of Myersdale, now con- i ducting evangelistic services In the ! | Church of the Brethren, here, was ten- i j dered a birthday postcard shower at \ ! the home of the Rev. H. Mitchell Stover j j last night in honor of his fifty-second ! J birthday anniversary, JOHN VILE DIES ! Waynesboro, Pa., Nov. 10.—John Wile, i lone of the oldest citizens of Mont Alto! near Waynesboro, is dead. lie was • | bom in 1832, and is survived by these ichildren: Mrs. J. L. Smith, Waynes-| | boro: Mrs. Daniel Heefner, Mont Alto; : Vrs. David Roclt, Quinev; Mrs. Edward B. Sprow, Highsplre, and Mrs. Emmert I Maugans, Harrisburg. e j PARCEL POST SALE r Duncannon, Pa., Nov. 10.—Ladies of the Methodist. Episcopal church will ' 1 hold a parcel post sale in the audi f jtorium of the church this evening at S 9 o'clock. lIIRLE CLASS OFFICE!!S a ; Halifax, Pa.. Nov. 10.—Indies' Bible | class of tiie United Brethren Sunday I j school met on Tuesday evening at the t home of Mrs. Ryan Bressler, in Mar -3 ! street, and the following officers . I were elected: President, Mrs. Harry '• | Kline; vice-president, Mrs. W. J. Jury; - ; secretary, Mrs. Charles Bailetts; assis't- I. ant secretary, Mrs. C. W. McClellan; n ! treasurer, Mrs. Ryan Bressler; teacher, , ; Mrs. V. P. Fetterlioff; assistant, Mrs. iW. B. Nace; chairman, prayer meeting committee,' Sarah Reisch; social, Mrs. dj Charles KnouiT; flower and relief, .Mrs. g I Calder Pike; resolution, Minnie Speece; | librarian, Margaret Still. h NEW SYSTEM AT HERSHEY ! j Hers hey. Pa., Nov. 10.—A model I, office has been an improvement at the d! Hershey Store Company. The now e , quarters arc- very attractive and mod , ern in nil respects. Beginning this week, all money outside the factorv D and trust company will be handled through the central office in the-JHer : ;=hey store. The Hershey interests are , now organized into two divisions; one | is the Hershey Chocolate Company and 0 the other is the Hershey Industrial School. I e WORKING FOR NEW MEMBERS Hershey, Pa., Nov. 10.—A special _ | effort is being made by the members , of the Palm Lutheran Church to add J ! more members and a house-to-house 1 I canvass is being made by teams made |up from the congregation. Special services will be held for the new mem bers on Thanksgiving Day. „ SCHVLTZ-KIVLER WEDDING 0 Dauphin, Pa., Nov. 10. A quiet s wedding was solemnized on Tuesday n i afternoon at 2.30 o'clock when Mrs. r ° | Elizabeth Kivler and William H. P | Schultz were married by the Rev. j Francis J. S. Morrow at the Methodist s j Episcopal parsonage. The groom is well known in Dauphin. ] 28-30 and 32 N. Third St. Specials For Saturday's Selling ' Georgette Blouses 500 Georgette blouses in flesh and white, lace and beaded trimmed, large sailor collar and new cuffs; values up to $6.95. Special, $3.95 Crepe de Chine Blouses One lot of crepe de chine blouses in flesh and white, tailored models, double-breasted effects. Special, 2.95 Serge Dresses 100 navy serge dresses for women and misses, wool embroidered and bead trimming; values up to $27.50. Special, 15.00 Women's and Misses' Suits 25.00 Values up to 45.00 A special purchase of 100 suits enables us to offer these unusual values. Fur-trimmed and strictly tailored models of smart styles in the season's finest fabrics, including velour cloths and broadcloths. Shetland Sweaters 200 Shetland sweaters in rose, white, gold, Copen and qrcen: values 58.50. Special, 5.00 Dance Frocks 75 dance frocks, in all the newest shades, all crisp and fresh: values up to 520.50. Special, 18.50 Hosiery Pure silk thread hosiery in black, white and all shades to match shoes and gowns. t Special, 95< Envelope Chemise One lot of envelope chemise in nainsook .lace and embroidery trimmed, slightly soiled from handling; values up to $2.10. Special 89<* 1.39 1 .S9 Millinery One lot of colored velour sport hats; values $6.00. Special, 3.95 One lot of trimmed hats in the season's newest shapes and colors. Special, 5.00 Woman Starts Fire With • Eight One-Dollar Bills Chestnut Level, Pa., Nov. 10.—Recent ly Mrs. John Trimble rolled up a piece j of paper and started a fire, not having j a match at hand. Several hours later a member of the family began to hunt for eight one-dollar bills, when It was j | found that It was In the paper Mrs., i Trimble started the Are with. She saved [ ! n match and lost eight dollars. Harrisburg Hospital Will Benefit by Election Wager Heishey, Pa., Nov. 10. Frantz | Zinner bet on Hughes and Frank Zent ! meyer bet on Wilson, the loser to play j a hand organ In front of the post office ! to-morrow afternoon. On the organ | there will be a tincup and all dona tions ai\ to go to the Harrisburg Hos pital. The donation end of it seems to be a good thing and it give the people a chance to contribute to an institution that is of a large and con stant value to the people of Hershey. GOES TO NEW MEXICO Marietta, Pa., Nov. 10. Albert C. Murray left to-day for New Mexico, where he will live with his uncle. John | Baker, a native of Marie, ta, and who | left here 33 .years ago. TYPOS TO MEET | The Eastern District Typographical Union will hold a meeting in Lebanon on Sunday. The local union, No. 14, will be represented by F. A. Sohmer and A. Johnson. _____ HURT AT STEEL WORKS j Lewistown. Pa., Nov. 10.—Elijah i Harkness, aged 25, colored, working at i the Standard Steel Works, lias been ! taken to the Lewistown hospital, with | | a broken rib and other Injuries. The j I rib was so badly fractured that It stuck j out through the skin. BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it 25c at all druggists. | NOVEMBER 10, 1916. LAD INJURED BY Al'TO Lewistown, Pa., Nov. 10.—Robert. 7- year-old son of Harry Price, of 133 West Third street, was severely in jured last evening by being struck by an automobile. The lad while playing became blinded by the lights on a big truck and ran in front of a passing automobile. A physician found the child suffering with concussion of the brain. Automatic Telephone Elected By Big Majority At last Harrisburg will have telephone service of "quality as well as quantity!" Cumberland Valley Telephone Company of Penna. Federal Square SUCCESSFUL HUNTERS Hersliey, Pa., Nov. 10.—Local hunt ers returned from the fields the first Jay of rabbit season with filled bags. Adam Whisler bagged twenty-three rabbits in three times out. Ewing Cain and P. N. Kasson hold the record for birds. While, hunting at Lock Haven last week they were sucecssful in bringing down twenty-one pheasants.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers