2 TO TRY DOCTOR FOR HARROWING | DEATH IN CAMP ' ( Baker Court-Martials Two in 1 Expose Made to Senate Washington, March 2.—Trial by I general court-martial has been or- ' dered by the Secretary of War of Major Philip B. Connolly, medical corps, National Guard, following the ; death from spinal meningitis of First j Class Private Albert Hestwood, of Camp Doniphan, Okla. Private Hestwood's illness and the I. arrowing circumstances of his death were told on tb* tloor of the Senate January 24 by Senator Cham- : berlain, of Oregon. Investigation ; was ordered immediately. Major General W. M. Wright, the I commanding general of the division, ■ and Brigadier General L. B. Bern - , formerly commanding general, have been directed to make a report as to how such conditions as even found in the camp came to exist. M;ijor Connolly was the command ins officer of the hospital and Lieu tenant Kirkpatrick was the tirst of ficer to examine Private Hestwood after he was taken ill. "Deplorable , conditions" were stated to exist in a leport made by the Inspector general \ to the Secretary of War. This is the first case of high of- j ticers being severely dealt with for conditions in the medical service. I-a I her Reported Distressing Story Private Hestwood came from Li- i ber.il, Kan. His death, when almost J i n: ttended and with insufficient bed'- . clothing and no fire in the stove in j liis little shack, was told of by Sen ator Chamberlain as an illustration ! tit why he believed the "military es tablishment had fallen down." The Senator read a letter from the ;; her of the boy. the Rev. Mr. Hest wood. The communication, although t! e names of the sender and the i-uiap had been deleted, presented tho facts without criticism or hope Ot obtaining any personal redress, but, the minister said, he thought ; the situation should be laid bare to prevent a recurrence of such trag- J e.lics in the future. It told the helplessness of an in- : <\perienced orderly, who tried to, give the dying boy a drink through ! • funnel: how the father went back i) the shack by himself, and, as Sen ator Chamberlain read: "l had my pass into the building. 1 did not stop and knock, but opened : ie door to enter, when it struck , oniething that would not let it open 1 further. I "1 looked and saw that it was my son's body lying on the floor of the hall and it was his head that I struck v.ifJt the door." When Senator Chamberlann came to this point in the letter, women in ti>e galleries gave a gasp. Even Sen- < :,tors themselves wept. Senator Till i jn was so moved that he, with ■ h ering voice, arose and demanded > know who was the author of the ; tter so an immediate inquiry could I held. • Seven days later the War Depart- ' l.ient had its investigation under way. Yesterday a digest of the re -1 ort of the inspector general was ir.de public by the Secretary of \ .-tr. It read: •'The case of Private (first class> ' Hestwood, Company H. Thirteenth i.ii'ntry. Camp Doniphan, Oklahoma, j \SJS investigated by an officer of the . :-pector general's department dur ,the period of January 31 to Feb rua.y 12. At the same time a com- , \ re'.ienslve and searching inspection ; was made of the base hospital at this tamp and investigation made of . other similar complaints which were 1 sought to the attention of the in- j pector. "The investigation disclosed that piior to the date of Private Ilest v.ood's death (December 25) and lor a considerable period thereafter , onditions in the hospital were noth- ! Ing short of deplorable; in fact, the conditions cited by Private Hest wood's father in his letter of Jan uary 14 were found to be substan tially correct. "During this period the hospital was in charge of Major Philip B. j Connolly, M. C., who is held to be responsible for such conditions. "There were many causes which produced these conditions, some of which cannot rightfully be charged to the local authorities. When the hospital was first established the medical officers were untrained in military hospital ways and organiza tion: the enlisted personnel was al-J most wholly untrained: there were no female nurses: there was a short age of supplies, due to the unusual ■ number of patients which flooded the ! hospital; there was a long delay in i completing the hospital; total lack of nearby laundry facilities; lack ot sewerage and plumbing'." LECTURE BY DR. REED Marysville, Pa., March 2.-Sun-, nay afternoon the Rev. Dr. George l E. Reed, will lecture in the Evan gelical Church. His subject is a new one prepared for the Marysville people, "Rifts of Sunshine Amid the' Clouds of War." Dr. Reed for twen ty-five years has been one of Ameri ca's leading educators and preach ers. MRS. MARY VERNONE DIF.S. . 1 Enola, Pa.. March 2.—Funeral services will be held Monday after noon at 2 o'clock at the home of C. : K. Wert, of South Enola for Mrs. Alary Vernone, aged 69, who died; yesterday morning. Burial will be | made in the Camp Hill Cemetery. , YOU SCHENCK'S MANDRAKF word for eonges- IT JIX Xm. Kk. Lj tion, the beginning of every serious disorder, and near ly every discom- |ll W W fl fort. Rid yourself I I of constipation and ■ MB il j*. 1 you will be free n*w from all disease aa nearly as pos sli iroof against , In '" c act freely, but gently and comfort ably, on the liver, stomach and bowels, cleansing, sweetening, toning strengthening, so that a consti pated condition will become impossible. Ordinary constipation "curt*"' arc only laxatives that must ho taken regularly, and-that finally I'orni a habit that is as dangerous a-, constipation itself. Schenck's Mandrake Pills arc wholly vegetable: absolutely harmless, they form no habit. PLAIN OR SUGAR' COATED PROVED FOR MERIT BY 80 YEARS' CONTINUOUS SALE DR. J. H. SCHENCK & SON, Philadelphia SATURDAY EVENING, HABBISBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH 2, 1918. MISFORTUNE FOLLOWS FAMILY j Two Children Killed on Rail road and Others Have Met With Accidents Sunbury, Pa., March 2.—Owen Cooper. 14 years old, was killed and his brother. Edward Cooper. Jr.. both i of Sunbury. was slightly hurt by a 'locomotive here la?t night as they j stood on the tracks looking at a rail* road switch. It was Edward's job ! to keep these switches clean, and he i was explaining its workings to the j child wiijn death bore down upon them. Misfortune has followed this fam ily. Ten years ago one brother ac • cldentallv shot and killed his broth er. Another boy has just recovered ; from being accidenialy shot in the } foot, while a sister lies in the Ber ' wick Hospital with a broken arm, suffered in a fall. The father, Kd ward Cooper, is a Pennsylvania rail- I 1 road conductor. Meeting at Carlisle on Lebanon Valley College Carlisle. Pa.. March 2. —-Delegates from all the churches in tbe central section of Cumberland county to-day, heard the needs of Lebanon Valley 1 College presented in a special mcet ! Ing In the interests of the endow ment fund of that institution held in ' the Grace United Brethren Church here. The main addresses were made by | President Gossard, of the college, i :>nd Congressman Aaron S. Kreider. ' Tho Rev. F. Berry Plummet-, pastor |of the Carlisle church, presided. All ( of the delegates pledged their con ! ;-regations to the raisins of a pro portionate share of the fund. TF.MPEHAJtCK MF.IJAI, CONTEST Carlisle. Pa.. March 2.—An event of importance in temperance circles was 1 a special medal contest held in the Franklin schoolbuilding here last evening, at which tiuje a number of I girls from all parts of the county j ' participated in the annual medal ora- j torical contest under the direction of L'he Cumberland County Women's I Christian Temperance Union. The recitations and compositions were | ilong temperance lines. The deci : f=:on of the judges as to the winner will be announced later. B VXQI F.T ON ANNIVERSARY Carlisle, Pa.. March 2.—ln honor of the ilrst anniversary of the organi sation. the members of the Retail i Merchants' Bureau of the Carlisle I Chamber of Commerce will hold a banquet and special meeting in Mentzer Hall here on Thursday evening. Invitations have been ex tended to businessmen from other 1 communities to be present. The ad dress will be given by William , S-nedley, of the State Retail Mer chants' Association. BOY DIES AT HOSPITAL Mechanicsburg. Pa.. March 2. W. I Scott Graybill, Jr., the 10-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. W. Scott Gray ! oill. East Louis street, died on Thurs day at the Harrisburg Hospital, where he underwent an operation for appendicitis about ten days previous i ly. The lad was on a fair way to i recovery, when a sudden stomach | trouble caused his death. The fu neral services will be held to-morrow j afternoon at his late home at 1.30 o'clock. Burial will be made in the Mechanicsburg cemetery. Performance and Economy Two Hupmobile Features In speaking of the various "se i lcct points" of the new series "R" ' Hupmobile, two big features stand out and in a way speak for them ; selves. These points are the per -1 formance and economy. In the mat ; ter of performance, it is claimed ' that this new Hupmobile even out classes that of the series "X." It develops more power and shows sur prising strength in hill-climbing and . in digging through heavy sand and mud. ; This car is so glared that while T running in high gear it can be throttled down so as to equal the i pace of an ordinary walk and with a slight pressure of the accelerator will jump from a speed of four miles an hour to fifty miles an hour. It is claimed in doing this there is very little vibration. The riding qualities are easily explained in the ; adopted phrase of the company, I "The Comfort Car." In speaking of the economy of this now Hupmobile. Mr. Church, the lo : cat distributor, says, "This car iF economical because it is a practical stranger to a repair shop. The : sti;rdincs9 with which these cars are ; built assures this. From the tires ; up through the car to the tcp it is built for long service. The fuel question is onr that has been givert | a great deal of thought by the en gineers of our factory, especially that of carburetion. The light weight ot these cars added to the unusual per . formance makes it indeed 'the com . fort car.'" RED CROSS EXAMINATION Waynesboro, Pa., March 2.—Mrs. , John A. Martin, the instructor of the surgical dressing clashes of the local • tied Cross, will conduct an examina t on for' the Monday evening teach ! era* classes at 7.15 o'clock. The fol ic wing Tuesday evening she will or ; ganize another surgical dressing class | for begini.ers and anyone desiring to J enter. Y. M. C. A. PLANS FOR THE FUTURE Awakened Institution Now Is Scene of Many New Activities The city of Harrisburg was for-; tunate in securing a man of vision and efficiency, Itoberi B. Reeves, to, take charge of the local Y. M. C. A.,; at this particular time. What the war means to this organisation no! one can estimate. It has been the i supreme advertisement for one of! the mightiest forces for good ever I devised and from letters arriving j daily it is now reasonable to forecast; that the Y. M. C. A. will gather in.; not thousands, but millions, after • the war. Soldiers who never enter- j ed a Y. M. C. A. room, who thought i i ta sissy proposition or a gloomy] religious project have discovered its j opportunities and value. Mr. Reeves j believes that a great proportion of j soldiers who return will want to be | linked permanently with the home' branch and, in fact, is so sure of j it that plans are to be shortly dis- ' cussed t'or building an annex on j Locust gtreet. This would be an up to-date establishment with dormi- j tories, huge gymnasium and swim-. ming pool and convention hall, a • genuine community center, a real j public utility. Of all innovations in war the es- j tablishment of sharks, Y. M. C. A., K. of C. and Jewish Welfare, is the! one which will have permanent and j profound results on building up a i nation. War humanizes and the J soldiers have found that the habit: of gathering in fine, clean, whole-1 some shacks whore there is plenty 1 of fun. but no stupid horse play is contagious. The Harrisburg secre-1 tary looks forward to the time when j men and'boys will not be draped! around the street corners ogling the I parade, but gather in the Y. M. C. j A. for some elevating and educative recreation. Looking forward to this he is now panning a program ofj activity, to increase the membership | and prepare valuable features which ■ will make the Harrisburg home even! more attractive than it is now. j These plans will not be outlined atl the present moment but they will be shaped up so that when the war ts over they may be comprehensively! taken up. Had Not Awakened Like many other cities Harris burg has not awakened to the pos sibilities of the Y. M. C. A. for ad vancing human improvement and stimulating ambition, although the | youth of the neighborhood who pat-1 ronize the gymnasium, baths and • reading room could testify that the ; "old Y. M." is the jolliest place in town. The management of these es-1 tablishments is elastic and gener ous. While true to the meaning of its title no religious cult or denorn- i ination is favored. Jew. Roman' Catholic and Protestant are alike welcome. But there is always the fixed unwritten law that a patron is j to try to improve in virtue a little each day. as Socrates put it many: hundreds of years ago. The future of our Y. M. C. A. is a t most interesting thins to meditate; on. Larger cities have gone far; ahead of us, to be sure. The Bos-1 ton branch maintains a high class law school; other cities have schools! of finance and commerce: at the! West Side in New York 2.000 stu-< dents pursue various courses, get- j i ting almost a university education.' As Mr. Reeves told in his recent re- I port a large amount of money has j been spent in equipping the present j building, installing billiard and pool tables, a Victrola talking machine.! an electric playing piano, a moving picture machine, additional maga zines and periodicals and new fur niture. But the investment quickly paid, as witnessed by the great crowds of soldier boys who flocked there during the summer. The Y. M. C. A. is no narrow-gauge affair. In this town it oponed its doors to thousands of enlisted men who had all privileges without cost. The history of tbe last nine months is guarantee of what Harrisburg may expect in the near future of the Y. M. C. A. The new secretary has only been here nine months and in| that short time, with able assist- i ance, he increased the membership: [from 419 to 1130. It is an encour aging feature of the work that the! building is now rapidly becoming' too small. The 33 dormitory rooms are filled every night and a dozen or so usually turned away. A new j building is therefore almost e4sen- 1 tial, but before that arrives forces [ will be concentrated on the organ ! ization of a branch for colored men : which is greatly needed. I The vision of a greater Y. M. C.; IA. is a dream at present, but aj I dream which will come true, if for; ! no other reason than that it main-! tains itself, with all its myriad calls, i jon a sound financial basis. The Harrisburg branch, for example,! I closed its books for the lajt year j I with all bills paid and a substantial [ balance in bank. Mother and Son Killed by Gas at Hagerstown Home Ilagerstown, Md., March 2. —Mrs. Emma Slick, aged 38, and her 18- year-old son, Ferrell F. Slick, were killed by illuminating gas in their home in High street in this city, both being overcome while they were asleep. Young Slick was found dead in bed while his mother was discovered lying on the floor of a rear room where, it is believed, she had fallen v.liile trying to get to a window. Mrs. Slick was a sister of Roland Rhodenizer, a Philadelphia and Reading engineer, of Harris burg. The bodies of Mrs. Slick and her son were found by J. S. Lillard, a neighbor, who lives next door. Two of Lillard's children were seriously affected by the gas fumes that got through into his side of the house. ' NEED IAO PHOTOGRAPHERS j I A call to induct 150 photographers i j into the service of the United States j was received by state draft head-1 J quarters here. The registrants must i be photographers of advanced ama-: j teur or professional experience, who I will act as aerial photographers in i the aviation section. The photo graphers will report to the United States School of Aerial Photography, at Rochester. New York, March 10. COURSE IX <;.%S DEFENSE i Annville. Pa., March 2.—George A. Will-wins, a graduate of the class of 1913. Lebanon Valley College, who was in the Army Medical Corps has been transferred from Wash ington to Johns- Hopkins univer i sarv, at Baltimore, where he is do j ing research work in pathology in j connection with the Gas Defense J Service. HOLD BOOSTER MEETING A booster meeting of the P. O. 8. ! of A. was held in the hall of Camp 717, Penbroojc, Thursday evening. Another booster meeting will be held next Thursday evening, at Penbrook. THE PATRIOTIC GARDEN ONE YEAR'S VEUETAHI.E RATIONS I'OR FAMILY OF FOUR AIHLTS. BY WHICH THE PLANTING OF THE EX PERI MENTAL GARDEN WAS PROPORTIONED Summer —127 Days Yeicctnblc No. Rons Serving!* •Peas 7 14 Reets, 2 10 Cabbage 15 heads 15 Corn S 40 Turnips t 5 Carrots. J 10 •Kohlrabi t 4 •Eggplant '.... 1 25 •Cauliflower 15 heads 15 Tomatoes ;i Indefinite Okra 2 15 Sorrel, , 20 Beans, t 50 Lima beans ;t 15 •Squash (crookneck), 4 hills ;ii> •Peppers 1 25 Total number of servings grown 299 Required total (number of days), 127 Surplus of summer vegetables (to be canned or dried) 172 Wintcr-7-238 Days Yeselnble Xo. Rows Serving* Beets 2 10 Parsnips ;t 15 Salsify, ' ' 4 20 Carrots .... 2 10 Cabbage, 9 heads 9 Rutabagas .7 1 18 Winter squash ; hills 10 Onibns, 4 40 Total number of servings grown 132 Required total (number of days) 23S Deficit of winter vegetables 106 Hence there must be on hand for winter, in' addition to the above winter vegetables, the following, canned or dried, from summer's surtdus: Corn, .... 25 cans for 25 servings btring-beans 25 cans for 25 servings Ureens (beet tops, etc.). 12 cans for 12 servings Okra (dried), 250 pods for 10 servings Tomatoes, \ 24 cans for 24 servings Lima beans (dried), 10 pints for 10 servings Or a total of 106 servings Tho summer's surplus shown above provides about half as much more, which allows a fair margin tor extra service. The space given over to potatoes allows 402 hills; at a fair yield a hill a day. or 365 hills in all, should be enough for a family of four. This allotment of ground, therefore, may be considered sufficient when the proper conditions of soil have been secured. Add ' of tho above amounts for each additional member of a family. . * Xot considered for canning. SCIENTIFIC management is ap-1 plied to the bacUyafd by Grace j Tabor in an 'article entitled, ' I "Making the Smallest Quantity , I Reach Farthest," contributed to ; 'The Garden Magazine (Xe\y York).; jAn experimental garden was con- \ \ ducted last year by Miss Tabor to as- j i certain how modern scientific meth- I | ods could be effectively introduced i i into the patriotic garden. She j j worked out the essential problems j j of efficiency in space, succession, and ! quantities of food crops for any defl | nite ntimber of persons without any excess going to waste: and she gives ] charts, plans, and data. In the first place. Miss Tabor gives us her opln- i ion of the average back-yard gar- ! den. which she considers "the most 1 lamentably wasteful bit of earth on : I earth." It usually contains, she ; | says, "string-beans by the bushel, 1 when you can't give away quarts." j Then there is lettuce daily—when j half a head furnishes enough for the ' family, and green corn by the score 1 ears—just" when there are plenty ;of beans and beets and the okra is i [demanding to be cut. She goes on: ' "This is the way it goes, until the ; gardener is quite out of his mind I with the worry of it: and like as not sits down and gives up in despair, ■ letting everything go to seed or to ' j waste—which is usually one and the . I same. Very few had, up to last: j summer, arrived at the stage of dry- : j ing their own beans and corn and 1 ] okra. And in addition to the surfeit I there is usually the famine—the lack jof certain worthy vegetables that I have either been crowded out. or ; J else have not been planted in sufti j cient abundance to meet the needs : j of the household. "So in the last analysis it is not i | how much we raise, but how much i j we use. that is important: and in- I stead oj being smart we are simply! stupid when we overdo. It is noth- j ing to boast of that we had 'such a i world of tomatoes!' if a world of 1 tomatoes was more than we needed, more than we could use. Rather is I it something to be ashamed of, for it i reveals poor management. Prodig- j ality again: prodigality everywhere! —our besetting sin. It Is this as- i sertion. taken as a warning, that | sounded the key-note of the war garden that is the subject of this article. j "The 'clearly defined ideal* was j 'just enough and no more!' Deter mining what would be just enough : meant, of course, ascertaining, first of ail, what the year's market would i t be. In other words, what would the ' family which this garden was to be •tried out' on cat during the year— finishing up with next to nothing I j FARMER COMMITS SUICIDE Marietta. Pa., March 2.—William Y. Stoppard,.aged 50 years, a farm er. of Chanceford township, coni ; mitted suicide by shooting himself with a rifle, death being instantane •! ous. lie was brooding over the I war and the disposition of his farm : which he was soon to vacate. His wife survives, lie used a 22-caliber ! rifle. FIRST AID CLASS Xew Cumberland, Pa., March 2. — 1 A class in first aid instruction will 'be organized hero n*xt Tuesday j evening at the schoolhouse. Dr. 1 Lenker. of Harrisburg, will instruct ; the class. CONCERT BY GLEE CLUB Annville. Pa., March 2.-—Lebanon ] Valley College Glee Club, will give a concert in the Academy of Music, 1 at Lebanon \on Monday night. Prof. Sheldon, director of the club, an nounced the loss of eight members through enlistment or the draft, but he has found sufficient talent, to take the places of these men with j out serious loss to the club. ANNVILLE Irina Rhodes, of Lebanon Valley College, visited friends at Harris burg this week. Miss Dora Zeitlin, of Lebanon Valley College, has been called home on account of the illness of her mother. Miss Madeline Statton is spending I several days at her home in liagers- I town Maryland. Edgar Hastings, a former student •; of Lebanon • Valley College, who is [ | ward master at the base hospital at : j Camp Wadsworth Spartanburg, S. ' j C., spent part of a ten-day furlough '! visitins friends here. 1 | Eden Fry spent Thursday at Har- J risburg. HUM MELSTO W X Howard Goodman is spending a ; several days' furlough at home. He j has been with the army since June, *' enlisting when the Harrisburg boys ' j were encamped on the Island. • j Mrs. George Fox spent a day at ? ! Harrisburg with her daughter, Mrs. ■ ! Baird Petts. Samuel Zeiters. Railroad street - J merchant, was seriously ill several I , days at his home. * i Miss Carrie Schaffner is visiting her brother. Dr. Daniel Schaffner, at ' Enhaut i Floyd Light left on Friday morn* ■ i ing for Seattle. Washington, where )! he has been ordered by the govern ., ment to join the forester." ? Mrs. Oscar Clobbs. of Harrisburg, II spent Wednesday with pare nts, Mr. mud Mrs. Eiiaa Earnest. Ile/t over when the garden products of next year begin to be available?! ISo many bushels of potatoes, so , many measures of beets, and of ! carrots and parsnips, and so on, through the list, could be roughly I guessed at. of course; but this seem jed altogether too vague, too much i the old liit-or-miss way. There must be something more definite than this or it would not deserve to be called j scientific management. "Obviously it must be brought down to the individual, in order to be exact enough to meet this and to form a basis of operations. How many potatoes will an indivi • dual eat during the year? How j many beets? And carrots? And parsnips?—and so on. Sounds ab , surd, at first, does it not? But act ually it is simply a problem in rat ioning which, when solved, is to be- I coupled up to the gardening plan j ning problem, and there you are! "So thus it was all planned, root I crops and top crops, with pages of figures set down before quantities j were finally determined." As a result of Miss Tabor's plan 1 we have a supply of each vegetable i based upon a division of the year into producing months and non-pro . ducing months. There are approxi ' mately eighteen weeks during which .each day's supply may be taken j fresh from the garden, leaving thir ty-four weeks to be provided for | with canned, dried, or preserved j products, or with the strictly winter : vegetables. The writes goes on: "The thirty-four weeks, or 238 ; days, of winter have eight strictly ! winter vegetables and six canned or ; preserved to be divided among them: i that is, there must be enough of the ! fourteen to serve seventeen times | each, or as much more of a favorite ! as may be wanted, with as much less iof some other. Against this, eight j times serving each of the fifteen ; available during the 126 days of , fresh green stuff—this reckoning 'does not include salads, nor gar j nishes, nor the side issues, such as j radishes—will carry through the i summer, roughly speajting. i "The canning and drying are look | ed to first, and only when the re -1 quisite amount is reached is the gar i den product freely consumed during the growing season. This does not i mean any dearth of fresh, green ; vegetables, however, for the list does I not include salads, but the garden j includes them the year around, with j the help of its three frames. Also, 1 it affords fresh kale during the very ' early spring—late winter, actually— i and spinach also, and there are per | ennial onions, furnishing the 'seal- I lions' of early spring, tucked away iin a corner." , LANCASTER COUNTY DEATHS i Marietta. Pa., March 2.—John Mohn, 77 years old, died from a com j plication of diseases. He was a re ' tired baker at the Zion Home, Neffs ville. Three children survive. ,i Henry K. Springer, aged 59, a prominent farmer of Mount Joy i township, died Thursday after a I long illness. His wife, four sons, a i brother and a sister survive. Word reached Lancaster county of j the death at Cincinnati of Mrs. Eliza beth Diffenderfer, who died after an i illness of several months. The fam j ily went west a few years ago. The ! body will be brought to East Pet- I ersburg for burial. Her husband and I several children survive. ROBBER DRIVEN OFF Marietta, Pa., March 2.—While at i tempting to rob the home of Ham- I ilton Weller, at Wrightsville, Thurs j day night, the would-be burglar was , greeted with four shots by Mr. Wel | ler and it is believed that he was struck. He was about to enter the kitchen door when discovered. A posse started'after him and lost the thief in the dark." n 11 s Soft White Hands follow u*e of Cuticura Soap and Oint'- ment. At night bathe them with the ! Boap and hot water Dry and rub In the ointment. Wear old gloves during night. Sample Each Frc fcjr Mail. Ad-Ire** port ' card: "Cuticura. Dept. 10A, Beaton." Sold everywhere. Soap2sc. Ointment 25 and 50c. Austrian Sentenced to Seven Years For Murder Lewistown Pa., March 2.—At ar gument court held hero yesterday, Eli Lukac, of Burnliam, the Austrian who shot and kliled Michael Smith, proprietor or tne Burnham Y. M. C. A. restaurant, several months ago re ceived sentence for second degree murder. The sentence is that Lukac shall pay the costs of prosecution, a fine of $1 and servo not less than seven or more than nine years in the western penitentiary. The crime of which Lukac. was convicted was the killing of Michael Smith, several months apo while Smith was going home from his restaurant after closing for the night. Smith was shot from an ambush, and next day .Lukac was found missing and circum stances fastened tho crime on the Austrian. HOME FROM HOSPITAL Hummelstdwn, Pa., March 2. Thomas Sutoliffe was brought home from tho Harrisburg Hospital on Wednesday night after a five weeks' stay there. His sister Rebecca Sut- On Land or Sea, In Gloom or Glee, Helmar Cigarettes for me. ollflfe, Let a Alwoin, and Margaret Cassel and Earl Martin are.still in the hospital, they being the re mainder of the sleighing party hurt in the trolley accident in January. Impudent German Told Police Chief Where to Go Sunbury, Pa.. Murlch 2. —Because lie told Police Chief Hanson, of Mil ton, to go to the place where many believe the Kaiser will go some day, Andrew llaefner, of near Milton, was taken into custody yesterday and will be held pending the investigation of his claims that he is a naturalized citizen. Hanson said ho urged llaef ner to either register under the alien enemy law or show his citizenship papers, when Haefner violently urged lxim to go to a warmer clime. FIVE HUNDRED AItTIOI.ES SOLD' Mechanicsburg, Pa., March 2.—At the sale of L J. Shrlver, a farmer, of Ilampden township, on Thursday, 500 articles were sold, with the amount aggregating about SI,BOO. The highest price paid for a horse was $150.50; cow, $129.50, and other rlock in proportion. "Lazy Bob Perkins" For Junior Red Cross Dauphin, Pa., March 2. —The play entitled "Lazy Hob Perkins," which was given by the seniors of th .1 Dauphin High school for the bene • fit of the Junior Ited Cross branch last evening in the high school room was successfully rendered and well attended. The sum of S2O was real ized. The cast of characters was as fol lows: Hob Perkins, Clarence Per ickson; Cal Watson, William Shaf fer; Eleanor Lawson. Helen Ken nedy; Sydney DeHaven, Georgc,F*i ser; Sol Hofer, Melvin Strohin; Jothoni Clese, Lawrence Oliver Pomery, Seth Dowden; Lais, Robbins, Mtna Lyter; Jennie Lap ham, Rebecca Lyter; Mrs. Plnmlcv. Ruth Ward: Mrs. Laxon, Ellen Fea ser; Mrs. Partlow, Artie Singer: Henrietta Laxson, Mae Yoder: quar tet, Mr. Blacksmith, Ruth Deibler Jelley Jones, John Lyter; Hon. Dus ty Doolittle, Susan Jackson; Mi Rawley, Clyde Garman,