12 MRS. •'. P. MURPHY DIES Mrs. Annie 1.. Murphy, wife of F. P. Murphy, died yesterday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. A. L. Michener, 74 7 South Twenty-first sfreet, after a lingering illness. Fu neral services will be held to-mor row evening At 6.30 o'clock. The 1 lev. J. W. Deaver and the Rev. M. K. Shafer will officiate. Further services will be held at New Bloom field, Thursday. Mrs. Murphy is sur vived by her husband and the fol lowing daughters, Mrs. J. C. Rupp, Mrs W. Wallace, Mrs. James C. Cless, Mrs. A. I-. Michener, Mrs. Wil liam Runkle, Mrs. Mabel Houdeshell, Mrs. C. I. Filson, and Miss Sadie Murphy, and two sisters, Ella Lup fer, of this city, and Mrs. John Jack son. ol Fort Wayne, Indiana, and one son, Harry R. Murphy. Mrs. Murphy was a member of the Ep worth M. E. Church for many years. HEARING CONTINUED Chester Zedenck, colored, was up ill jollce court yesterday, charged with thp robbery of $145 from Robert Wil liams, while the latter was sleeping off the effects of too much liquor in the Strouther's poolroom. Strawberry street. The case was continued until Thursday afterncon. SPECIAL MEETINC.S Elder Abner Martin, of Elizabeth town, is conducting special gospel meetings every evening at 7.45 dur ing this week and the next at the Messiah Home Chapel, 1175 Hailey street. FAVORS STATE SIEGE By Associated I'rcss Rio Janerio. Nov. 6. —The foreign relations committee of the Chamber of Deputies has passed a resolution favoring the proclamation of a state of siege. Washing Won't Rid Head of Dandruff The only sure way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid nrvon; apply it at night when retir ing; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. Do this to-night, and by morning most, if not all. of your dandruff will lie gone, and three or four more ap plications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the sculp will stop at once, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. . You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive and never fails to do the work. fIF YOU HAD A NECK LONG AS THIS FELLOW. AND HAD IRE THROAT DOWN INSI LINE UID QUICKLY RELIEVE IT. .V Oc. Huwpitiil ntxe 91 ALL pRtOGISTS Resorts LAUREL HOTKI, LAUREL HOUSE LAKEWOOD, N. J. F:rst class American Plan Hotel A short motor run from Camp Dix, i'r Wrightstown, N. J. A. J. Murphy, Mgr. C. V. Murphy, Am(. Mgr. It goes without saying, that you, as a judge of cigar quality would rather pay * 6c For General Hartranft than to ever see the day when its rich flavor and unquestioned quality would change. Pay your little 6 cents and feel secure in the knowledge that you are getting General Hartranft C. E. BAIR & SONS Manufacturers 24 NORTH FOURTH STREET P The WANTS of Pp? the Community wf are told in /yg | The" WANT" if 0 CDLUMNS 1 REAO-USE 1 1 "WANT ADS || TUESDAY EVENING, lERICAN OFFICERS ABOARD CASSIN WHEN TORPEDO STRUCK HER A • w ''irrfIWMttMMMMBBBMMMBMBBHBBPBMMMMBBKg'.".- 'y *-■•• ?■ fti io P*™u These American officers, among many others, were commended by Admiral Sims for their conduct on the American Desroyer Cassin when she wag sruck by u German torpedo and seemed to be sinking;. They are, from left to right: Lieutenant it. N. Parkinson, Lieutenant J. W. McLaren, Lieutenant L. H. Agrelii, Lieutenant W. N.,Vernou, Lieutenant . •. u. U. Queen. AUTUMN'S BEAUTY IS FREE TO ALL Dame Nature's Glories May Be Shared For the Asking By BEATRICE FAIRFAX Yours for the taking.' All of the beauty and glory of autumn! Will you refuse your share of the won derful loveliness of the autumnal world ? If the most influential woman in your town—a woman famous for the 'avish and wonderful wjiy she did things—gave a party, .would you de cline to do Dame Nature is about the most influential person in every body's toyn! Great thinkers iiave invited us to go "Through Nature to God" and I believe that he who seos and feelS can surely so approach the great Invisible King. But whether you arc deeply relig ious or idle and trivial, still beauty must mean something to you. There is a glory and glamor about sheer loveliness. Scarcely any man or woman ever becomes so debased, so hardened, lliat there is not some where in the world, something of Too Late For Classification. HELP WANTED—MALE 50 LABORERS Rutherford Yard, near V. M. C. A., for steam shovel work. DENNETT & RANDALL ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT Third floor front room, comfortably furnished, for gen tleman; steam heat.- bath and tele phone. A good home in a private family. Reference. Address 1811' State street. beauty which appeals in some de-' Kree to the soul hidden under thei brutality and crime. The fall woods! Even that city' which stands completely for every thing metropolitan and urban and sophisticated and worldly much maligned New York —lies in con-j stant and loving communication with the woods. 1 wonder if the most sodden un believer in all the world can look, on the gold and orunge and bur- ■ gundy and russet of the autumn leaves, with evergreens pointing their spires heavenward in the midst of the glorious pageant of color, and! questions the Power that renews life)- every spring, brings it to fruition in' the summer and then before thei fflcep of winter, gives it the last bene- ] flcent beauty in which to say good-! by to the world. Among the hills, with the vast un dulating sea of glorious leafage bil-l lowing away from you and the sun- j sit turning the horizon hills to rose and copper, there is for every seeing eye—God. Creed and church strive; beautifully to interpret to us the i Power behind the Hills but the! Hills themselves present that Power to us with a vast simplicity. How can you or 1 stand in the sunset of a Fall day and question God or an after life? However! much we human beings run amuck, however sadly we twist and tangle I and misuse and abuse our lives, there | is still the beauty of October's fare-1 well and the promise of the Spring! that will follow the barrenness of! Winter to offer us a wonderful sym-1 holism of life itself. No one ',s so far from October-in the-country that he cannot go and find her. No one who goes simply.! open heart, with kindly faith and' with a willingness to behold and to feel no one who goes thus can fail to be blessed by the beautiful spirit of Autumn. Life in our cities is 'so compli cated of brick and stone and mor- i tar; of striving and envying and I achieving; of artificial barriers be- 1 tween us and the blue sky; of for-1 getfulness of our own sSouls that] it cuts us off from a real under-1 standing of our simple feelings. Please, please, all you who read, go at once before the beauty fades to the sombreness of early Winter— Winter as yet untouched by the ben ediction of snow—rout into the woods Just drink in the loveliness about you. Forget everything else and bathe your souls and mind and spirit in sheer beauty. The coloring of the sky and the trees that lean so lov ingly against it—the little clumps of] scarlet bush and vine—the tendrils! of golden flame that twine along thei ground. Beauty and loveliness; col- i or and glow! If you have eyes til behold—if rhythm and magnificence j mean anything to you, your day will ! deight you. Then come back home and tliink I That glorious color will fade and be-] come sear, and brown and old. Then j will come nakedness and death it-! self. Silence and coldness, with grim i branches waving against the sky* el-j most like myriad hands shaking in j menace against the heavens. But! that is not the end. Then the mant- | le of star flakes—whltesnow. hoar, frost and the gleam of .sunlight rn millions and trillions of rainbow hearted jewels. Months of such] beauty and then melting rivulets of now—sodden, muddy ground under j foot, branches stripped again, the' stillness of waiting in the air. I And then the Spring! New life, beauty, renewal. The cycle of year GERMAN "PILL BOX This German "pill box" watching post la one of their latest develop ments in the war. It shows a cement and steel tube within sight of the enemy lines, built so strongly thut it must bo struck by the heaviest can non to destroy It. The watcher can close the heavy steel door and be Immune from Injury of ordinary tire. HARRISBURG TFXEGHAPH again in full swing. Could man with i all his inventive genius produce one ! miracle like this? And we doubt the Pcyver that unfailingly produces-this miracle through all the years and lor each generation of men? t'HICAKO CATTLE By Associated Press i Chicago. Nov. fi. Oattie He . ceipts. 10,000; slow. Native steers. s6.6o<&> 17 15: western steer.-*. St.o* 13.35; stockers and feeders. $6.85 1.60; cows and heifers, $ I.so<£i) 11.S0; I calves. $7.00(ft 1 13.50. Sheep iteeclpts. 17.000; weak. Wethers, $8.50@12.75; lambs, sl2.oo(<f V 16.25. ' Hogs lleceits. 17,000; to-mor : row's. 27,000; slow; 15c under yester i day's average. Hulk of sales, $16.10® 116.90; light, $15.35® 16.90; mixed, $13.75® 17.10; heavy, $15.70®) 17.10; rough, $15.70® 15.95; pigs, $11.25<& 14.75. It OTA RY CUR MEKTS TOXIUHT J The Htrrlibiirff Rotary Club will wpet to-night in the parlors of the Y. M. C. A. Sends Message to "Mother of Russian Revolution" I I ■■■ f u > * ii. -ilßhi Mr-IE. brsshicovsicAvs. .j Washington, .~i h -The State I Department has made public men i sages of felicitation exchanged by I President Wilson and Madame liresh -1 kovskaya, chairman of the Russian Committee of Civic ICducation. The letter from Madame Hresh ! kovskaya gave thanks to America 1 for aid rendered to Russia in her , | hour of reconstruction on a riemo •icratic basis. President Wilson, in his 1 • j reply jsnid: i! "May awakened Russia and cn- I fi •anchise<l America advance side by , sidr- with mutual affection and con ■ fident trust." Mother Mary James, Well Known Sister, Is Dead By Associated Press Philadelphia, Nov. 6. Mother! Mary James, first assistant to Mother! Katharine Drexel, founder and su-' perior of the Sisters of the Blessodj Sacrament, died last night at St. liilizabeth'ii convent, , the mother house of the congregation at Corn wells, Pa. She was 51 years old and had been' In the sisterhood twenty-eight years.' Before she entered thte convent her j namo was Nora Otis. She was a pupil in the convent of ; the Ladies of the Sacred Heart, j Omaha, when she applied for ad-; mission to the sisterhood of the 'Blessed Sacrament, which Pope Leo; Xlli had just given Miss Katharine! Drexel, this city, permission to cr-i gunizc to evangelize the Indians and | negroes of this country. Miss Otis was the first applicant. "With Miss Drexel, Miss Qtis made her novitiate in the Convent of Mercy, Pittsburgh, and had con tinued with her ever since. Commission Holds Hearings on Rate Schedules Washington, Nov. 6. Another phase of the light of the eastern railroads for increases in freight rates which brought the executi'-e heads of various great trunk line systems to Washington for yester day's hearing before the Interstate Commerce Commission was inaugur ated to-day when Examiner Disque, by direction of the commission be gan a series of hearings on separate rate schedules involved in the case. The separate hearings began to day with a presentation of the case of the proposed Increased rates on anthracite coal. Other hearings this and next week will concern petro leum, grain, lumber and cement. The presentation of the case of the shippers will be made a week front Friday, with final arguments in all phases of the rate case on Saturday, November 1". HELD FOR COURT llenry Kunsch, an Austrian, resid ing in South Second street, was held for court under :ioo bail yesterday for larceny. Kunsch was charged with stealing about $3 from the cash drawer in the barroom of Norman M. Jones, IG7 Paxton street. HItITISH CASirAI.TKS -I,HIM By Associated Press London, Nov. 6. British casual ties reported during the week ending to-day totalled 21,891 officers and men as follows: "Killed or died of wounds, officers 241, men 4,976; wounded or missing, officers 813. yien 15.861." — IM HI.H SVI.I-: OR no l"K lioffT FUItNITURE, ETC. Will sell at public sale at the residence of Hev. Calvin A. Hare. No. Pll North Sixth street, on Friday afternoon, November 9, at 2 p. ill., consisting in part: Sofa, Turkish gent's chair, in leather: couch; a collection of fine oil paintings, etchings and steel en gravings; mahogany bureau, chif fonier, bookcase and desk combin ed. flat top desk, book shelves, tireless cooker, glass and queens ware, kitchen utensils and many other articles not enumerated. J. T. EXSMI\(IHIt. Auctioneer. Public Sale At the Court House THURSDAY, NOV. 15TII AT 10 A. M. TIIE ARCADE RtnLDINT. 219 Walnut Ktrcet THE FRANKLIN BUILDING 212 Locust Street. For particulars regarding prop erties, address the Union Real Estate Investment Co. Arcade Building. John T. Ensminger, Auct. gIiBBER SlTAMftf jLffja SEALS A STENCILS if \ fTI MrG.BYHBG. STENCIL WORKS ■ g • 130 I OCUSTST. HBG.PA. I' Go Away With Printing ?It would be folly to send to a distant city for water when it is here in abund _ ance; it would be w unwise to suffer de lay and inconven ience in an effort to pro cure any commodity that is yours by the simple reaching out and taking hold. From a slightly dif fering view-point it is a"iso true that you invite delay and disappointment, with no saving in money-value by going out of town with your printing. It has been • proved so often that wise business men save postage, telegraph or telephone tolls and are able to keep in personal touch with their order. Get the Home- Printing Habit Save Brain Wear and Tear The Telegraph Printing Company Printing Minding Designing TJiioto-cngraviiii; Die Stamping Plate Priiitli. x 216 Federal Square — Pc insylvania ! ii tii fill 1 1 iim— ii11 iiiwi ■ I Russian Minister of War Leaves Post By Associated Press I'etrograd, Nov. 6.—General Verk-I liovsky, the minister of war, Jiuh' been granted an indefinite leave oil absence by a government order! which relieves him of his office. Gen-1 eral Manikovsky has been appointed ; acting war minister temporarily! while the department will be under the general direction of Premier! Kerensky. General Verkhovsky, the Russian! war minister, has been a member of' Comfortable Homes In the Beautiful OLD ORCHARD SECTION Derry St. Corner of Twenty-Ninth For Sale at an Attractive Price * _ ■ — _ - ' 1 Planned With Art Built With Brains Eight large airy rooms and bath and all conveniences. High fil ings, Spacious halls. Large closets in every room, with linen closet tn the bath room. Steam heat—Electric lights—Cemented cellars —Mod- ern plumming. Ten-foot front porches with coal bin underneath. Grass lawns with cement walks. Twenty-loot street in rear. Double car line service. These homes are completed and ready for occupancy. Come out and look them over. Houses Open for Inspection Gray and Kline OWNERS AND BUILDERS 1322 STATE ST. H. T. BAYLES, 258 North St., Bell Phone 1278 M I PUT ONE ONIEVERY DESK | Mend your speech YOU CAN AFFORD T0 00 80 > NOW YOU GET THEM *l*l 'idw'ce y f°rom to ~ AT THE MERE COST OF HANDLING—DISTRIBUTED EXCLUSIVELY TO READERS OF THE mtmJ) The New Universities J ®^ ou ld on desk of every stenographer and Demand has been tremendous, The people like tl]e book—your neighbors J Thoiisands of new words never before in ANY Best illustrated dictionary in the world—profuse & I j guffisM in page and double page color plates. Bound like • Bible. Full limp leather. Stamped ? Reduced Money Back if Not Satisfied. I i 80 6TAMPED K M A GOLD LE Publisher's J YOURS FOR ONLYF| g* [Mail Orders I JcSSEi?*^ 1 &'; eat i3oS : gS£S Price 1 COUPON If M|* IFiUei See , | p Luxurloua Book. ~ mil fi ' 1 Coupon Appears Daily. * Clip Coupon Today, Page, 2 NOVEMBER 6, 1917. the cabinet since September 5. He has been a strong advocate of better discipline in the Russian army and has endeavored to introduce reforms. On September 28 he told the Demo cratic congress that a final victory over Germany was certain if disci pline was restored in the Russian Army. In sin address to the prelim inary parliament on October 25 he urged reorg inizati>.:i o£ the ar:Tiy and the authorization of severe pun ishment for delinquents. HOME: TO VISIT MOTHER James P. Good, of Ammunition Train No. 1. returned from Au gusta. Ga., where his company is encamped, to visit his sick mother. He returned to-day. He left all his comrades in good health. MANAGERS OF TEA COMPANIES MEET HERE Last evening the managers of the branch stores of the Grand Union Tea Company in Lancaster, York, Lebanon. Columbia and Ilarrlsburg, .held their llrst booster meeting in the branch at 208 North Secon , street. Plans for the fall season v -re dis cussed. George E. Zellers district manager, presided. The following managers were present: Edward Kendall, York; L. A. Failing. Lancas ter; A. L. Hoff, Lebanon; John Row®, Columbia, and R. A. Forney, assistant i manager of the local store.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers