Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, February 20, 1917, Page 9, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Heed the warning twinge
of rheumatism in your mus- ITWffljjr
cles and joints and stop it |1 |JH|i
with & warming application of j^B|l
The country wide out-door move
ment hps multiplied {he users and /y
uses of Sloan t> Liniment for the MaKBM
painful after of exposure
and strenuous exercise. |IJt
Easily applied without rubbing, |jj
It goes right to the sore spot with Igl
relief. Does not stain the skin or j'jllll 11 \j 13 >II jj!
'clog the pores. |*|
For* the pains oic neuralgia, f;| sl]
[lame back, bruises, sore stiff mus- j[i ljl
cles, sprains and strains, [it /PtL f "I
Sloan's Lminient gives ~
Huge Commercial Orchard
Planned at State College
State College, Pa., Feb. 20, A
sixty-acre fruit farm with the com- ;
plete equipment of a commercial or
chard Is planned for the department j
of horticulture at the Pennsylvania!
State College. The new orchard, sup- j
plementing the present experimental (
tracts, is to be established to enable'
students In the various horticultural
courses to obtain practical instruction
in modern methods of fruit growing. ;
According to the plans of Dr. S. W.!
Fletcher, head of the Horticultural de- '
partment, the State College orchard j
will be planted to apple, peach, pear,
plum and other tree fruits. Small
fruits, strawberries, raspberries and
grapes will also be planted. A large
packing house is to be part of the
equipment.
GLEE CU IL TO MARK RECORDS
State College, Pa.. Feb. 20. The i
male quartet of the Pennsylvania State
College glee club has arranged with !
the Edison Phonograph Company to j
sing selections for several records. C. j
|
You can cure
that cold in a
day. Take—
CASCARA^UININE
Hie old family remedy—in tablet
form—safe, sure, easy to take. No
opiates-no unpleasant after effects.
Cures colds in 24 hours—Grip in 3
days. Money back if it fails. Get
the genuine box with Red Top
utl Mr. Hill's picture on it—2s cents.
At Any Drug Stora
1
(f
The Beginning of Saving
Just as in everything else, there is a right and a
wrong way to save. Saving should be above all
systematic and purposeful.
Systematic in that you set aside a definite sum at
definite intervals.
Purposeful in that you save for a definite object.
The advice of this company is to adopt as your first
purpose the initial premium on a Life Insurance
Policy.
TALK TO A LIFE INSURANCE MAN ABOUT THIS PLAN
Mechanics Trust Company, 3rd and Market
GOULDNT FOOL HIM TWICE
Experience Proved That There Was Nothing "Just
As Good" as Father John's Medicine for Colds
and Throat Troubles and As a Body Builder
The victim of an unscrupulous /Liiljfk f -J"* m
druggist in a Pennsylvania town B
says that when he asked for If
Father John's Medicine the drug- f _
gist persuaded him to take some- V- X
thing else was "just as vrrffaLi-L'tl-A X
good," according to the clerk. Y 1 / \
"I might just as well have taken v, W f Ay ill T/y 1
so much water," this writer con- l( .1 ///J I/L \
tinues. "I afterward went back /.k M i f V (
and got Father John's Medicine iMi CJ. /
and in a short time I felt the good ii^
effects. It increased my weight, uZ VML' W°y(Vj
gave me strength^and helped my iMii iXyrj
In some localities this practice 7) 1W? J i®\ f\]
of substitution by druggists is an f |l \ i M
evil practice of vast proportions. /F< * t■ I lCrj
The unscrupulous druggist who l/I' ' []■ \\ vfyf
forces upon you a different prepa- Wl ! ,IV [\ |
ration when you call for Father John's Medicine " • 11 Jl, - yH
Remember that Father John's Medicine is at p
doctors prescription, pure and wholesome, free '
from opium, morphine, chloroform or any other
dangerous drags or alcohol and with a history of more than 6o years' success
in the treatment of colds, throat troubles and as a tonic and body builder,
Begin taking it today; it will make you strong. j
TUESDAY EVENING*
I C. Robinson, Pertn State's musical dl
-1 rector, will havo his club sing for the
! records while they ore in New York
City for the annual Intercollegiate
Clee Club Contest, March 3.
Country Church Conference
Launched at State College
State College, Pa., Feb. 20. To
: learn how to develop their country
| churches Into potent community cen
ters, ministers from all parts of this
i State will hold a ten-day conference
, at the Pennsylvania State College next
i summer. Preliminary plans for the
gathering were made here by twenty
preachers who responded to the invi
tation sent out by Dr. Edwin R.
; Sparks, the college president.
The conference will meet from July
| 10 to 20, running In conjunction with
: the summer session for teachers.
: Subjects helpful to the ministers in
their aims will be studied as follows:
Religious education, rural sociology,
rural school problems, technical agri
culture, and organized play. Much in
terest was expressed by the church
i leaders in the possibilities of organized
; play.
PLAYFUL CAT NEARLY CAUSES
DEATH OF WOMAN
! Atlantic City, Feb. 20.—A playful
! cat, pawing a rubber gas tube in the
j home of Mrs. Frank Herbert, while
the family slept, yesterday, turned on
1 the valve of a gas stove. The cat was
' still at play when members of the
household, smelling the fumes, broke
into Mrs. Herbert's room and found
| her unconscious. Ambulance surgeons
revived her.
MAY DRE FROM SHOT
Reading, Pa., Feb. 20.—Alvln D.
Schwartz, 31, single, was shot, possibly
| fatally, in the abdomen while handling
a rifle in his room in an apartment
house here. He said he did not know
i the weapon was loaded and had stood
lit up against a chair. It was accident
; ally knocked down and the charge
i struck Schwartz, who was about to go
j to a shooting match.
USE OF STATE
CONVICTS IN ROAD
BUILDING GROWS
Show Trend Pfoiri Prison Shop
Eniplyment Id Construction
of Publie Works "
WfshtftgteHi fi: ?:, Feb: IS:—A
steady tleetrtlse sitiee IBSS in the pro
portion ef PBhrieta itt the thiited States
employed #o>. : iniseptlaneeUs trorh Utti
del' lease tkttd Menlraet tend ft marked
increase ill the employed
foe the benefit of the State on hinh
>Tttjre tend othel' }<ublie Works are
showrt in statistics just published by
the office of Public Honda and Rural
Engineering of the United States De
partment of AgTleMiture; These statis
tics are included in Department Bul
letin 414, a professional paper, Which
reports one of the first exhaustive
studies made in this country covering
the administrative, engineering, eco
nomic) disciplinary and health condi
tions In convict road camps. Repre
sentatives of the United States Public
Health Service co-operated with the
specialists of the Department of Agri
culture in making the studies. The
systems adopted by the several States
are discussed and recommendations
are made for the achievement of
greater efficiency In operation of the
convict camps and conduct of the road
works
The systems of convict labor are
classified In the report as lease, con
tract and piece price systems, under
which the labor of convicts Is for the
benefit of private Individuals or corpor
ations, often in the manufacture of
commodities; the public account sys
tem, under which the convict-made
goods are sold by the State! the State
use system, under which goods are
manufactured only for use in State
institutions, and the public works and
ways system, under which the labor
of the convicts la devoted to public
structure and roads. The latter system
has grown In popularity, it is pointed
out, because it makes use of the con
vict labor with a minimum of com
petition with free labor, contributes
fairly lasting benefits to the whole
community, affords healthful and even
somewhat reformative employment to
the convicts, and reduces congestion
In penal Institutions, The most satis
factory use of the system, In the opin
ion of the department's road special
ists, is under State rather than coun
ty administration. Since 1885, the re
port shows, the percentage of convicts
in a larite number of representative
institutions working under the public
account, State-use and public works
and ways systems, has Increased from
33 to 86 per cent., while the propor
tion engaged In road work alone has
increased from 1.3 per cent, to nearly
13 per cent.
Convicts should not b® Indiscrimi
nately put to work on roads. It is
pointed out. Only those who are phy
sically fit for the work should be em
ployed. It may be even desirable and
practicable In many Instances to re
serve assignment to the open-air work
as a reward for good behavior. Phy
sically and by former mode of life,
statistics cited In the report show,
about three-fourths of the average
male prison population is better fitted
for out-door labor than for shop work.
In practice, when all considerations
are taken Into account, it has been
found that from twenty-five to fifty
per cent, of the male Inmates of pris
ons are available for road work.
English Lecturer To
Speak on Conditions
In Geological Ages
Joseph McCabe, of London, Eng
land, will give a descriptive lecture
to-night in the Technical High school
auditorium, under the auspices of the
Harrisburg Natural History Society.
He will tell of the conditions of life
in the past geological ages, describing
the early fish, vast coal forests, the
rise and fall of the great reptile age
and the various causes that work in
the advancement of birds and higher
animals.
Mr. McCabe is one of England's
most popular scientific lecturers now
making a tour of the United States.
He is the author of thirty works and
the translator of twelve others. He
is a fluent speaker and his success is
attributed to his ability to present
scientific subjects in a simple lan
guage.
Court Places Value of
$25 on Bank Directorship
Carlisle, Pa.. Feb. 20. A Cumber
land county jury in court to-day
placed a value of $25 on a bank direc
torship, awarding this sum to E. M.
Biddle. Jr., a local attorney who
brought suit against the Carlisle De
posit Bank for damages on the claim
that he had been kept from the direc
torship of that institution by reason
of the failure of the president. Frank
C. Bosler, to make out a certificate of
stock transfer. Biddle filed quo war
ranto proceedings and mandamus, this
latter action being heard yesterday
with Judge W. Rush Gillan, of Cham
bersburg, specially presiding. Judge
Gillan in his charge stated that under
the evidence only nominal damages
could be given and the $25 verdict
was given.
Greek Poor Are Living
on Herbs and Grass
Washington, Feb. 20.—The Greek
legation, in a statement here says fa
mine is resulting from the Entente
blockade of the coast of Greece and
the poor classes are living on herbs
and grass. It also is declared that des
pite compliance with the ultimatum of
the Allies, there has been no relaxa
tion of blockade measures.
20 YEARS FOR SLAYING RIVAL
Sunbury, Pa., Feb. 20.—Thomas
Thompson, 20 years old, of New York,
convicted of the second degree mur
der of Homer Reynolds, of New Ber
lin, at Milton on October 21 last, was
sentenced by Judge Cummings to serve
twenty years in the Eastern Peniten
tiary. Thompson shot Reynolds from
behind without a word of warning. At
his trial no defense was offered. Judge
Cummings severely chided tlvß jury for
not bringing in a first degree verdict.
The Judge yesterday declared that but
for a miscarriage of justice Thompson
would have been visited with the death
penalty.
Both Reynolds and Thompson wero
paying attentions to Mrs. Carrie Coup.
THIEVES TRADE TIRES FOR GAS
York, Pa., Feb. 20.—Two automo
bile thieves were arrested here 'ast
evening. When their gasoline became
exhausted they replenished their sup
ply by trading two tires for ten gal
lons. Th#>y confessed they stole the
car from William Campbell, of New
ark, N. J.
HVRT WITH RAILROAD CAP
Linglestown, Pa., Feb. 20. A son
of Milton Allen found a railroad cap
and tried to break It with a hammer.
The explosion which followed badly
Injured several of his Angers.
taARRISBURG t&SftSjl TELEGRAPH
I The I
| Public Ledger I
I secures the most important and 1
| exclusive war news, thro' its 1
1 connection with the London I
j Times, twenty-four hours 1
| ahead of any other American I
j newspaper. |
1 The Public Ledger often j
j has most interesting news |
! "beats," duly cabled the next |
j day to our esteemed contem- |
| poraries as fresh news! j
I The Public Ledger main- S
1 tains a more comprehensive 1
j news service, has more special f
I correspondents of its own in f
| leading cities and more I
j real news than any other news- I
| paper. I
| The Public Ledger is I
I quoted editorially, more often 1
| than any other newspaper. I
1
I Philadelphia I
PUBLICsM&LEDGER I
On sale at hotel newsstands in leading cities I
February 20,
9