Once Again We Offer You an | Opportunity to Secure the Greatest | Auto Value Ever Offered § BRAND NEW 1916 ROADSTERS 3 | Original Prlw OUR PRICE j $5 5 0 , 3 Speed Trammission, Selective Type, Electric Sta*t4 Eltri Light* '! c J r l' n d*r, cait en bloc, Left-hand Drive, Center Control, Can til aver ! :];• •:j: ! Spring*, Top, Glass Front, Speedometer, Electric Horn and Tool Kit <[ | WITHOUT QUESTION THE GREATEST SALE OF THE YEAR | I 1000 USED CARS ON OUR FLOORS | I Gorson's Automobile Exchange I 238-240 N. Broad St., Phlla. GEN. W.F.SADLER DIES AT CARLISLE Adjutant General of New Jcr sev, Breaks Down From Overwork Carlisle, Pa.. Nov. 11. lndirectly from the result of overwork connected ■with the sending of the National Guard to the Mexican Border, Wilbur F, Sadler, Jr., eldest son of former Judge Wilbur F. Sadler and Adjutant General of the State of New Jersey, died at the home of nis brother, Lewis S. Sadler at midnight. General Sadler came here some weeks ago in ill-health following a night and day siege of work connected with sending the New Jersey guard to the Border. Through his activities the militia from that State wfts among the first to be fully equipped for serv ice. The strain of overwork aggra vated organic heart trouble, from KEEP OFF PARALYSIS AND ARTERIO-SCLEROSIS "Alteratives which change by some inexplicable manner certain morbid conditions of the system are of great benefit in nervous diseases, in paraly sis, arterio-sclerosis, glandular tuber cles, lupus, fistulous and carious ul , cers." Dr. Mason, in U. S. Dispen satory. Number 4 0 For The Blood contains all the alteratives alluded to in the above and is therefore indi cated in paralysis, arterio-sclerosis, scrofula, chronic rheumatism, nodes, tumors, lupus and all diseases of the blood. Also in constipation, hepatic congestions, dyspepsia and stomach troubles. Sold by Geo. A. Gorgas, 16 North Third street. i See Yourself ( j\ Should Look J. J) i 7 free from facial ble \k S JJ wishes and with a clear, soft, pearly white appearance that /J will be the envy of your friends. / Gouraud's n Oriental Cream does this for you instantly. Its effect is so subtile that its use cannot be detected. Non-greasy 6B years in use. Send 1 Oe. ©r trial else FERD. T. HOPKINS & SON, New York I SEATS 7;WEIGHS3OOSLBS. 1 I BEAUTIFUL AND LIVELY 1 That well describes the | 7-passenger 6-30 Chal- ' 1 mers. The car of the t double cowl, marine 1 lines, long tufted uphol- I § stery. Its activity on I hills and in city streets has caused wide com ment. Saneindesignand sensible in action. Easy on the pocket book. Until Nov. 30 only SI2BO. After that $1350. A quality car. > (All price* f.o.k. Detroit) 3 Keystone Motor Car Company 1019-1025 Market St. C. H. Barner, Mgr. I SATURDAY EVENING, which lie had been suffering and which finally caused his death. General Sadler was born In Carlisle 46 years asro> and was educated In local schools and in Dickinson Col lege. He was interested in electric railway development being connected with corporations which built and operated lines about Greensburg. this State and Trenton, X. J. He was presi dent of the Hroad Street National Bank of Trenton and connected with other business and financial institu tions. General Sadler was appointed to the post of Adjutant General under Gov ernor Kort and served under Gover nors Wilson and Fielder, holding ofllce at the time of his death. He was actively against the extension of fed eral control of the National Guard and favored the partial control of the militia by the State. He is survived by his father, who was for twenty-one years Judge of the Cumberland county courts, and three brothers, S. 15. Sadie;-, the present Judge; Lewis S. Sadler and Dr. Hor ace T. Sadler, all of Carlisle. Says Miss Pankin Is Corker; Has Red Hair Missoula, Mont., Nov. 11. —Messages of congratulation from suffrage lead ers In many pkrts of the country poured into Missoula for Miss Jean nette Rankin, Republican, the first woman to bo elected to Congress. Miss Rankin's campaign managers contenu that she has been successful by at least 2,000 majority. "I felt that the women would stand by me," Miss Rankin said to-dav. "It i is wonderful to me to think of having the opportunity of being the first 1 woman to sit in Congress with 434 men." Miss Rankin Is small and slight. She ! is a Kraduate of thft University of' Montana and the School of Ph'ilan- . thropy, of New Tork city. New York. Nov. 11.—"Oh. Jean nette is aj;orker. She -won't do anv thing rash even if she has red hair." This is the unanimous verdict of the New York suffragists concerning the new congress-woman from Montana. Miss Jeannette Rankin. If Montana does not look out, the New York women will be claiming most of the glory, too, so proud are they of the fact that it was their Jeannette who is the first woman elected to Congress. BLAKEIvOCK AGAIN IN ASTLITM New York, Nov. 11.—Ralph Albert Blakelock, the artist, who was released from the Middletown State Hospital for the Insane on September 6 as a result of the activities in his behalf of Mrs. Van Rensselaer Adams, is a patient in Dr. Flavius Packer's private sanatorium near Riverdale. N. Y. Dr Packer said that Mr. Blakelock was netting along nicely and condition had improved. The artist, -he added, is spending much of his time painting and sketching. CADILLAC TEST A CONSTANT GRIND Car on Go Twenty-Four Hours Every Day For Two Years Under All Conditions Autotnobilo manufacturers, ns n | -ri:'*?. subject tholr cars periodically to driving bw (lie roads for sev- i era! Nvecka or n month or so. But J it to doubtful If ut;y other car has | I ever coma It* for iv tcet quite as Srruplllnir nnd continuous na that which falla td tho lot of tho ('ndlllac Klght "twenty-ftfur hour car." Tliln car la operated by tho factory | at Detroit not only twenty-four houra day. but every day • winter end summer, In fair weather and foul, through sivnd and mud and tno\v; through dual and pouring rain. It knows no rest! and the object of the drivers In to see how much punish ment and abuse they can give it. Such n ear has been on tho roads of Michi gan for tho last two years. Kour ex perimental drivers, working in pairs each polr driving 12 hours, pilot the car on Itn cciiselotfa grind. The fail ure of deliberate attempts by the | drivers to break and wear out various j parts constitutes a source of daily reassurance to Ondlllae engineers. A lH>trolt nowspapor reporter who spent part of a night In the "twenty four hour car" wrote of his adventure as follows?"" "Tho top was up, the side curtains were down, for It was raining, and the whole car was covered with mud. And when I aay covvrod, X mean plast j wed. i "My first Impression was that I was •not alone In tho tonneau. There was ' something lying on the floor in front 'of me. I kicked It. and it did not move. Then I touched it, and it felt II cold and clammy. I recoiled squeam | lshly. ' ■ " 'lf those sand bags are in the way. Just kick 'em around any way 'you | j please,' said one of the experimental ! 1 men. 'Ten of 'em 75 pounds apiece. . Same as five 150-pound people.' "Wo soon reached the concrete out -1 sldo the city. Although it was wet ' and slippery, the size, the nolseless r.ess, and the smooth running of the car gavo mo a senso o£ absolute sc '] curlty. "The concrete ended abruptly, and ' wo were upon a treacherous clay ' road. The windshield was so spat :l tt rod with dirty water that It was J j occasionally necessary for one of the men to sozzle off a porUon of the | glass with his glove. [ | "Some other reckless voyageur of i the night had apparently preceded us, ! for tire tracks corkscrewed from ono I side of the road to the other. It was ' j apparently a lighter car, and every thing Indicated that it was having a '■ rough voyae. And ours was by no | n-.eans smooth. Thirty, thirty-fivo, I forty-five miles an hour — "I lunged from one side of the ton , neau to the other. If the car had ! been anything but a Cadillac Eight, j and the man at the wheel anyone but a master, I should have given up all hope. Mile after mile of lunging, ! buffeting, ramming. 1 "Presently we saw the tail light of ! the other car and we soon passed it with a swish. As I had guessed, it | was a smaller, lighter car. As they j saw us roll past them with such un ' swerving power, an expression of ad i miration must have passed their lips. "All the time the men had been silent except for such occasional re ' marks as: | " 'Never saw these roads so treach erous.' • I " 'Say, but this car has' bump (into a rut —'controllability!" I "At about four o'clock the one who I was not driving began to sing an attempt at grand opera. It exasper j ated me because I wanted to sleep. ! In spite of the grand opera and the threshing around, I finally did doze a little. j "When I awoko the rain had ceased ■and the roads were nearly dry. We I swung along more steadily than be | fore, ar.d I was able to sit back com i fortably. We removed the side cur- I tains. The musical one began hum | ming ragtime. An ungodly hour for ragtime, I thought. As we passed a ! farmhouse, we saw a man with a | lantern on his way to the barn. Morn ing was coming. "At one point there was a bad ' ssrdy stretch beside the road. The I stoical gentleman at the wheel seem ied possessed of a sudden facetious ' mood. We left the road completely j and plowed through the sand on high gear. j "It was beginning to become light. We pulled up a long, hard hill, and I from its crest we caught the first I glimpse of-that day's sun. The hor rors of the night faded from my ' mind. It seemed like an old legend in which one comes upon a beautiful enchanted valley after a perilous trip through a dark forest, beset with dragons. " "Beautiful, isn't it ? And see that little river over there,' said the music al one. " 'Uh huh,' grxmted he at the wheel, 'I guess we'd better stop at the next town for some more gas.' " R. J. Firestone Now Vice President of Tire Company At the annual meeting of the Fire stone Tire and Rubber company, Thursday, November 2nd, K. J. Firestone was elected vice-president. Mr. Firestone has been sales man ager for a number of years and is widely known in automobile circles the country over. The success of Mr. Firestone in building up the sales of the company is quite phenom enal. History records but few sales managers whose companies' sales for rapid and consistent increase equal Firestone. From thirty to sixty per cent a year, is the way this sales manager recorded his increases. The fiscal year which closed August Ist showed Firestone business well over $33,000,000. The field of vice-president offers M. Firestone many additional op portunities for spreading tils knowl edge, experience and personality into all Firestone activities. A. G. Partridge, formerly assistant sales manager, was appointed to suc ceed Mr. Firestone as general'sales manager. His long service in the or ganization equips him well for his larger work and his appointment is in line with the Firestone policy of promoting men who havo made good'. MKXICANS IN FLIGHT El Paso, Texas. Nov. 11. Many wagonloads of furniture belonging to Chihuahua refugees are standing at tho international bridge to-day await ing customs examination. Customs in spectors state that within tho last two weeks more household goods and trunks belonging to refugees havo crossed the international bridge Into El Paso than during any period within the two years. Many Mexican families have moved from Juarez to El Paso. " HOME ON FUIUjOUGH Marcel "Fat" Von Bereghy, star athlete of Technical High School and of I„ebanon Valley College, has re turned to this city. After graduating from Lebanon Valley he joined the regular United States Army. He is now home on a furlough until January first. HXRMSBtma telegraph MAXWELL LIGHT DELIVERY CHASSIS Big Market and Demand Shows Trend Toward Motor Vehicles Tlio great Increase In sales of com mercktl chussls by the Maxwell Motor company la n reflection of the extent to which tha automobile i Invading tho light delivery tisld, It Is an In dication. too, of how tliu merchant whose delivery service requires a light, speedy vehicle Is coining to the realization that in tho motorcar lies tha best solution of his delivery prob lems. "The horse ns a factor In light de livery rystems is tv back number, said H. KV Barker, local Maxwell dealer. "This Is true not only In tho cities, but also In the rural districts, where traffic congestion cuts no figure. Mer chants realize that the motorcar de livery Is swift, sure nnd economical." "Figures have been compiled by experts on delivery systems to show that in a period of flvo years tho merchant effects a saving of more than 15000 by supplanting tho horse drawn vehiclo by the motor delivery vehicle. Any progressive merchant is willing to add SIOOO to his profits every year. "Then, too, the merchant lias tho added advantage of having bodies built according to his own specifi cations and his own taste. The Max well chassis comes from the factory all wired and equipped and ready for the body to be fitted on. "My experience has been that the light delivery field la especially profit able. because It Invariably results in reorders. The merchant who orders one delivery vohicle as an experiment t-oon finds how practical and econ omical it is and immediately he orders enough motor vehicles to take cure of all his deliveries. "The following is a partial list of businesses that are now using Max well Commercial Cars. Throughout the country they are being used by laundrlos, cleaners and dyers, groc ers, florists, tea and coffee merchants, department stores, decorators, plumb ers, meat markets, retail paints, re tail hardware, bakers, clothing stores, dry goods stores, ice cream (retail), men's furnishing stores, hatters, boots and shoes, rug weavers, jewel ers, millinery, retail dairies, towel •supply companies, upholsterers, sew ing machine agents, cigar manufac turers, barber supplies, plaiting com panies, printers, tailors, sporting goods, photo supplies, artificial flow ers, adding machines, dental sup plies." Value and Meaning of Slogans in Business "Slogans in business should be something more than advertising catch-phrases," says Harry M. Jewitt, the executive who formulates the pol icies and the plans of the Paige- Detroit Motor Car company and stamps his ideals as a manufacturer and merchandiser on the Paige pro duct. "It is a good tfiing for every one, no matter what his business mav be, to have a mark to aim at. ail ideal to strive for, and it is well to have this ideal expressed as nearly as . P° ssl ble in the company's slogan. 'Several years ago we adopted the S CB ?.IL„" rhe stan <Jard of Value and Quality and have been endeav oring to live up to it with what measure of success, our 50,000 Paige owners can testify. I think our slo- Bood one. It keeps everyone in the organization on his toes to icach it. Its influence on the spirit of the men and on the quality of the work they produce can scarcely bo measured. e , are con stantly emphasizing that slogan to our mon to those in the field as well as to those In the factory. We are not going to let It be forgotten no matter how busy we may be preparing for automobile •shows or formulating plans for the next selling season. And, moreover we are endeavoring as a matter of policy to make it all-inclusivo in its application; that is. we tell our men that it means not Only the quality of the car, but the quality of service the car and the Paige organization render. Luncheon For Members of Enola Booster Committee Enola, Pa., Nov. 11. The Booster Membership commjttee of the Enola 1 . li. R. .M.C. A. will be tendered a luncheon at the association on Monday evening, when the general chairman of the booster committee will instruct the teams of the com ing campaign in what is to be done b\ the \arious trains in tlic coming campaign. The teams are, Enginehouae, J. C. Buck, .lr., chairman; Charles P How man Kdward N. Bachman, Oliver A. Fisher, W. Hoy Green, John P. Gruver Car repair shop, J. p. Gibson, chair man; H. P. Troup and W. K. Cunkle C. T. department, J. N. Dibeler, chair man; C. U. Hockey and F. M. Harrold Motive Power, W. U Troup, chairman; George W. Shuey and G. G. Shelleheim er. Car inspectors, J. H. Kinter, chair man; L. St. Wlleman, C. R. Patterson R. E. Black and Phillip Fordney. Twins Await Election Result to Get Names Mount Holly, N. J„ Nov. 11.—Until to-day Raftaele Volgarino, owner of a shoo repairing shop here, didn't know what he would name twins, a boy and a girl, who arrived in his home Sun day. It was decided that the boy should be named for the successful nresidential candidate and the girl for his wife. Wednesday morning Vol garino believed that the name of Hughes wouiti be brought into hit; family, but before the morning was over later returns caused him to hesi tate. Yesterday he became impatient tnd thought that the boy would have to be given the name of Wilson Hughes Yolgtano, but before doing anything he decided that it would be better to wait until to-day. Complete returns decided the bov's name as Woodrow Wilson Volgarl'no £-nd the daughter's as Edith Volgarino. 14 CHARGED WITH MURDER Everett, Wash., Nov. 11. —Informa- tion was filed in the Superior Court charging forty-one men, alleged to have taken part In Sunday's Industrial Workers of the World raid, with mur der in the first degree. All the accused are now prisoners In Seattle jails. Warrants will bo Issued at once. Seven men wero killed at the wharf here when a steamer load of men attempted to land for the announced purpose of holding a street meeting. WOO!.WORTH'S HANDSOME HOME BURNS; IX>SS $150,000 Glen Cove. N. Y., Nov. 11.—The country homo of F. W. Woolworth. head of the Woolworth chain of stores, was burned to the ground. More than $50,000 worth of furniture was carried to safety. liut the loss will reach } 150,000. The family was In New York and only servants and workmen were on the estate. ■IA Car I jj|/ that a Woman Can Drive | lllllli/ Is thoroughly masculine —a big ear as you can see—virile-of 15 BffiWßßgf' endurance. Yet its operation is so simple, sare, safe, the Holf.M3liou ■ fWttaHflHl ; Dollar Motor works so sweetly, positively, Art your wifirdrcUi|kter B MWBI csn drive it without apprehension —without nak. A woman vviU | mSgl ciate the Brieootilittury—its distinctive sti Eg F Come IN AI Pour Twanty-Fowr BRIIWI flj in|L piece oi Beajeinia Erieeoe'l buty MK He WY TO SPECIFICATIONS M itinmPßf Europe to procure lor Ue ooaatrymea the **• , lalf Million Dollar Motor— §B iifllHßgf deilga in motor oar oowtraetioa et • pnoe wtUMa IS* Horr li-ineki Mtroke fll rttlffHf f reech of ell. He em ployed fourteen ol tb* *ot noted nir-eooled mo- Sa HHV/ ■•* JS-WJiiTSSSK i • '-I' ' : ,S& I of • hM a million dotlirs perfocttd tint notof WnitA able plate above valve L- • M nl lWi ? you will find in the Bcieeoe Poar Twenty' Four. hrud. fl mHtSa I IVhrelhaKe—loT> Inchen. _ S3 ftalifP| If you will phone or mell your aama udijUmi, you u ~ tiearnHne* # de- fQ will receive en introductory oerd which will entitle you nigui comfortable room fiS i -IwH I to a free de"""r. , --'ion tor live pa*Minern In ■■ _ ________ __ , _ touring; 'ar tour pan- , H flfl E. T. MEH RING jf WMI Distributor I Control—tenter. | W St " jjj MASONIC LODGE 137 YEARS OLD Perseverance Members Cele brate Anniversary With a Dinner at Temple The one hundred and thirty-seventh anniversary of Persevorance Lodge, i No. 21, was celebrated last evening in the Masonic Temple. Members and |Kuests numbering more than five hun dred convened first in the lodge room where John T. Olmsted made the ad dress of welcome. After the business session of the lodge, a selection by the Perseverance quartet preceded the ad journment to the banquet hall, j Toasts were given by the toast mas ter, John N. Peregoy; Edgar W. "Wal ton and Warwick M. Ogelsby. Fol lowing the dinner, Frederic A. God charles. Deputy Secretary of the j Commonwealth, made an address on i "Our Warrant Master"; Edwin E. Sparks, president of State College, j whose ability as a speaker is so well known as to need no comment, spoke |on "Making the Entire Man." "The Sunny Side of Masonry," by Clayton A. Smucker was a very optimistic talk. Dr. J. George Beclit, executive secre tary of the State Board of Education, ispoke on "Masonic Ideals." I One of the special features of the I evening was the singing of popular | airs, and well-known songs by the en tire chorus of voices. But the Ma j sonic Temple was not the only place ] where the annual banquet of Perse verance I odgo was celebrated last evening. The Rev. William R. Swartz, who is conlined to his home, 1156 Mul berry street, because of injuries re ceived some months ago, when he was knocked down by a motorcycle aUo celebrated the big occasion. A dupli cate banquet, including everything on the menu, was sent to his home. Associated Aid Doing Good Work Among Poor The annual report of General Sec retary John Yates, of the Associated Aid Society, made public to-day. shows that the society aided 56 4 famflles. 194 homeless men and women and 230 RASH DISFIGURED - linLEjn FACE Had to Cover Face, Broke Out On Legs. Itched So Could Not Rest. Healed by Cuticura. Trial Free. "My little boy began to break out on his face with a small red rash. It waa very sore and the more I had him treated the larger it grew, and I had to cover his face with cheesecloth. He was cross and his disfigured. Then it broke out on the calves of his legs, and itched so that he nibbed them, and they looked terrible. He could not rest. "When he was five years old I heard of Cuticura Soap and Ointment so I began using them, and lie commenced to get better, and after using one cake of CuticuraSoap and two boxes of Ointment he was all healed." (Signed) Mrs. Jack son Marks, Galilee, Pa., April 17, 1916. It is so easy to prevent these many distressing disfiguring skin troubles of childhood by using Cuticura Soap, and no other, for evcry-day nursery uses instead of impure, coarse or strongly medicated soaps. Think of what it means to go forth into the world handi capped by a disfiguring skin trouble. Mothers may have samples each of Cuticura Soap and Ointment by return mail for the asking. Address post-card: "Cntlcnrm, Dept. T.Boston. Sold throughout the world. NOVEMBER 11, 1916. helpless during the year ending Oc tober 31. Through the assistance of the Har : risburg Benevolent Association, the ! Aid Society was able to handle these families and individuals to the best possible advantage, giving (hem food, coal, medicine, clothing and other necessary supplies. Mr. JTates asks for additional funds to clrry on the work of the association. The chil dren's bureau reported that five chil dren had been placed during the last month, five homes had been Inspected and over 360 calls rißing from various causes. Mrs. Robert McCreath has been named as chairman of the spe cial committee to arrange for Christ mas presents for more than 100 poor children in the care of the society. Check Book Economy Before you economize, you have to know in what ways you are wasting money. Your check book will tell you. Open a checking account with us and pay your bills by check—then you can easily see where you can avoid useless expenses and build up your Savings Account here at 3% interest—compounded every four months. You will be pleased with _j] our prompt, courteous service. ON SAVINGS ACCOUNTS jSHMR CAPITAL AND SURPLUS ,[l|i ISf j flfiliSf ♦eoftooaoo JjgUl ( CAMP CURTIN I TRUST COMPANY Sixth and Maclay Streets Acts as Administrator of Estates; Executor, appointed by decedent, to carry out provisions of a will; Guardian of minor children. Wills written, receipted for and kept without charge. Recorder Lentz Addresses Elizabethville Students Elizabethville, Nov. 11. Members of the Junior and Senior classes of the Elizabethville high school, enter tained the freshmen last night at a big banquet at the high school auditor ium. The decorations were class col- 1 ors and flowers. Instrumental and vocal selections featured the program. James E. Lentz, recorder of deeds, made the principal address of the evening, commending the directors teachers and pupils on the good work they have done in maintaining the standard of the local high school. Di rectors of the school district are H. S. Knlsely, H. H. Hassinger and J. A. Boyer. 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers