2 CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA NEWS NEW JAIL AT CARLISLE NEEDED Judge Sadler Instructs Grand Jury to Make Complete Survey Carlisle, Pa., Feb. 6. The abso lute need of a new jail for Cumber land county or many changes to the present structure was emphasized by Judge Sadler when he,gave a special investigation charge to the Grand Jury in the February term of criminal court now in session, quoting also from a recommendation of the State Board of Charities on the matter. The charity board advises the erection of an entirely new building stating that "the front walls might be kept as the people of Carlisle seem to like their appearance." The body will also act on a recom mendation of viewers to close a bridge on the State Highway route leading from Carlisle to Gettysburg which is classed as dangers and which the borough says it cannot repair for lack of funds. BAND ELECTS Mechanicsburg, Pa., Feb. (!. Offi cers for the ensuing year were elected by the Singer Band as follows: Pres ident, Samuel L. Duey; vice-president, Lloyd E. Rhodes; secretary, E. E. Strong; assistant secretary, Willis Ar nold; treasurer, Frank T. Hiilinger; business manager. Louis A. Diiler; di rector, Philip 1. Shelter; assistant di rector, George C. Dietz; librarian, Philip I. Sheffer; directors, John Cra mer, Hugh W. Strock and John Kyle. Four new members were admitted to the band as follows: Albert Childs, Paul Rltter, Herbert Lehman and John Brougher. CRIMINAL COURT OPENS Sunbury, Pa., Feb. 6. —Northumber- land county criminal court opened here to-day with 51 cases listed for trial. Thirty of these are new. Two murder cases are included. BIG ICE HARVEST Waynesboro, Pa., Feb. 6. Thou sands of tons of Ice were harvested this winter by the Buena Vista Springs Ice Company from Lake Royer, at Cas cade, Md., near Pen Mar. PASTOR RESIGNS Marietta, Feb. 6. The Rev. Jo seph D. Krout, pastor of the Maytown Lutheran Church for a number of I years, has resigned. He will become j pastor of Holy Trinity Lutheran ■ Church, Audubon, N. J. Suffered with ; ''• il| Catarrh for Twel y e Months M^" NA Different Mr. W. H. Chaney, R. F. D. 2, Sutherlin, Va., writes: "For the past twelve months I have been a Will Your Wife Have sls a Week When You are Gone? Go into the matter of your Life Insurance con scientiously, with your agent. Find out what the income would be, should j-ou be taken away sud denly. Would it be sls a week, even by the most liberal plan? Do you want her to have to get along on less? Shouldn't she really have more? I You Life Insurance Agent will tell you how you can carry enough insurance to give your wife a living income when you are gone. And you can do it easily bj' means of a Premium Savings Account. He will /tell you about that too. ! Mechanics Trust Company, 3rd & Market Sts. j e | YES, the motor truck is a necessity, and the progressive business man of to day has already purchased motor trucks or is figuring on them for the very near future. But it is not a question of any motor truck. It is a question of reasonable first cost, economy of upkeep and operation, and efficiency in keeping everlastingly at work. Above all, the motor truck owner de mands effective, continuous and reasonable after-sale service. The only assurance of this lies in purchasing from a responsible and successful manufacturer. THE AUTOCAR COMPANY ARDMORE, PA. V % 5 ' -4 i TUESDAY EVENING, FEDERATE PERRY BIBLE CL ASSES Organization Has Definite Aims For Growth of Move ment in County Marysville, Pa., Feb. 6.—Extensive plant) are being made for the organ ized adult Bible classes of Perry county | for the year 1917. The first annual ■ conference was held at Duncannon re ! cently and now the executive commit j tee has just announced details that • have been worked out for the fed eral ion of the adult Bible classes of | Perry county. The program as worked ! out falls under four heads and is ap pended: ! Organisation— by getting the church and Bible class voters out at primaries and election; (b) securing the co operation of all classes in temperance reform and community betterment. COTTAGE PRAYER SERVICES Shiremanstown, Pa., Feb. 6. Cot tage prayer services are being held each day by the Bethel Church of God. Revival services are being held each evening, conducted by the Rev. R. E. Soylar. JTO HEAT; NO SCHOOL Lemoyne, Pa., Feb. 6. No school was held in the borough schools yes terday .'til day on account of it beins impossible to heat the rooms properly. The furnaces were fired hard all night and the school resumed to-day. sufferer from catarrh of the head. Since taking: four bottles of your Pe runa I *feel a different person alto gether. Tlie severe pains in my head have disappeared, and my entire sys -1 tcm has been greatly strengthened. | This is my first testimonial to the curative qualities of any patent medicine, but I feel it a duty to mankind to let them know of the Kreatest medicine on earth, Peruna, !in my estimation, for the above trouble." Tlioso who object to liquid medi cines can now procure l'enma Tab lets. HEIGHTS WOULD BE ANNEXED Committee Will Present Peti tion to Lemoyne Council Tonight Lemoyne, Pa., Feb. 6. Washing ton Heights residents are again seek ing admittance to the borough. Cliristofer Renecker and Mr. Davis compose a committee representing the residents who will meet Lemoyne council at its regular meeting to-nigh(. A petition containing the names of i more than half the residents of this ! district will be presented to the | borough fathers by this committee. , Residents want, the entire community taken into the borough including the i Haldeman tract near the borough of j Camp Hill. 'Raymond Parker Given Position With the Globe Raymond Parker, who for a num ber of years has been identified with I the hat business of this city, has ac cepted a position with the Globe as manager of the men's hat depart ment. Mr. Parker is well known throughout the city among the younger men, who wish him every success in his new position. TWO SURVIVORS DIE Brest, Feb. 6. The captain and twelve men of the Spanish steamer Al gorta, which was sunk by a submarine, have been landed here by a steam trawler. They were adrift for forty-six hours before being rescued, and two sailors, Bartholomed Paregan and Jose Urvos, died as a result of their privations soon after being taken aboard tlie trawler. The other refugees had their hands and feet frozen and are In the Seamen's Hospital. Several of them are in a grave condition. C. M. SCHWAB ON WIVES The Right Kind Useful; the Nagging Kind Drags on Success -In his Itttte'-Twok "Succeeding With What You Have" (Century Company), Charles M. Schwab tells something about his own success and the inner workings of the Bethlehem Steel plant. Wo quote an interesting point on domestic success. Says Mr. Schwab on Page GO: "I can never express the wonderful help Mrs. Schwab has been to me from the very start. Not long ago u group of men offered me a large sum, $t>0,000,000.1 believe, for half of Beth lehem. 1 told my wife about it that evening. 'This is a big sum,' 1 said. 'Half of what I have is yours. What shall we do? If we sell, your share, invested at 5 per cent, will bring you an income of over SIOO,OOO a month for the rest of your life.' 'We wouldn't sell for five times that,' my wife said. 'What would I do with the money? And what would you do without your work'!' "I have seen more men fail in busi ness through (he attitude taken by their wives in their younger clays than from all the viees put together. A nagging wife, or one who is not in sympathy with a man's work, who expects impossible, things of him, and is incapable of taking a general in telligent interest in his work, is one of the worst handicaps lie could have. If a man works with his mind clogged by domestic troubles ho is of no use to himself, his employer, or the world at large." CELEBRATE ANNIVERSARY Capitol legion. No. 1108, will cele brate its twelfth anniversary to-mor row evening at 26 North Third street.. SPEED combined with good judgment counts in business now-a-days. Grape-Nuts FOOD I Supplies balanced nourishment for sturdy muscles and active brains. "There's a Reason" No change in price, quality or size of package. HXRIIISBURG TELEGKXPH | Hot Off the Wire | •*>- ■ V j Washington, Feb. . Plans for strengthening aeronautical defenses liavc been laid before President Wil son by the National Aerial Coast I'atrol Commission, headed by Hear Admiral Peary. The plan includes the stationing of 1,000 hydroaeroplanes along the coast, the training of 2,300 aviators In six months and 5,000 in a year, and the establishment of a de partment of aeronautics with Its head a member of the cabinet. Newport News, Va., J£cb. 6. Plans are under way to move the German prize ship Appam from Newport News to Norfolk. In leaving his ship Lieut. Hans licrg, the prize commander, turned over to the United States mar shal in cliarge six hundred pounds English money and two British orphans' fund Itoxes heavily ladcu with coin. Marshal SauiKlers was un aware of the presence of this money aboard the Appam. New York, Feb. . A resolution approving tlic President's course in the international crisis and pledging him "hearty and united support," was adopted amid enthusiastic cheers at the opening of the joint annual con vention here to-day of the Pciuisylr vanla and Atlantic Seaboard Hard ware Association and the New York State Itetail Hardware Asoclation. The resolution was wired to Wash ington. Washington, Feb. r I sA;ssic¥r te ,or ra,,m --; 95.00 Costume, 50.00 69.50 Dance Frock, 35.00 | Copen Panne Velvet One-piece Costume; size m„„ t- -r- , , I 36; trimmed in mink. . H 0 , Tulle Dance Frock, combined with I French Blue; size 36. I 125.00 Costume, 50.00 95 00 Dance Frock 49 50 | Beige Kitten-ear cloth one-piece costume, . massively trimmed in mink. Royal Purple Tulle Dance Frock over Cloth I of Gold; size 38. 135.00 Street Frock, 50.00 loc . ftAr . n Cftrn j, I J Evening Gown, 59.50 Ivory-white Panne Velvet Skating or Street ■ ■ Frock; size 36. with massive banda of musk- Apple Green Embroidered Cloth of Silver- I rat fur trimming. elaborately combined with Silver Lace ' I "" 'I |. 11 Dance Frocks made of Tulle Nets and Lace, Misses'sizes only, 1 A Qft I values up to $32.50; special 1- , . I 9 Evening and Dance Gowns, in Ladies' and Misses' sizes, in Silk J Q [Ja Laces and Velvet, values up to $49.75; special lO.DU 4 Evening Gowns elaborately trimmed in Sequin, values up to OIT flfk $65.00; special I 10 Ladies' Afternoon and Evening Dresses, values up to $59.50; 0£ f|r| I special Miscellaneous Lot of Dresses; 15 in all; Nets, Serges and Crepe dc £AA | Chines; Misses' sizes only; slightly soiled; values up tos2s; special OeUU || 25.00 to 59.50 Women's and Misses' I Afternoon Dresses High Class Suits | lof Georgette Crepes, Velvet Combinations, Crepe de Chine; exceptional garments; special °' Velvet* and Velours. Only twenty in all; prices. irrespective of former prices, choice I 15.00 to 18.50 25.00 •L , ' i i ease. He was 41 years of age, and the son of the Rev. and Mrs. Henry Fish er, Lancaster, Pa. He had been a resident of Waynesboro for the past seventeen years and was one of the largest stockholders of tho Landia Machine Company, this place, and one of the town's richest men. He is sur- j vived by Ills parents, his wile and three children. The funeral will be held here Wednesday, afternoon at 2 | o'clock at the house. WILLIAM D. BEEM .Yoganvllle, Feb. G. William D.' ij SO, buy the one genuine. Every package and every tablet of n iV ■>: genuine Aspirin bears "The Bayer Cross" your protection against H counterfeits and harmful substitutes. "The Bayer Croat —Your m (1 _ H Tfce trade-mark "Aspirin" (Retr. U. S. Pat. Office) H |jmj| Boxes of 12 |WI is a guaranUe tbat the monoacsticacidester of IlijiJ Bottle* of R fiiicTilctcid in these tablets ii of the reliable H |al 24 and 100 H Carer manufacture. FEBRUARY 6, 1917. Rcem, died last night at the home of his daughter from a complication of diseases. He was a member of the P. O. S. of A. and the Presbyterian Church. His widow and seven chil dren survive. MRS CATHARINE STROUP | Millersburg, Pa., Feb./ 6. ' — Mrs | Catharine Stroup, aged 86 years, died : early Sunday morning nt the home of i her daughter, Mrs. O. C. Hockenbery, Center street, after a short illness of paralysis. The funeral will take place from her late home Wednesday at 2 p. m. The Rev. Mr. Musselman, of the Lutheran Church, officiating. Burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it. 25c at all druggists. t —\ HBADQUARTEnS FOII SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES mmaz Entrust your plating, polishing and art metal reflnishing work to us and you will never be disap pointed. Gold and Silverware Retinished —Replated —brass and metal art work, also do oxydlzlng and lacquering. Phono us and get our estimate. Bell Phone 2853 Harrlsburg, Penna. j Use Telegraph Want Ads