Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, February 13, 1918, Page 4, Image 4

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

    4
ALLIED ARMY
ONE, DECLARES
LLOYD GEORGE
Broad Preparations to Face
Expected German Drive
Are Indicated
FAILS TO GIVE DETAILS
Ready to Resign Rather Than
Reveal Decisions of Ver
sailles Council
London, Feb. 13.—Premier Lloyd
George, in an address in the House
of Commons shortly after the re
opening of Parliament by King
Heorge, voiced his disappointment
with the replies of Teutonic states
ment to the war-aims declarations
GIRLS! BEAUTIFY
YOUR HAIR AND
STOP DANDRUFF
Hair becomes charming, wavy,
lustrous and thick
in few moments
Every bit of dandruff disappears
and hair stops
coming out
For a few cents you can save your
hair. In less than ten minutes you
can double its beauty. Your hair be
comes light, wavy, llufty, abundant
and appears as soft, lustrous and
charming as a young girl's after ap
plying some Danderine. Also try this
■—moisten a cloth with a little Dan
derine and carefully draw it through
your hair, taking one small strand at
a time. This will cleanse the hair
of dust, dirt or excessive oil, and j
In just a few moments you have dou
bled the beauty of your hair. A de
lightful surprise awaits those whose
hair has been neglected or is scraggy,
faded, dry, brittle or thin. Besides
beautifying the hair, Danderine dis
solves every particle of dandruff;
cleanses, purifies and Invigorates the
scalp, forever stopping itching and
falling hair, but what will please you
most will be after a few weeks' use,
when you see new hair—fine and
downy at first —yes—t>ut really new
hair growing all over the scalp. If
>ou care for pretty, soft hair, and i
lots of St, surely get a small bottle
of Knowlton's Danderine from any
drug store or toilet counter and just
try it.
Stomach Misery
Get Rid of That Sourness,
Gas and Indigestion
When your stomach is out of order
or run down, your food doesn't digest,
it ferments in your stomach and
forms gas which causes sourness,
heartburn, foul breath, pain at pit of
stomach and many other miserable
symptoms.
Mi-o-na stomach tablets will give
joyful relief In five minutes; If taken
regularly for two weeks they will
turn your flabby, sour, tired out
stomach into a sweet, energetic, per
fect working one.
You can't be very strong and vig
orous if your food only half digests.
Your appetite will go and nausea,
dizziness. biliousness, nervousness,
vick headache and constipation will
follow.
Ml-o-na stomach tablets are small
arid easy to swallow and are guaran
teed to oanlsh indigestion and any or
all of the above symptoms or money
back. For sale by H. C. Kennedy and
all leading druggists.—Advertisement.
Warner's Safe Remedies
A CONSTANT BOON' TO INVALIDS SINCE 1877
B Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy.
Warner's Safe Diabetes Remedy.
Warner's Safe Rheumatic Remedy.
Warner's Safe Asthma Remedy.
Warner's Safe Nervine.
Warner's Safe Pills, (Constipation and Biliousness)
THE RELIABLE FAMILY MEDICINES
Sold by leading druggists everywhere. Sample sent on receipt of ten
cents. -
WARNER'S SAFE REMEDIES CO., Dept. 266 ROCHESTER, X. Y.
I Pennsylvania Indemnity Exchange |
PHILADELPHIA
| "RECIPROCAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE J
A plan that every car owner should investigate
Write To-day for Circular U
IHmrrimbmrg Bramek, A. L. Hall,
Patriot BaiMhtg Manager
Adams County
Apples
Were grown where sun, soil, climate and
scientific methods of growing, picking, sort
ing, packing and shipping all unite to pro
duce wonderfully delicious fruit.
These apples are juicy, fragrant, beautiful in ap
pearance, of unusual soundness and keeping qual
ity.
Being without flaw from skin to core they may
be kept fos a long time.
For Sale by First-Class Grocers
UNITED ICE & COAL CO.
DISTRIBUTORS
WEDNESDAY EVENING, BJLKRISBURG £SO& TELEGRAPH \ FEBRUARY 13, 1918.
of the British government and Presi- j
dent Wilson and boldly challenged 1
the critics of the Versailles council,
plainly intimating that he would
prefer to resign rather than divulge
details of the decision of the Su
preme Council.
The premier, replying to a ques
tion propounded by ex-Premier As
quith on the enlargement of the
powers of the Versailles council,
said that if the House of Commons
was not satisfied with the conduct
of the war, the only way was to
change the government.
New and Menacing Situation
He held it obvious that until there
was some better proof than had
been provided in the speeches of
Count von Hertling and Count
Czernln, that the Central Powers
were prepared to consider the .vims
and Meals for which the allies were
lighting, it would be the nation's re
grettable duty to go on and make
the preparations necessary in order
to establish international right.
It was true that he had stated in
November, he continued, that It was
not intended that the Supreme War
Council should have executive func
tions, but since then Russia had
gone out of war and a number of
German divisions had been brought
to the western front from the east.
The situation had become very much
more menacing and the allies had
met at Versailles to consider the
best method of meeting that menace.
Unification of Armies
The change in the military situa
tion brought about by the sending of
German troops from the east to the
west was a factor which must be
considered, the premier repeated,
and it was essential that the whole
strength of the allied army of
France, preat Britain, America and
Italy should be made available for
the point where the blow would
come. Arrangements should be
made under which the allies would
treat their army as one to meet the
danger and menace wherever it
should come.
Field Marshal Haig and General
Robertson, he added, were present
at the session of the Supreme War
Council and approved its decision.
Requesting the House not to press
the government regarding the ar
rangements made for countering the
coming blow of the Germans, the
premier said that upon the decisions
of the supreme war council depend
ed millions of gallant lives, the
honor and safety of the country and
the war aims upon which the fu
ture of the world was dependent. It
would be impossible to make a state
ment as to the decisions without
giving information to the enemy
which It would pay any money to
get. If Information in this particu
lar were to be given to the enemy
he would prefer that the responsi
bility be placed upon other should
ers.
LANCASTER COUNTY DEATHS
Marietta, Pa., Feb. 13.—Henry P.
Wagner, a lifelong resident of Mari
etta, died at the Lancaster county
hospital Monday night from a com
plication of diseases. He is survived
by his wife, five children and a num
ber of-grandchildren. He was a
member of the Presbyterian Church.
Jacob H. Vogel, 71 years old, a
veteran of the Civil War, and a re
tired coachmaker. died from a stroke
of paralysis. In early life he was a
farmer, and was born at Lititz. His
wife, two children, two grandchildren
and a number of brothers and sisters
survive.
SOLDIERS IN CAMP
The abrupt change from
home comforts to camp life may
be trying on your boy's health, but
if he will take the rich food in
scorrs
EMULSION
it will create richer blood to estab
lish body-warmth and fortify his
lungs and throat Thousands of
soldiers are now taking
Scott's Emulsion•
It is just what they need. TVf
Scott & Bowne. Bloomfield. N. J. 17-30
CHEERS FOR U.S.
GREET OPENING
OF ITALIAN BODY
Situation Is Growing Retter,
Premier Orlando Tells
Parliament
I
By Associated Press
Rome. Tuesday, Feb. 12.—Enthusi
astic applause and cheers for Amer
ica met the declaration of Premier
Orlando at the opening of Parlia
ment to-day that the war situation
was growing better, due to help from
the United States replacing Russia.
Premier Orlando reviewed the Ver
sailles conference and pointed out
that so far as Italy was concerned
the continuation of the war was no
longer a matter of choice, but neces
sity. Also, he said, this fact is un
derstood by all patriotic Italians, who
are now willing to wage war to the
bitter end. Regarding Italy's aims,
the Premier declared they were un
imperialistic.
"All she wants," Premier Orlando
declared, "and no less, and she can
wish for no more than the security
of her national boundaries by land
and sea and also the fulfillment of
her national unityV'
French Cabinet Meets to
Discuss Military and
Diplomatic Situation
By Associated Press
Paris, Tuesday, Feb. 12.—The Cabi
net met to-day to discuss the mili
tary and diplomatic situation. Fi
nance Minister Klotz submitted a re
port on the Inter-Allied Finance
Commission meeting held in London
last week, which he said was highly
satisfactory.
Premier Clemenceau approved a
measure combining under one head
the anti-espionage, intelligence and
secret police departments, and an
nounced the appointment of State
Councillor Maringer, now Director of
Public Safety, as commissioner-gen
eral in charge of the new depart
ment.
The Minister of Agriculture re
ported on food conditions in France
and the Allied countries. He pre
sented a measure intended to restrict
superfluous consumption of food and
to provide for the equable distribu
tion of necessities.
Premier Lloyd George Fails
to Mention Latest Wilson
Speech Before Parliament
London, Tuesday, Feb. 12.—Parlia-:
rr.ent reassembled to-day on tiptoe
with curiosity as to how Premier
Lloyd George would meet President
Wilson's latest declaration and the
dissatisfaction manifested by a sec
tion of the press and public over the
Versailles council, and also as to
how far H. H. Asquith, the former
Premier, would respond to the de
mand of the extreme wing of his
followers for the abandonment of the
policy of benevolence toward the
government in favor of active oppo
sition* based on disapproval of the
general war policy and espec!ally the
enlargement of the functions of the
supreme war council.
Commons No< Disappointed
The House of Commons was not
disappointed, for the sitting proved
unusually exciting. It could hardly
be said that Mr. Asquith to the
expectation of the most eager of his
party, but the temper of a large sec
tion of the members seemed to show
such actics would meet with consid
erable support. -
Perhaps the most notable thing
was the contrast in the speeches ot
the Premier and the former Premier
with reference to President Wilson's
speech. While Mr. Asquith endorsed
fully the President's view. Premier
Lloyd George did not even mention
Mr. Wilson s last speech and de
clined to see in Count Czernln's
statement any nearer approach to
reasonable terms than in Count von
Hertling's. Moreover, the Premier
regarded the German Chancellor's de
mands that Great Britain give up
her coaling stations as proving fully
that the controllers of German pol
icy were in no mood to discuss rea
sonable terms of peace.
Declaring absolutely he would not
yield on the matter of revealing
more about the Versalles conference,
Premier Lloyd George challenged the
House of being dissatisfied with the
government's conduct of the war to
I put another government in its place,
j The House adjourned and thus far
| no motion of want of confidence in
' the government has been placed on
j paper.
•
GIRL'S BROKKN ARM RESET
Hummelstown, Pa., Feb. 13.—Miss
Rebecca Sucliffe, one of the mem
bers of the sledding party which
was struck by the trolley car Janu
ary 24, had to have her arm rebroken
on Saturday, as it was growing
crooked. Her' condition when ad
mitted to the hospital made it im
possible for the surgeons to set it
right until the swelling disappeared.
NEW STREET COMMISSIONER
Millerstown, Pa., Feb. 13.—Mil
lerstown borough council has elected
A. W. Stambaugh as street commis
sioner. President C. C. Page has ap
pointed committees for the year as
follows: Paving and crossings, D. G.
Rickabaugh and Warren Cross;
water, A. L. Long and W. D. Bol
linger; street, Dr. M. Gearhart and
L. F. Wagner.
SKIN RELIEF
AWAITS YOU
IN POSLAM
The more intensely you have suf
fered from irritated, itching skin, the
more grateful will be your sigh of re
lief when Poslam has been applied.
Soothing, cooling, pacifying, now that
you KNOW, you will never be with
out it should the need arise.
Try Poslam for any Facial break
ing-out. for clearing inllanicd com
plexions or red domi:, for Scalp-Scalc,
liny fcrm of ecioina, P!m.r<lcs, Burns,
Barbers' Itch, Tired. Itching Feet to
drive away all eruptlonal troubles be
fore they spread and become serious.
Sold everywhere. For free sample
writo to Emergency Laboratories, 213
West 47th St., New York City.
Urge your skin to become fresher,
brighter, better by the daily use of
Poslam Soap, medicated with Poslam.
—Advertisement.
IUIOTHERS
A* A Keep the family free
ja from colds by using
■ mtl* inTibr HomP^lmy'
WsmzlemM
SERGEANT EMPEYTO GO"OVER THE TOP"
IN BIG PATRIOTIC MOTION PICTURE
Famous Soldier-Author-Lecturer Signs With Vitagraph
Company to Appear in Film Based on His Celebrated
War Book, "Over the Top"—Has Obtained More
Than $50,000 for Newspaper "Smoke" Funds and
Sold More Than $1,000,000 Liberty Bonds.
Sergeant Arthur Guy Empey, author of "Over the Top" and
one of the most widely known personalities developed by the war,
and through whose interest and active effort more than $50,000 has
been realized for the soldiers and sailors tobacco funds, has gone
into motion pictures. He has signed a contract with Albert E.
Smith, president of the Vitagraph company, to appear in a big
feature to be called "Over the Top," based on his own eighteen
months experience in the trenches.
Sergeant Empey doesn't enter
photoplay for personal gain. His
literary work and lecture engage
ments keep him busy and he has re
fused offers to appear in vaudeville
at enormous pay. He will make the
picture, to use his own words, "sim
ply in the hope that a motion pic
ture adequately depicting conditions
on the other side may serve fur
ther to awaken America to a realiza
tion of what we are up against."
Sergeant Empey personally sold
more than one million dollars worth
of Liberty bonds in the second drive,
and he has been an active worker,
by lecture and personal appeal,! in
behalf of the Red Cross. Auto
graphed copies of his book, sold at
auction, have brought as high as
$2,000 for "smoke" funds.
The scree'h version of "Over the
Top" has been prepared by Robert
Gordon Anderson of the Putnam
Company, a close associate of Ser
geant Empey and his publishing ad
viser. He has woven a thrilling love
story in between stirring events
which Sergeant Empey's book de
tails, and it is declared the story is
one of the strongest war documents
yet produced. It shows Empey ;:s
a machine gunner and bomb throw
er and introduces a thrilling air
plane episode where Empey, at the
point of a revolver, forces a Ger
man flyer to carry him from behind
the German lines to those of his
own comrades.
Lois Meredith, who plays the hero
ine, is a beautiful little Irish girl,
well known both on the screen and
Girl Operator Who Took
Call For Troops in 1861
Is Knitting For Soldiers
Lewistown, Pa., Feb. 13.—Miss
Elisabeth Cogley, of Lewistown, aged
84 years, is knitting her twenty
eighth sweater for the Red Cross
since the United Staes entered the
war. In Civil War days Miss Cogley
knitted for the boys in blue and
when war was declared between the
United Sates and Germany she at
once got busy.
Miss Cogley was at the telegraph
key at the local office when Lin
coln's call came for troops at the
breaking out of the Civil War, and
she took the message off the wires
and got in communication at once
■with the Logan Guards, a local mili
tary organization of Lewistown,
which offered its services, and was
the first body of men to do so. Miss
Cogley was learning telegraphy with
her brother, a member of the Logan
Guards, who is sill a telegraph op
erator here. The members of the
Logan Guards of the First Defend
ers all wear a medal given them by
Congress as a reward for their
quick action in responding to the
call.
Congress Will Provide
$50,000,000 to Build
Homes For Shipbuilders
Washington, Feb. 13.—The ad
ministration bill, already passed by
the Senate, appropriating $50,000,-
000, to provide housing facilities for
fmployes of shipyards engaged In
overnment work, was passed by the
House late yesterday without a roll
call.
The House adopted some minor
amendments, which the Senate may
accept to obviate necessity of send
ing the measure to conference.
Under the bill the shipping board's
Emergency Fleet Corporation may
purchase, lease, requisition, or con
demn any land, houses, buildings,
or similar facilities, may construct
houses on land it acquires and sell,
lease, or exchange these houses, and
may make loans on adequate secur
ity and for not exceeding ten years
to persons, firms or corporations to
build houses for shipyard workers.
Roosevelt Once More
on Way to Recovery
New York, Feb. 13. Theodore
Roosevelt continues to make prog
ress at the Roosevelt Hospital, and
it was believed last night that he
had made up the ground lost in the
setback on Sunday.
A bulletin issued at the hospital
, last night said "this has been Colo
nel Roosevelt's most comfortable
day" and that "his progress is likely
to be uninterrupted from now on."
A bulletin issued at noon said:
"Colonel Roosevelt had a com
fortable night, and his condition is
improving. His temperature and
pulse are normal, and at present
there is nothing to indicate further
operation."
Among those who called at the
hospital to Inquire about the Colo
nel's progress wer6 Chaunoey M.
Depew, Clarence H. Maekay, Henry
A. Wise Wood, General Theodore A.
Binijham and Oscar Straus.
Cardinal Gibbons sent the follow
ing message from Baltimore to Mrs.
Roosevelt: "I thank God for pre
serving your husband to home and
country."
FUNERAL OF CAVALRYMAN
TO BE 'HELD TO-MORROW
Funeral services for Arthur Stoak,
18, of Glenwood, will be held at the'
Penbrook United Brethren Church
to-morrow afternoon at 2 o'clock,
the Rev. H. H. Miller, officiating.
Burial will be made In the East Har
risburg Cemetery. Stoak died at
Marfa, Texas, where he was station
ed as a cavalryman, Saturday, Feb
ruary 2. The body may be viewed
this evening at the funeral parlors
of S. S. Speece, undertaker, 200
Chestnut street.
GOES AS RED CROSS NURSE
New Bloomfield, Pa., Feb. 13.-
Miss Florence Beard, of Philadel
phia, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O.
F. Beard, of Green Park, a trained
nurse, has gone to Fort Jackson,
South Carolina, as a Red Cross
nurse and her brother, Ralph B.
Beard, who has been teaching school
at Johnstown, Pa., and is a grad
uate of Bucknell College, left for
Columbus, Ohio, last Saturday,
where ho will go Into training In
the Aviation Corps. He passed hts
examination at Philadelphia in De
cember.
the legitimate stage. Miss Meredith
was born in Pittsburgh, but spent
the greater part of her life in Bel
fast, Ireland, being educated there.
Sergeant Empey, who is a native
of Ogdien, Utah, and is only 34
years old, has had an adventurous
And colorful career. He ran away
to sea when he was only a boy and
traveled several times ground the
world. He also went around the
Horn and has written a story of this
experience. When he left the sea
he joined the United States cavalry
and remained in it six years, seeing
active service on the Mexican border
in 1911. At the expiration of his
enlistment period he settled down in
Jersey City and was working there
when the Lusitania was sunk. He
went immediately to England, where
he enlisted in the First Royal Fusil
liers. For eighteen months Empey
and his comrades were almost con
tinually under tire.
After being four times wounded,
Sergeant Empey was invalided home
and honorably discharged from ser
vice. But he did not quit fighting
when he quit the trenches, because
immediately upon his arrival in this
country he took up the work of
writing and lecturing with the pur
pose of arousing the American peo
ptejby actually showing them what
the war means to this counto'. As
the climax to this work, he has now
come to the screen in the belief that
in this way he can reach more peo
ple and reach them more quickly
with his message than by any other
medium.
Coal Shortage Closes
New Jersey War Plants;
Thousands Are Idle
By Associated Press
Newark, N. J..' Feb. 13.—War work
in hundreds of plants In northern
New Jersey is at a standstill to-day
j as a result of the shutdown of pow
'er by the Public Service Electric
[ Company. The service is not ex
pected to be resumed for several
j days. Thousands of workmen are
I idle in all industries north of Tren-
I ton. Only power sufficient to supply
j street railways, homes and shipping
I piers will be furnished by the com-
I pany unti conditions improve. The
j company uses about 9,000 tons of
1 coal daily in its northern New Jer
| sey power plants and the inability
of the Fuel Administration to con
-1 tinue the pooling process by which
this amount was furnished, it is said,
made the curtailment necessary.
Fire at Vassar College
Sweeps Main Building
Poughkeepsie, N. Y., Feb. 13.
The main building at Vassar Col
lege caught fire last evening, and it
appeared as if it would be destroyed.
The main building is the oldest and
largest building on the campus.
The Are started in the south wing,
! upstairs over the diningroom and
assembly hall, and quickly spread
to the center of the building.
The building, which was erected
in 1861-65, was the first put up at
Vassar. It housed 400 girls. It is
| believed all the students escaped.
Spanish Cabinet Meets to
Consider Ship Sinkings
By Associated Press
Madrid, Tuesdaq, Feb. 12.—The
Spanish cabinet met to-day to con
sider the sinking of the Italian
steamship Duca Di Genova and
the Spanish steamship Giralda. The
case of the Giralda !s considered
one of the most important matters
the cabinet has had to consider since
the beginning of the war.
A dispatch from Madrid •. n Febru
ary 9 said the Italian steamship
Duca Di Genova, of 7,803 tons, had
been torpedoed only a mile off Mur
viedro beach on the Spanish ccast.
The Spanish steamship Giralda was
sunk on January 28. A protest
against the sinking was presented at
Berlin by the Spanish government on
February 8.
GAS, HEARTBURN,
INDIGESTION OR
A SICK STOMACH
"Pape's Diapepsin" relieves
stomach distress in
five minutes
i
Time it! Pape's Diapepsin will
sweeten a sour, gassy or out-of-or
der stomach within Ave minutes
If your meals don't fit comforta
bly, or what you eat lies like a lump
of lead in your stomach, or if you
have heartburn, that is usually a
' sign of acidity'of the stomach.
Get from your pharmacist a fifty
cent case of Pape's Diapepsin and
take a dose just as soon as you can.
There will be no sour risings, no
belching of undigested food mixed
with acid, no stomach gas or heart
burn, fullness or heavy feeling in the
stomach, nausea, debilitating head
aches or dizziness. This will all go,
and. besides, there will be no sour
food left over In the stomach lo
poison your breath with nauseous
odors.
Pape's Diapepsin helps to neutral
ize the excessive acid In the stom
ach which is causing the food fer
mentation and preventing proper di
gestion.
Relief in five minutes is waiting for
you at any drug store. >
Theso large fifty-cent cases con
tain enough "Pape's Diapepsin" to
usually keep the entire family free
from stomach acidity and its symp
toms of Indigestion, dyspepsia, sour
ness, gases, heartburn and headache,
for many months. It belongs In your
home. ,
Recorder Lentz Presents
Service Flag in Honor
of Elizabethville Soldiers
Elizabethville, Pa., Feb. 13. —Eliz-
abethville High and Grammar
schools observed Lincoln's birthday
yesterday with a patriotic program
in the High school auditorium.
James E. Lentz, Recorder of Deeds,
presented the school with a service
flag with eleven stars in honor of
the following young men now in the
United States service:
Floyd Romberger, Stewart Swab,
William Galllnger, John Whitman,
Edward Ditty, Arthur Helt, Percy
Swab, Ralph Spacht, Lloyd Tsehopp,
Leroy Temple and Miss Pearl Gaupp,
who is a Red Cross nurse in France.
Dog Burial Cost $500;
That's Only a Start
Towandh, Pa., Feb. 13.—James
Walbrtdge three weeks ago burled
his pet dog, after spending nearly
SSOO for funeral expenses. To-day as
a direct result of the widely publish
ed story of the burial, Jim has on
hand requests for $319,000, several
proposals of marriage and numerous
offers of pets of all varieties to take
the place of the dog.
He also has a letter from the Red
Cross Society of one of the western
cities criticising his funeral with a
request for a large endowment for
the chapter. One San Francisco
woman has asked for sl6, to be used
she says, for Red Cross work, and
another woman of the same city has
asked for SIOO,OOO to endow a home
for "homeless" dogs.
A St. Louis woman, claiming her
bankroll at several millions, has of
fered her purse, hand and two dogs
in marriage. A colored educational
institution in the South has asked for
$6,000, two large manufacturers of
graveyard fence have offered bids
on the fence around the dog's grave,
and a western college wants SIOO,OOO
to endow a building to the local man.
Other appeals include requests for
assistance from two boys In Shamo
kin, churches of cities and towns
from every section of the country
and Baltimore land promoters. He
is offered 114 dogs and several score
cats.
$985, chassis only, f. o. b. Detroit. Electric
lights. Electric generator. Worm drive. 10-
foot loading space. 2400 pounds.
More brains than metal
are used in building this
Brains are hard to find and come high, but
they are the cheapest in the long run. In a
great organization like the Maxwell Motor
Company which, in four years, has done a
business in excess of $100,000,000, there are
many great minds.
These great minds have found a way to
make trucks stronger, yet lighter in weight
(more thought and less metal went into the
truck). These great minds have found ways
to build them better, yet at less cost.
That's one reason why you can buy a
Maxwell for S4OO less than any other truck
of similar capacity in the world.
That's one reason why the Maxwell has a
verdict o\ close to 100% perfect from its
service record based on the 6600 Maxwell
trucks now in use.
MILLER AUTO CO, Inc.
68 South Cameron Street D , D . 126 North Ninth Street
Harrisburg, Pa. Both Phones Lebanon, Pa.
52 W. Main Street, Mechanicsburg, Pa.
SAFE IX FRANCE
Marietta. Pa.. Feb. 13. W. Wiltley
Wlkel, has received word that his
son. Stewart Wikel, a member o£ the
35th Railway Engineering Corps, has
arrived safely in France. It was at
first feared that he was on tho Tus
cania. This makes five Mariettians in
France—Horace Wisman, a member
of the Regular Army: William H.
Kiehl, Lieut. Frank McCloskey and
Paul Stoner. Young Stoner was the
first to land there. Marietta has now
in the service ninety-two young men,
ADAMS
§ Pure Chewing Gum §
a Stick a day
keepsrfsSS^a
ffl
"Dark Brown
Taste" away
anil u woman as u lteil Cro.s nii: a
Miss Elizabeth Mann.
MARRIAGE ANNOUNCEMENT
Newport, Pa., Feb. 13. Word
has been received here of the mar
riage of Miss Mary Kathryn Shatto
of Mannsville, Perry county, and
Roscoe McKinley Montgomery, ol
Ottumwa, lowa, at the latter place
Mr. Montgomery has passed the phy
sical examination for entrance intc
the United States Army and expect*
to soon be called to service.