Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, September 28, 1917, Page 10, Image 10

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    10
LIMIT LUNCHEON
TO MEMBERS ONLY
Chamber of Commerce Men
in Good Standing Permitted
to Attend War Meeting
Only member* of the Harrisburg
Chamber of Commerce who are in
good standing are eligible to attend
the annual dinner and "war meeting"
which will be held on Monday. Octo
ber S. at 7.30 p. m. The guest ot
honor and the principal speaker upon
this occasion will be the Secretary
of War, Newton D. Baker.
Due to the fact that Secretary
Baker's acceptnce was feceved only
a few days ago. it has been impos
sible to announce the arrangements
for the annual meeting some weeks
in advance, as has been the custom.
Members are urged to mail their
checks with their acceptances. No
reservations will be made unless a
check is sent.
Brilliant Spenker
The dinner will be served in Chest
rut Street Auditorium, and. although
the auditorium will accommodate a
large number of persons, it is ex
pected that the capacity of the build
ing will be more than taxed. The
membership of the locaJ body lis
large, and reservations should be
made early. The charge for this oc
casion will be $2.50 per cover.
Secretary Baker, as the man who
is actually in charge of America's
share in the world var, will have a
iiessage importance. The
Secretary of War is a brilliant speak
er and members of the Chamber of
Commerce are looking forward to
the meeting with keenest anticipa
tion.
Candidates for directors of the local
body have been selected in accord
ance with the by-laws. The follow
ing persons have been placed in nom
ination: Quincy Bent, Carl K. Deen,
Robert A. Enters, J. E. Gipple, W. P.
Maguire, John T. Olmsted, H. A. Rob
itison. \V. P. Starkey, J. 11. Troup
and John Fox Weiss. The five per
sons receiving tii.> highest vote will
be elected for • terms.
GI'II.TV o i- . . i. man
Gertrude Ritzman was found guilty
of abandoning her infant child by a
jury in Judge Kunkel's court this
morning, but sentence has not yet
been imposed. It is understood that
the Court will be asked to parole the
nurse.
LetCuticuraße
Your Beauty Doctor
Now That Piano
Invite You to See Our Display
of The
$285 to SBSO
Surely if you are interested in a new piano for your home you will be
interested in seeing our unequalled display of famous pianos listed above.
This is your invitation to come and inspect them. The instruments them
selves are works of art. Beautiful in finish. Exquisite in tone. The latest
achievements from America's leading Piano Manufacturers. Yet with all
their'known value and guaranteed worth, they are
fEasy to Acquire
On our convenient rental payment plan—and
prices here are the lowest named anywhere. Come in
now for demonstrations and explanations. And, too
Victrolas & Edisons
will be found here and here only, at guaranteed low
est prices. Don't fail to compare them side by side
and choose the one which you like most. Ask about
See Our Angelu* and Other Player-Pianos
PRICES $425 to SIOSO
J. H. Troup Music House
Latest Troup Building Victor
- 88-Note Records
Music Roiis 15 Market Square Edison
FRIDAY EVENING,
HARRISBURG BOY WINS AVI
EXPECTS TO L
" : .;..... j '&§£%s
- ,\ . "'tv®' '"'' V ; : _;_. *■■ fgM "' : - ■• ■-■■ W|i|§' .. v
'ffir
When Uncle Sam begins his aerial
raids on the Kaiser's domains one of
the Harrisburg boys who expects to
be in charge of a big flyer is Lau
rence Ellsmere McGinlej. In a
letter to his grandparents who re
side at 122 Chestnut street, he says
orders to move toward a seaport are
expected daily.
He Refuses to Be Silenced;
Wins His Freedom in Court
Actions on the witness stand of
times help a criminal court defend
ant to squirm out of troubles and
William Boyken, colored, was no
exception to the rule yesterday when
he was tried on a charge of robbing
an old colored man, staggering
drunk, several weeks ago at Fourth
and Strawberry streets.
The Commonwealth's witnesses
seemed to link up a chain of circum
stantial evidence against the defend
nnt, indicating that he knocked the
drunk down and took $4 from his
pocket. When Boyken took the stand
he was so enthusiastic he refused to
remain seated .He insited upon tell
ing his story. He was 'found not
guilty.
A little dishwasher, a girl of 11
years, with golden curls, who last
spring worked after school hours
and later, during part of the summer
McQinley is pictured above with
his airplane. He is seated in his
flyer, and the picture was taken
shortly after ho landed on the field
at Fairfield, Ohio. He is a member
of the Twelfth United States Aero
Squadron. McGinley served in the
Seventy-flrst New York Regiment,
Company E, in Mexico, and on his
vacation season in the Steelton res
. of Harry W. Reed, went on
the witness stand in Judge Kunkel's
illi!mi court at noon to
day and related a startling story, tell -
nig of three attacks made on her by
Reed.
CONVICTED OF DRIVING
At TO WHILE INTOXICATED
Mike Karpas. Steelton, was convict
ed this morning on a charge of operat
ing an automobile while intoxicated,
and the same Jury convicted him also
on a charge of aggravated assault
anfl battery, a charge growing out of
an accident in which a pedestrian was
struck by the auto and injured.
IIEI.D ON ANOTHER COUNT
John Ensinger, 2812 North Seventh
street, was brought before Alderman
Eandls. in police court to-day, to
answer the charge of having stolen an
automobile tire from the machine be
longing to a Mr. Melick, of Park
Glace, near Progress, in Pine street
some time ago. Ensinger was held
in the sum of S3OO. He was in court
earlier in the week on a similar
charge.
HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH
return accepted a position'as Inspec
tor for the French government at
the Bethlehem steel plant at Steel
ton. He was anxious to get back in
service and enlisted for aviation
work. Recently he was picked as
one of ten who had made good as
aviators and recommended for spe
cial work.
PLAN BIG TIME
AT OPEN HOUSE
Movies and an Informal Re
ception Will Be Held at
Y. M. C. A.
To-morrow night the first of the in
formal receptions to be held by the
V. M. C. A. during the winter sea
ton will begin at 8 o'clock. This re
cption is not the formal opening
v lilch the Y. M. C. A. holds every fall,
but is only a beginning of the Satur
day night scries of "open house" that
the club will hold every week-end
tor the members and their men
friends.
The program will begin promptly
at 8 o'clock and the big feature of
the entertainment will be five reels
of moving pictures. Mr. and Mrs. Sid
ney Drew will be featured in a two
reel Vitagraph comedy called. "Bv
Kight of Might." Other pictures will
lie "Salmon Fishing in Alaska," "A
Trip Through the American Kockies"
and a "Pathe Weekly News." The
piictures were selected by the Pathe
acope Company. The musical program
will be furnished by the new self
playing piano and the talking ma
chine.
Formal Opening jfext Month
I The formal opening- of the T. M. C.
| A. will be held sometime In October.
| Next Monday evening at 8 o'clock
i a class in FrenCh will be started in
| the Y. M. C. A. rooms for the ftiem
bers of the Signal Corps. A com
petent instructor has been obtained
i and the lessons are free to members
t- of the Signal Corps. They will hold
■ the classes every Monday and Thurs
; days evenings as long as the mem-
I l>ers of the corps remain in Har
: risburgr.
Anoth class In French will be
stnrted early in October for the men
! who are apt to be selected. Theße
I lessons will also be free. Although
; the men can not hope to learn t6
! speak French fluently in the few les
i sons that they will receive before
being called awav, yet they can get
enough words and phrases to make
1 themselves understood by a French
man.
Tells Judge He Should
Be Freed Even if He
Did Carry a Gun
Haword Picket, a Southern negro,
pleaded and argued with Judge Mc-
Carrell this morning, telling the Court
why he should be let go, even though
he had been convicted of carrying a
loaded revolver and threatening to
shoot a woman, but Haword either
didn't talk long enough or he talked
I too long. When he finished Judge Mc
| Carrell said six months and the Sheriff
chimed in with "right-about, face,
! etc."
The Court took a different view of
the case against Joseph Smith, a local
colored man, who pleaded guiltv to
I pistol toting. Smith Is a man of good
] reputation and character, officials of
j the Bethlehem Steel Company told
| Judge McCarrell. He was carrying a
revolver on the night he was arrest
| ed because he was expected to make
a trip alone on a road beybnd Pfix
| tang. A passenger on a trolley car
| spied the pistol and tipped oft the
! police. A fine of |SO and the costs
| were imposed, and if both are paid
before January, the Court will then
consider a motion to discharge him.
i William Hughes got three months on
I a larceny charge.
Rotary Club Members
and Wives Have Dinner
at Berkshire Club
One hundred members of the Har
risburg Kotary Club and their wives
motored to Reading yesterday and
i took dinner at the Berkshire Coun
i try Club.
Peter G. Dlener, chairman of the
entertainment committee, was in
charge of the affair and toastmtater
jat the dinner. William S. Essick, of
the Harrisburg club, a former resi
dent of Reading, and several offl
j cials of the Reading club, were
I among the syeakers. An elocutionist
from Schuylkill seminary and a Ha
| waian orchestra provided entertain
ment.
The links and courts of the Berk
shire club, which is beautifully situ-
I ated and well equipped, were plac
ed at the disposal of the Rotarians.
The affair was one of the most de
lightful in the history of the club.
Motor trips to the mountains about
1 Reading were part of the program.
Son of Coroner Weds
at Hagerstown, Md.
Announcement was received in ?hls
city to-day of the marriage yester
duy at Hagerstown, Md„ of Joseph C.
Eckinger and Miss Susan E. Bretz.
Mr. Eckinger is the son of Coroner
Eckinger and is well known In Har
rlsburg. The young couple motored
to Hagerstown in company with Cor
oner and Mrs. Eckinger and after the
cerefony left on a short wedding
trip. ,
GIVES SIOO FOR CAMPAIGN
Levi N. Miller, Republican nomi
nee for director of the poor, spent
nothing In addition to the *IOO con
tribution which hedonated to the
candidates' campaign fund. Alex 8.
Cooper, one of the Republican or
ganization leaders, was treasurer of
this fund. This information was con
tained In Miller's accoiyit filed yes
terday with Prothonotary Holler.
Team Leaders and
Assistants Are Named
For Big Ticket Drive
Last evening at a social meeting
of the Epworth League of the
Stevens Memorial Church, Thir
teenth and Vernon streets, Ross K.
Borgstresser, who has charge of the
ticket-tale campaign, named the fol
lowing leaders and' assistants to
make the flve-day drive next week
for the Capitol City Lyceum course.
Team No. I—John N. Peregoy,
district leader; assistants, C. E.
Chamberlln. Harold Oilman, Robert
Champion, A. C. Fulwlder, John
Appleby.
Team No. 2—Miss Myrtle Schell,
district leader; assistants Miss
Esther Perry. W. B. Cobean. Roland
Banner, T. M. Sechler, 11. E. Jenks.
Team No. 3—Miss Anna Harris,
district leader; assistants Paul
Banks, Walter Rankin, William Haz-
Words Mean Nothing—
unless they are backed up by deeds and true
facts. And no one is quicker to recognize the I
- difference between idle advertising talk and
writings that come from a conviction that comes
only from an honest belief that the goods the
writer sells, are as good values as it is possible to
find in any part of the land. That's one of the
big factors in Wm. Strouse's New Store's
We Believe In Our Merchandise
The Public Eas Confidence In Us
Notice the Best
every ten would read "Wm. Strouse & Co." There's a heap of satisfac-'
tion to us to know that we have helped so many young men to success by
selling them "success bringing clothes" at
$ 15-$lB-S2O-$25~530
Sweaters Galore Shirts In Abundance
The sweaters at the New Store 1 Of course you've been used to
have a much "smoother feel" than beautiful shirts But even so,
those in other stores" we have
there's a difference between what I
been told—of course they do— *ww AnTuj |' some folks call "beautiful." To be
that's because we pay a large per- (L! I'UAI on the New Store s shelves Shirts
u* u \ must be not only beautiful m pat
centage higher than other stores 4 tern and design but also in qual
for goods we sell at the same ; V ity and workmanship. That's why
money. They're f" TIWiM, \/y we decided on "Emery's"
$1.50t058.50 9 $1.50 to $6
S Hats, $3 $4 $5
America
You Should Drop in and See Our 50c Ties
Our Boys Departmt Is Breaking All Records
and no wonder for not only is the selection the finest but the service
and courteous attention we give mothers and their boys is famed
all over central Pennsylvania—we had a man come to Harrisburg
from the western part of the state to study our method of conduct
ing this department—Going Some —Eh Boys! , v A
Boys' Suits, - $5 to sls Boys' Hose
Boys' Shirts and Blouses Boys' Hats to $3
The New Store of Wm. Strouse
eltlne, E. E. Miss Nevln
Bowers.
Toum No. 4—Miss Mabel Hoff
sotnmer, district leader; .assistants,
A 1 K. Thomas. Walter 8. Schell,
Miss Nellie Stlne, MIHB Helen Apple
by, Miss Lillian Shoop.
Team No. B. —Miss Miriam Brown,
district leader; assistants, John T.
Omsted, Frank Saussamnn, Miss
Helen Beaver Miss Margaret Jacoby,
Katherine Frederick.
Team No. 6—R. E. Boswell. dis
trict leader; assistants, Wulter Diet
rich, Frank Bealor, Miss Irene
White. Miss Merle Creswell, Miss
Beatrice McCalllster.
Team No. 7 —Mrs. E. J. Hocken
berry, district leader; assistants,
Arthur C. Hauck, Mrs. William
Meek, Mrs. H. S. Pedlow, Millard
Tawney Mrs. George Bogar.
Team No. B—Miss Gertrude For_
svthe, district leader; assistants, Mrs.
H. W. Johnson, Miss Itae Willis.
Mrs. T. P. Carey, Hoy Seidel, Arthur
Eurlsman.
Team No. 9—Miss Merle Smith,
district leader; assistants, Mrs. Ed,
The New Store of Wm. Strouse
SEPTEMBER 28, 1917.
Lathem, Mrs. MacNeil, Miss Kath
erine Keen, Miss Miriam Steever.
Edson J. Lulgard.
Team No. 10 —Mrs. Steven Bowers,
district leader; assistants, Mrs. Les
ter Vanaman. Mrs. W. W. Byrem,
Miss Julia Washburn, Walter S.
Fishel, Orant Ramey.
To-night the leaders and assistants
will be given a social treat in the
social rooms of the church. After
the luncheon the general salesman
uger. Boss K. Bergstresser, will
give full Instructions for the cam
paign drive to be made early next
week. The interest in this campaign
promises to be keen In many ways.
PUTS FOOT VXDKK TRAIN
RATHKR THAN BE SOLDIER
Independence, lowa. Floyd
O'Brien, aged 30 years, one of the
men called on to leave here to-mor
row for the Camp Dodge canton
i inent of the National Army, early
this morning went to the Illinois Cen
tral Station, where he held his rl|
foot on the tracH while a passeni
train passed over it.
O'Brien's great toe of his rl(
foot was severed. He admitted tl
he injured himself so that he woi
not have to report for service. 1
exemption board has his case un<
advisement.
NII-Q-NA QUICKLY
ENDS IHOIGESTIO
Do not continue to suffer wl
heartburns, dizziness, after dinn
distress, headache, biliousness, pa
in the bowels or sour and gas
stomach. Get relief at once—buy t
day—a 50c box of Ml-o-na Table
They quickly and surely end indigc
tion and stomach distress—-or mon
refunded. For sale by H. C. Ke
nedy.—Adv.