| Come To-morrow For Your Choice of These Used Pianos and Player Pianos Pay Only $5.00 or More Cash Then Monthly to Suit You Lose no time no.w if you want one of these bargain pianos or player pianos. The selling is brisk and late comers may find their choice taken. Remember, every instrument in this sale is guaran teed the same as new for all have been re-built. Only a few of the bargains are listed. Come fco-morrow and see the complete stock. Used Pianos New Pianos S3OO New England S9O SSOO Hardman $425 $325 Henning $125 .S6OO Everett $475 $350 Ludwig $145 $750 Grand S6OO $350 Starr $l5O $375 Hasbrouck $165 rji n • S3OO Weser Bros $195 P/a * er PlanOS $450 Hardman $255 $550 Autotone $295 $650 Autotone $320 New Pianos $550 Player-Piano $365 $325 Frances Bacon .... $245 S6OO Player-Piano S3BO $350 Kimball $290 $650 Player-Piano $435 S4OO Briggs $320 SBOO Player-Piano $550 If you arc unable to call personal- , , r A , ly at'thc store, clip out and mail the J- 1 roup Music. House, coupon to-day. Our representative 15 S. Market Sc|., llarrisburg will call with full description of each Gentlemen — 1 am interested in vour January Sale instrument, photograph, etc., and of p . and Player . Pianos . pj ease s - end ' will explain all about our easy pay- . ments and free delivery, without representative, any obligation on your part. Send the coupon to-day. These * 1 bargains won't last long; that's ccr- Address tain. _U___ J. H. Troup Music House Troup Building 15 South Market Square To Build Briquette Plants in Other Cities The Anthracite Briquette Company ot Sun bury, chartered yesterday at the State Department, is the first of a num ber of similar companies to be organ ized in Pennsylvania. The purpose is to erect plants in a number of cities lor the. manufacture of coal briquettes. ACHES AND PAINS Don't neglect a pain anywhere, but find out what causes it and conquer tlie cause. A pain in the kidney region may Dit you on your back to-morrow. Don't blame the weather for swollen feet, B may he an advanced warning of Height's disease. A pain in the stom ach kiay be the .(list symptom of ap pendicitis. A creak in a joint may be the forerunner of rheumatism. Chronic headaches more than likely warn you i>f iliious stomach trouble. The best way is to keep in good condition day in and day out by regularly taking r.cilj) MKDAI, HAAUDEM Oil, I'up stilef. Sold by reliable druggists. Moqiy refunded if they do not help you. It*'v3ur of substitutes. The only • ure 11up*• t'-rt llaarelm Oil Capsules are the' c;aLD MEDAL.—Advertisement. Absolutely No Pain f W I Mr latrat Improved apptl- J& /* ■"'. luclndla* nu oirrita- *Jv u** 1 led ollr PPratita, makn > xSky, '/'WIF I utrictlns nnd all ltrn(l k work poKltivelr palDlru JtF . A and la prrffrt'T harm- Vv •■. < A ■ EXAMINATION FREE >\\\\ X ,s;Lvr;;.s ' noy B®* lUflitrrrd A \,~ Gold rWM ■ Graduate a % r krldie work *3,14, M -'- T Onto* open dally Bi3o Ar \ 22K cold trom.,.|sJ A F >r to a p. m.l Mon, Wod. V/ aad 9a*., till • p. M.i lu* lam, to a. ■*. to 1 p. ■*. T jp BBIX PHONE aaza-R- _ if • KALY TERMS Of JK PA7UUC.NTS ftTfftoll 329 Market St. W|9ra tOer the llab) Hcxrrlsburg, Pa. it iiiai ivrt *.Mt JFKIL)AY KVENTNG, | similar to the products of the Gamble Fuel Briquette Company, of this city. I The success of the plant in this city, it I is said, has created a demand for the new coal in other parts of the State. | The Sunbury company incorporators | are: C. B. Miller, secretary of the com . pany, anil also attorney for the local company; B. K. Gamble, of Mt. Holly I Springs. I'. 11. Lehman. Harrisburg; U !M. Brieker, J. A. Pryor and W. E. : i Bushey, of Lemoyne. Mrs. Barbara Brubaker Dies While Visiting Daughter ! Halifax, Pa., Jan. 19. Mrs. Bar bara Brubaker, w|dow of the lute Ben | jamin Brubaker. died from pneumonia i at the home of her daughter, Mrs. J. 1 i Etter, at Philadelphia., to whose home she hail gone for a visit shortly before the holidays. Mrs. Brubaker was born here "7 years ago. Two children survive, Mrs. J. r. Etter. of Philadel phia, and Ernest W. Brubaker, of Al j toona. The body was brought here | Wednesday noon and taken to her late I home on Second street, where the ser i vices were conducted at 2 p. m. by her pastor, the Rev. H. B. Slider, of the j .Methodist Episcopal Church. Armed Mob Demands Two Slayers, but Disperse on Promise of Special Trial I lay. \V. Vb„ Jan. 19. A mob of ■ | more than 150 armed men appeared at | the Clay county jail here early to-day. j and demanded Andrew and Howard j Sampson who were confined there charged with murdering Preston Tan- J ner and burning his home. The turn j key who had the keys could not be I found anil the mob fired into the jail . but no one wus wounded. On the I promise of the lawyers that a special term of court would be called anil the ' j prisoners given a speedy trial the mob dispersed. NKWI.ANDs VIOLATED TRUST Washington, Jan. 19. Senator New-lands acknowledged to the Senate i to-day that it was he who furnished to Interstate Commerce Commissioner Daniels while it was yet held confiden tial, the executive session speech of Senator Cummins attacking the com missioner's confirmation. Opponents of Commissioners Daniels contended • that by having possession of the I speech he was enabled to prepare a reply. i CURES NEURITIS and RHEUMATISM Bnuitihes Clicst Colds, Couglis, Sore Throat Over Xiglu For 25 cents you can get a big package of GINGEROLE and drug- I gists will tell you that if it isn't bet- I ter than any piaster, liniment or | poultice you ever used, money back. ! There surely is nothing so good on j earth for sprains, strains, bruises, bun- I ions, callouses, chilblains or frosted | feet. Just rub it on; it will not i blister. 1 GINGEROLE absorbs instantly, is i very penetrating and that's why it 1 only takes a few minutes to get rid lof earache, toothache, backache and I neuralgia. j GINGEROLE won't blister; and is I always ready. It always satisfies. GINGEROLE is for sale by Gross' .Drug Store, Croll Keller, Clark's Medi cine mores and dealers everywhere. j -■ , HARRISBURG tSKb TELEGRAPH STANDING UP AND FOLLOWING AFTER International Sunday School Lesson on "First Disciples" (By William T. Kills.)) | Six men sat in council upon a grave i international question. The issues of i the little gathering might be—indeed, | proved to be-—portentous, for a call ; to the Christian manhood of the coun- I try was in contemplation. The six j men all expressed themselves as in explicit and complete agreement. J When it came to signing the docu ment that had been agreed upon, one man, an eminent ecclesiastic, said he would like one night more for con sideration. The next morning he sent work that he would not sign. He was atraid to stand up and be counted, iHe vigorously expressed convictions jof the day before could not weigh against expediency. All" his life he i had sought to be on the side of the j majority vote. Therefore, in one of the great testing times, he could not torsake all and follow his gleam. I Then, to crown all, the tragedy wis turned into a comedy by the later de j for the ecclesiastical I politician had guessed wrong, and I the big crowd proved to be on the | side of the statement he l.ad been afraid to sign! Incidents of this sort are enacted every day and every hour. Miriads I are constantly in the valley of deci- I sion. | "Once to every man and nation comes the moment to decide, In the strife of Truth with Falsehood, j for the good or evil side; 1 Some great cause, God's new Messiah offering each the bloom or blight, , Parts the goats upon the left hand, I and the sheep upon the right; ! And the choice goes by forever 'twixt that darkness and that light." Daring to Decide In matters moral and spiritual, | there can be no neutrals. Once a i great question of right and duty is | faced it must be answered. Any at j tempt to evade it is in itself an an swer. Never was the world so full of [ challenges to decision as now. Op portunely, this Sunday School lesson upon decision conies to fortify the | souls of youth; for it is youth that j has the courage to make great deci sions, and to leave all and follow a new ; allegiance. The radiance of the cour | age and loyalty and self-abnegation jof the millions of soldiers in Europe, | who have dared to make all sacri- I fices for what they believe to be loy j alty. may not be overlooked as we i contemplate the darker side of war. In the case of the half dozen young j men whose life choices we glimpse in the present lesson, Jesus of Nazareth | represented to them the call to the i best possible expression of them i selves. Two of them, at least, for- I sook the second-best for the best. Three of them brought dear ones into | the same discipleship of the new Mas i ter. In so doing, they all found a I newness and greatness of life that j passed their imagination. ! "If I find Him, If I follow, What His guerdon here? ] 'Many a sorrow, many a labor, Many a tear.' ; "If 1 still hold closely to Him, What hath He at last? I 'Sorrow vanquished, labor ended, I Jordan passed.' : "Finding, following, keeping, strug gling, Ts He sure to bless? | 'Saints, apostles, prophets, martyrs, Answer, 'Yes.' " The Man Who Abdicated Possibly the man who can best un derstand the sublimity of the great, renunciation of John the Baptist, in surrendering his leadership and his disciples to Jesus, is the pastor who, upon the advent of an evangelist in his community, suspends his own services, gives up his own plans, and becomes a mere assistant to the temporary preacher, probably being denounced by the latter after all! All the while he . knows that the evangelist could not hold a pastorate or succeed in the exacting and con tinuing work of the man whom he has for the moment displaced and ob | scured. i John the Baptist was so thoroughly | first-class that he was able to take j a second place. He was great enough to know a greater. Therefore, with ; tine magnanimity, he made way for Jesus. All the prestige he had won, i all the popularity he had built up, | all the following he had gained, he laid down as a cloal'c on the highway I of the One whose messenger he hail j been. Let us tarry to thank God for j this John the Baptist spirit, which has never been absent from the ' church. The richness of the Cliris j tian fellowship is in these superior saints who take a secondary place. Their faith is that "The Father which seeth in secret, he shall re ward you openly." Whittier's fa miliar lines might have been written of the Baptist and all who follow in his train; "What matter, T or they, Mine or another's day. So the right word be said, And life the sweeter made. "Ring bells, in far ort steeples, The joy of unborn peoples; Sound, trumpets far-off blown, Your triumph is my own." This Is the Birthday Anniversary of— ___> ALDERMAN A. M. LANDIS He was born in 184 S at Newville, Cumberland county. The Alderman has been prominent in civic and political life for many years. He served from 1875 until 1887 on the city police force, serving four years as chief of police under Mayor S. C. Wil son. He was a special ofttcer for tl.e Pennsylvania Railroad for 7 years. He has since been aJdeim-un of the Sixth ward. The Telegraph extends con gratulations. 1 I XZ BELL—IO9I—U.VITKD IIARIIISBURO, FRIDAY, JANUARY 10. 101 T. FOUNDED 18T1 ♦♦ xx Only a Few Days Longer and Our Stock of | BOYS' CLOTHING WILL BE SOLD § | PRTCE IP I H Your final chance A life-time opportunity for par- B XX ents. II H COMMENCING TO-MORROW MORNING AT 9it U O'CLOCK YOUR CHOICE OF OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF H 5, * g 1 Boys' Suits and Overcoats! ♦♦ ■ ♦♦ SS AT EXACTLY H IHALF PRICEI :: tx ♦♦ —— ~ ♦♦ XX XX XX Bring your boy or send him here to be fitted out —♦♦ ♦♦ Choose from any Suit or Overcoat and pay but half. ♦♦ YxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxHx NAME SOLOISTS FOR MEMORIAL Service in Memory of Dr. Wil liam B. Gilchrist to Be Distinctive Tiie memorial service to be given in memory of the late Dr. William W. Gilchrist, next Monday evening, at Zion Lutheran Church, promises to be an event of great interest. Dr. Gilchrist was for many years the leader of the Choral Society, and was also much in terested in the general progress along all lines of the city. A choir of sixty voices will sing some of Dr. Gilchrist s best-known anthems, and the follow ing well-known artists will sing solos; Mrs Rov G. Cox, Mrs. William Bum baugh. Miss Catherine Heicher, George Sutton, Charles Cassell, M. 13. Hollen baugh. Miss Sara Lemer, the violinist, will play a selection composed for the occasion by E. J. Decevee. A movement, headed by some of the most prominent citizens of Philadelphia, is now under way. having for its object the erection either of a monument or bronze tablet to be placed in memory of Dr. Gilchrist in the Academy of Music, Philadelphia. On that occasion, as heie. the most important works by the great composer will be given. Mr. Decevee, chairman of the local committee, said to-day: "All former and present members or the Harrisburg Choral Society are in vited and especially urged to be pres ent in a bodv at the memorial service to Dr. William W. Gilchrist." Courthouse Notes Attended Funeral. County Re corder James E. Lentz attended the funeral of John P. Miller, former deputy reorder and at one time Mr. Lentz's school teacher. To Draw Jurors. —Sixty jurors will be drawn next Wednesday morning to serve during the second special Feb ruary term of common pleas court, which opens February 26. * Officials at Philadelphia. County Commissioner Dr. H. M. Stine and County Treasurer Mark Jlumma were in Philadelphia to-day on business. Flic Suit.— Stella E. Lee tiled a suit late yesterday afternoon against Car rie Parsons to recover S4OO which she claims she earned while in the employ Weak Lungs and Chest Troubles respond more quickly to the blood-enriching oil-food in SCOTT'S EMULSION than to any other one medicine. SCOTTS is a rich, nourishing food to strengthen tender throats and bronchial tubes. It is of peculiar benefit to the respiratory tract and is liberally used in tu berculosis camps for that purpose. You get no alcohol in Scott's. Scott fit Bowne, Bloom held. N. J. 16^22 FOR THROAT AND LUNGS STUBBORN COUGIIS AND COLDS ECKMAN'S ALTERATIVE kOI.D UV LBAUINO DRUGGISTS Use Telegraph Want Ads JANUARY 19, 1917 of the latter. Probate Will. —County Register Roy C. Danner to-day probated the will of Jacob S. Sherk, late of Grantville, and issued letters to the widow, Emma R. Sherk. • Visits Sheriff. —Sheriff Merkley, of Berks county, en route to Huntingdon, visited Sheriff Caldwell to-day. Sheriff Caldwell later left for Huntingdon Reformatory, taking Augustus Eberly and Christian Rones, Jr., there. Damage Suit for SIO,OOO. —John B. and Margaret Sheesley yesterday filed suit against the Harrisburg Railways Company to recover SIO,OOO damages for the loss of their son Leroy, aged 2, whom they claim was fatally injured when struck by a street car fast April. This Boy Isn't "Dosed" For A Croup or Colds (f 1 His Mother Says—"When tho V- !u Children are Croupy I Just Apply a Good Application of Vick's Vapoßub Salve at Bed- /t --time, and go to Sleep, Sure that \ the Little Ones Will Be All Right. an a ppn catlon at night—then go to Mrs. M. Z. Smith, • 320 Wood bed an<l rest assured that the little Sreet, Johnstown, Pa., is one of the ones are a 'l right for the night." many mothers who have found the in the South Vick's Vapoßub is Southern remedy—Vick's Vapoßub universally used as the "Bodyguard" Salve, much better than internal in the home against all forms of medicines. Mrs. Smith writes cold troubles, from lie<ul or chest "I find your Vapoßub the finest colds, sore throat, bronchitis, down remedy for croup and colds that I to deep chest colds or Incipient pnou have ever used, and now we would monia. It is applied externally—is not be without it, as we have two therefore perfectly harmless—and children and they are relieves by inhalation as a vapor both subject to croup. and by absorption through the skin. l,se Vapoßub as a Three sizes, 25c, 60c, or $1 00 in time'—put on At all druggists. Keep a lifrNe BOPV-GUABP in VOUR home** A JOCKS SALVE I'm your friend at all times and you can call on me for a nickel. My name is KING OSCAR and you can find me most any where. Just try me! JOHN C. HERMAN & CO., Makers Seeks to Oust Tenant. —Patrick J. Sillivan, an Eighth ward hotelman, started proceedings late yesterday to compel B. Leslie Potter, tenant in tlie old Fox Hotel property, to vacate. Sul livan bought the property at sheriff's sale. STOPS MAKING BREAD Norristown, Pa ..Jan. 19. —One of the biggest bakers in Norristown, Wil liam Schwartz, gave notice to his patrons that "the baking of bread, in all its varieties, including rolls and breakfast cakes," would be discon tinued. "In the future," reads the no tice, "we will give our whole attention to fancy cakes, pastry and deserts;" • 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers