Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, December 06, 1916, Page 5, Image 5

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    " THE BIG STORE ON THE HILL "
Your Gift Shop
As the gift-giving season approaches thoughtful, sensible
folks, naturally turn to the gifts that combine utility and
beauty. Good Furniture easily heads the list of useful gifts.
Good Furniture takes its place in the home, and the pleasure,
the comfort, the satisfaction it affords endures for a lifetime.
Come to this big Christmas Furniture Store and enjoy the
satisfaction of selecting from our immense stock of depend
able furniture at plainly marked prices that will net your gen
uine and generous savings. A few suggestions—
For Him—
Easy Leather Chairs or Rockers,
$22.00 to $45.00
Easy Tapestry Chairs or Rockers,
$25.00 to $45.00
Smoking Stands $2.50 to $15.50
Leather Foot Stools $1.25 to $4.50
Bookholders $1.25 to SB.OO
Rolltop Desks $25.00 to $38.00
Desk Chairs $4.50 to SB.OO
Mahogany Chair or Rockers fiJ
Mahogany Sewing Tables _
Mahogany Candlesticks; pair \ Jp—'
Tea Wagons $12.00 Peal (-J
Period Chairs and Rockers
Mahogany or Fumed Oak LI- T7
brary Tables. .$14.00 to $25.00 "f//j I [/
Music Cabinets.slo.oo to $25.00 Vl/\ I I
Electric I.amps. .$5.75 to SIB.OO V\l | / A
Waste Baskets, in reed or ma- wii i^Ti
hogany $1.50 to $5.00 \TJ
For the Family
Dining Suites or Odd Pieces in all woods; Library Suites
Odd 1" leces in all woods j Davenports, leather or tapestrv j
Bedroom Suites in all woods. 1 his is your shop for any gift
you may desire. Buy early and have it delivered when
wanted.
Fackler's 1312 Derr y st -
Store Will Be Open Every Evening Until 0 p. m.; After December
18th, up to Christmas.
FARE'S DIAPEPSIN FOR DYSPEPSIA,
GAS, OR UPSET STOMACH
Indigestion Goes Instantly ! Ends Sourness, Acidity
and all Stomach Misery—No Waiting—Get Some!
Do some foods you eat hit back |
taste good, but work badly; ferment i
into stubborn lumps and cause a sick,
sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or
Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down; Pape's
Dlapepsin digests everything, leaving
nothing to sour and upset you. There
never was anything so safely quick, i
so certainly effective. No difference
how badly your stomach is disordered
you will get happy relief in five min- |
utes. but what pleases you most is that'
it strengthens and regulates your
stomach so you can eat your favorite
loods without fear.
Most remedies give you relief some- j
times they are slow, but not sure.
"Pape's Diapepsin" is quick, positive
SMALL HOPE OF
SAVING RUMANIA
[Continued From First Page]
also the development of a violent ar
tillery engagement north of Monastir.
Another Route Opened
Another route for an attack on
Ploechti and Bucharest from the
northwest has been opened through
Sinai, reported to-day. This town is on
the Ploechti-Kronstadt railroad, lead
ing to Tomoser pass, 2 2 miles south of
the latter city and about 37 miles
northwest of Ploechti. The Ruman
ians who were defending Sinai and
the territory tothe north were com
pelled to evacuate the district bv the
advance of Field Marshal Von Mack
ensen's forces from the west.
Yesterday'B captures by the Teu
tonic armies invading Rumania to
talled 6,000 prisoners.
Italian Premier Says War
Not Wanted With Greece
Rome, Dec. 5. The allies do not
desire to force Greece into war, nor do
they support any anti-dynastic move
ment In Greece asserted Premier Bo
selli in his report on the war delivered
before the Chamber of Deputies to
Tb. Original Food-Driuk For All | SHb.tltuUo Co/y<W
>mu „ M (utuj
You are invited to attend the Formal Opening of our New Jewelry Store
REBUILT—REMODELED—ENLARGED— BEAUTIFIED
Restocked With Magnificent New Lines of Merchandise
RECEPTION TO THE PUBLIC FRIDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 8
7:30 TO 9:30
NO GOODS WILL BE SOLI)
MUSIC SOUVENIRS
A Cordial Invitation Extended to Everybody
THE IDEAL JEWELRY & OPTICAL'CO
2-3 N. Front St. STEELTON
WEDNESDAY EVENING,
I and puts your stomach in a healthy
| condition so the misery won't come
back.
)t ou t feel different as soon as
"Pape's Diapepsin" comes in contact
; with the stomach distress just van
ishes your stomach gets sweet, no
gases, no belching, no eructations of
undigested food, your head clears and
[ you feel fine.
Go now, make the best investment
you ever made, by getting a large
hfty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin
from any drug store. You realize in
nve minutes how needless it is to suf
fer from indigestion, dyspepsia or any
stomach disorder. Don't be talked
into something else "just as good"
genuine, no imitation.
day. Premier Boselli reiterated the
determination of Italy to maintain the
war with the allies until the restitu
tion of Belgium, Serbia and Monte
negro was accomplished.
As proof that Italy was prepared
to push her operations vigorously the
premier announced that there were
now 2,100 factories working on war
material, the workers being one-fifth
women whose participation both in in
dustries and agriculture was increas
ing daily.
George B. Nebinger
Will Be President of
Hbg. Republican Club
George B. Nebinger, for years a
prominent member of the organ
ization, will be the next president of
the Harrisburg Republican Club. He
will be elected without opposition at
the annual meeting, December 26. The
other nominations follow: vice-presi
dent, Edward A. Palter; secretarv
Asliton D. Peace: treasurer, F. M
Title; trustees. W. H. Hoffman, L. r]
Metzgrer, Herman Geiger; membership
committee. W. D. Block, H. Eisen
berger, Joseph H. Henning, Walter
Collins and Clyde Richardson.
STF£I7XWMm
COUFFER AUTO IN
TWO ACCIDENTS
Stearing Gear Cause of Colli
sions With Buggy and An
other Machine
Failure of the stearing gear of the
auto owned by Samuel Couffer, 322 Pine
street, last evening was the cause of a
double accident, in which much damage
was done two automobiles and a buggy.
While returning from Harrisburg late
| last night, Mr. Coulter's stearing gear
failed to work when he tried to turn
t out of the path of a buggy going down
j Front street near Franklin. He hit the
buggy and both occupants were thrown
|to the sidewalk. Mrs. Charles Look, of
I Knhaut, who was driving the buggy
sustained a sprained arm and lacera
! tions of the face and bruises of the
| body. The other occupant whose name
has not been learned was also badlv
bruised about the body.
The pair were taken into the home
of G. W. Weaver and later removed to
the offices of a physician where their in
juries were dressed. Mr. Couffer's car
was not damaged, in the accident and
he was able to proceed home.
At Second and Pine streets some time
I later Mr. Couffer was turning into Pine
street off Second and the stearing gear
■ again failed to work. Harry Long of
Harrisburg, operating his father s car
I was coming down Pine street. Unable
jto turn the corner, Couffer ran Into
Longs car damaging It. The front
| fenders, springs and axle, of Long's
, auto was badly bent. Couffer's car was
I damaged slightly.
Temperance Union Meeting
to Be Held Here Tomorrow
The annual institute of the Dauphin
County Women's Christian Temper
ance Union will be held in the Meth
odist Church to-morrow afternoon
and evening.
The afternoon session will convene
lat 2 o'clock The Rev. William
i banderson will have charge of the de
! votional exercises. Other numbers on
the program will consist of a solo by
Mrs. Karl Heffner; "Open Parliament,"
| subject, "A Handful of Hints for
I temperance Workers," led by the
I county superintendents: demonstra-
I tions. march of the dry States, led by
C w M ' s P ahr : campaign plans for
I by county president, Mrs. M. M.
| Stees. A social hour and box social
will be held at 5 o'clock,
; The Rev. D. E. Rupley will have
charge of the devotional exercises
! which will mark the opening of the
levening session at 7:45 o'clock. Other
I numbers will include a duet by Mrs.
| Roth and Mrs. Danner; reading Wai
cott; address. "Spoiling the Spoilers,"
I the Rev. F. E. Holsopple, district su
j penntendent of the State Anti-Saloon
League.
Red Cross Seals Put on
Sale at Borough Stores
Red Cross Christmas seals were on
sale in nearly every business place of
the borough to-day. The seals were
distributed by a committee yesterday.
Mrs. John M. Heagy, is chairman.
C. S. Davis, principal of Steelton high
school, will have charge of the distri
bution in the schools.
Steelton Snapshots
Declare Dividend. The Transpor
, tation Relief Association announced
| last evening a dividend of $8.40, to
be paid December 19 from 2 to 8
at 144 North Front street.
Booster Meeting. Arrangements
for the next meeting of the Booster
Association of the Order of Inde
pendent Americans in this district to
,l eIU next Wednesday evening in
Steelton Council No. 162. will be made
by the local council this evening.
FORTY HOURS' DEVOTION
Forty hours' devotion will be ob
served in St. Peter's Catholic church
next week. The services will be
opened Sunday morning at 8-30
o olock and will close Tuesday eve
ning with the benediction and proces
sion. The Rev. Father Murn of the
Franciscan order will have charge of
the services which will be held Mon
day and Tuesday mornings at 5 and
9 o clock and 7:30 In the evening.
FIFTEENTH ANNIVERSARY
Washington Camp No. 522, P. O. S.
Enhaut, will celebrate the
fifteenth anniversary of the organ
ization to-morrow evening. A public
to be held in the High School
Building will mark the celebration.
National and State officers of the order
will be among the speakers on the
program.
Country Store at the Orpheum
Theater, Steelton. to-night. The new
management announces this addition
to the weekly program.—adv.
FINED FOll CONDUCT
James Wright and Ralph Taylor, of
Adams street, were fined and discharged
after they had paid the costs at a hear
ing before Burgess Wlgfleld. last night,
on a charge of disorderly conduct. Ed
gar Butler, of Adams street, was lined
10 and costs for the same offense.
MOOSE MAY BUILD
A meeting of the Moose will be held
in the rooms in Front street, this even
m! The important topic for discussion
will be the erection of a lodge building.
SCHWAB MEMBER
COMMERCE BODY
[Continued From First Page]
ing list of important figures in the
I steel world.
Schwab is a firm believer in
Chamber of Commerce activity as
evidenced recently in his dinner to
the organizations in Bethlehem and
South Bethlehem in which he pro
posed a union of the two cities. The
taking of fifty memberships in the
Harrisburg Chamber of Commerce
followed the annual dinner of the
local body at which Mr. Schwab and
Eugene G. Grace, president of the
Bethlehem Steel Company spoke. Mr.
Grace, who has been called by Mr.
Schwab the greatest steel man in the
country to-day. is also a member of
the Harrisburg Chamber of Com
merce.
Bent Also a Member
Quincy Bent, who was made gen
eral manager of the Steelton plant
when the Bethlehem interest took over
the Pennsylvania Steel Company and
its subsidiaries, is one of the Bethle
hem Company's representatives in the
Chamber of Commerce. Mr. Bent has
accepted an appointment on the Indus
trial Committee of the Harrisburg
Chamber of Commerce. Other Bethle
hem Steel Company officials who are
numbers of the local organization
are:
W. F. Roberts, vice-president; A.
Johnson, vice-president; C. A. Buck
vice-president: H. S. Snyder, vice
president; E. S. Knlsely, general sales
HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH
IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT
Preparations Are Now Being Made For
Harrisburg's Biggest and Best Sale of -■
OVER 1450 WOMEN'S AND MISSES' WINTER COATS
Sale Starts Friday Morning (Next) At 8 O'clock
> LETTERGRAM REPRODUCED BELOW EXPLAINS ITSELF <
t . 1
if" ' SSTFCJJIF HTLETT ETG R" A M"1
W| AND ocuvcna THW NMHT URRTNOIIAII auajccr TO THC H
TIWI AM COWOITIOW —IWTIB OK TNC AC TMI. aiAMIC. CLAHCNCC H. MCKV. PHrIOIT. H
lny bo 40 788 am nl nl
Pr. Hew York NY Doc 4-16
Kauffmans Underselling Store
Harriaburg Penna
Have purchased from four of Hew Yorks largest manufacturers
oyer fourteen hundred and fifty womens and misses handsome
winter coats at big prioe concessions. They will all be shipped
today. Make preparations for the biggest ooat sale ever held in
Harrisburg. x
Ja 11a JLLOyda
Ar ei pi^ e t AbTe Night lettergram Tuesday Morning From Mr. Lloyd, Our Coat and Suit Buyer
and assorted into lots f ™tto Kg Coaf Sak. Purcha3e of over 1460 Coats has arrived and is now bein S unpacked
W Which Starts Friday Morning (Next) At 8 O'clock
The price concessions we secured from the manufacturers were Tremendously Large and the same big price
concessions will be passed on to you—giving you without doubt The Best Money-Saving Coat Opportunity You
Have Ever Had, Right At The Time The Buying Power Of Your Dollars Must Be Stretched To The Furthermost
Sales Like This One Are Not Usually
n To-morrow's Announcement We Will Give You Complete Details and Prices—Watch Tor It!
agent; B. H. Jones, treasurer; H. E.
Lewis, assistant treasurer; G. H.
Blakeley, manager structural steel de
partment; Paul Makall, assistant gen
eral sales agent; It. \V. Gillispie, as
sistant general sales agent; H. B.
Bent, engineer of tests; F. A. Rob
bins. Jr., superintendent of the blast
furnaces; W. W. Leek, superintend
ent rolling mills; C. P. Turner, chief
engineer; J. C. Reed, electrical en
gineer; E. F. Entwisle, mechanical en
gineer; J. H. McDonald, superintend
ent of transportation; Carl B. Ely,
engineer bridge and construction de
partment; G. S. Vickery, superintend
ent frog and switch department; B.
Weaver, superintendent of the steel
foundry; H. B. Hain, superintendent
ol the forge department; W. B. Hod
dinott, secretary to Quincy Bent; A.
G. L eberroth, works accountant.
With the exception of the first
eleven named, who are located in
South Bethlehem, the others are in
charge of the work at Steelton. The
remainder of the memberships will
be assigned soon.
Industrial Committee Meets
The Industrial Committee of the
Harrisburg: Ch&mber of Commerce
met yesterday afternoon and consider
ed a number of propositions which
demand further consideration before
they can be treated seriously.
The committee considered a refer
endum from the Chamber of Com
merce of the United States of America
relating to proposed national legisla
tion which will permit combinations or
co-operation agreements between de
velopers of manufacturers of natural
resources such as lumber, iron and
steel, oil. copper, coal, etc., also to
permit American manufacturers and
businessmen to co-operate in foreign
trade. This is in line with the pro
posed Webb bill In Congress, which
is receiving support from men of
every shade of opinion.
Edward N. Hurley, chairman of the
Federal Trade Commission who will
address the Chamber on Wednesday
December 13, will discuss the major
points raised in the above referendum
before the whole membership of the
chamber.
The membership of the industrial
committee is as follows: John F. Dapp,
chairman; Joseph Wallazz, Quincy
a nd yourTOOTHBRUSH
KXLI* THE GERMS—SAVE THE TEETH
SENRPCO. thatooth,p..ta that KEALLT CLEANS. ha, keen put to , teet,
*s A £ r t zfix r N lzfc£S> - c n .l s? -%• -*•
/wVr„ JIT '"*? ~" *M r * rn,dial agent In t/te treatment tha folder, "The Mo,t General O/'.a.c' wJ^tf^ToiethZT^luh'l'li'L. C °rr.-°'
Bent, Robert H. Irons, C. W. Lynch,
W. T. Hildrup, Jr., Edward Bailey and
George Watt. This committee will
entertain Mr. Hurley while he is In
Harrisburg.
Ivy L. Ic to Speak Hero
L. Lee, personal assistant to
John D. Rockefeller, Jr., will be one
of the speakers at the series of mem
bership luncheons of the Harrisburg
Chamber of Commerce. He will speak
early in 1917.
WATCH OUT FOR
WINTER ILLS IS TIP
[Continued From First Pago]
said that after a case has been diag
nosed at some homes, parents think by
sending children to relatives or friends,
that the health department will let the
youngsters go to school. This will not
be permitted. Dr. Raunlck declared, as
the children may be carriers of the
disease and cause an epidemic. In
warning parents about the prevalence
of chickenpox, he advised that chil
dren should be watched continually,
and that a physician should be called
at once If a child complains of feeling
111. In conclusion he again referred to
the importance of treating colds
promptly.
Close Emergency Hospital
Plans have been made to close the ty
phoid emergency hospital on Saturday.
Only eleven convalescent patients are
being treated there now under / the
city's supervision and the city health
officer said to-day that these can prob
ably be sent home within the next few
days. The place will be thoroughly
fumigated before the supplies are re
moved and the wards closed.
City food fnspectors announced to
day that only twenty licenses for the
present year remain unpaid, and that
prosecutions will follow unless these
are paid at once. Announcement was
made also that plumbers lyust regis
ter a grain before January 1, 1917.
DECEMBER 6, *1916.
'STATE C. OF C.
ORGANIZATION ON
[Continued From First Page]
I
Photo by Overton.
HOWARD B. FRENCH
Temporary Chairman.
opening session. 'Following the or
ganization of the State chamber ar
rangements will probably be made at
once for the establishment of
permanent headquarters In this city.
President French, of the Philadell
phia Chamber, said that favorable re
ports have been received from all
parts of Pennsylvania commending
the plan to organize a State body.
Following the session many of the
representatives who attended will re
port to the various organizations in
the State, to bring them In closer
touch with the State body.
WILSON STUDYING HIGH
COST OF LIVING REPORT
[Continued From First Paso]
primarily for the purpose of devising
an effective method of conducting th<
investigation which may take in fuel
and clothing as well as food.
Department of Justice officials ar
understood to have under considera*
tion as a pt.rt of the investigation, an
inquiry into the methods adopted bj
various boards of trade, produce and
other associations where the market
value of foodstuffs is largely deter*
mined.
Although several of the bills Intro*
duced in Congress since Monday to
meet the high cost of living situation
have been laid before the President
he has given his approval to none of
them and will continue to withhold
comment until he is prepared to pro-
Bent his views in the form of a recom
mendation for legislation. He has noi
yet decided when he will go befor
Congress.
A Single Application
Banishes Every Hair
(The Modern Beauty)
Here is how any woman can easilj
and quickly remove objectionable,
hairy growths without possible Injury
to the skin: Make a paste with somi
powdered delatone and water, apply
to hairy surface and after 2 or 3 min
utes rub off, wash the skin and th
hairs are gone. This is a painless,
inexpensive method and, excepting
where the growth is unusually thick,
a single application Is enough. You
should, however, be careful to gel
genuine delatone.
5