CALL TO MINISTER ' Hlaln, Pa.. Oct. I.—At a meeting of the Joint Council of the Blaln'a Zlon Lutheran charge, a call has been ex tended to the Rev. C. V. Hesse 0 f M&rtinsburg, West Virginia, to be come pastor of the charge. The Rev Hesse recently tilled the pulpits of the charge and received a favorable vote from the three congregations at lilaln, St. Paul's and New German town. DRIVES OUT RHEUMATISM Take "Neutrone Prescription 99'' and All Soreness anil Stiffness Will Faile Away as If by Magic "Neutrone Prescription 99" for rheumatism! Nothing like it 11 the wide world. It Is a prescription that everybody is talking about, and w-hen one takes it. it penetrates to m the muscles and joints and quickly L drives out the caßscs of the painful I trouble. r Druggists are selling a whole lot of "Neutrone Prescription 99" to people who must have free and strong muscles to support a vigorous body' for work. Get "Neutrone Prescription 99" for weary, stiff and painful muscles and joints. Get it to take out the agony from those painful limbs. Use this sure relief, not only for rheu matism. but to clear up the kidneys, make the liver work and purify the blood. A week's treatment for 50c. Large size bottle, l Brokers 3 NORTH MARKET SQUARE ! R. N. McGARVEY, Mgr. ! D. B. KIEFFER & CO.'S 1 Public Sale or 1 Western Horsis and Colts ON t Saturday, Oct. 5,1910 at 1 O'clock P.M. AT J. R. Kline's Stock Yards Mechanicsburg, Pa. We will sell one carload of extra good, big, rugged Fee lers and all-purpose Western Horses and Colts, ranging in age from 2 to 4 years old and will have them weighing from 1,100 to 1,40j pounds each. This is positively a good lot of Horses and Colts, bought i personally by W. M. Grove, who advises us that he has a load of the best that grows, with the size, shape, bone and weight. Will 1 have several closely mated teams it. Grays, Bays and Roans; also several good, big, shapely Mares with class and shape ail o'er. D. B. Kieffer & Co. ■ ■ ■ J? Absolutely Ho Pain MICM, {.eluding u oimts- Ck ail I Ued air ivpantu, makes cJp Aa. Nt l I EXAMINATION S.X&Y I FREE X| KsMeni X AA. V jW ° dalt; B.SO y JißiJt PHONH 8822-H. ®iinr tkrms or /\y PAYMENTS tfioCT / 320 Market St HARRISBURQ, PA. (t ain't h.rt .n I tu£PA y EVENING, WAIT UNCLE SAM TO 0E MATERIAL State Armory Board Anxious to Compl ete Buildings as Money-Saving Measure in ■ 1 Problems at r~\ V # //) tending the pro \\\ 7i /. position of the SA\\ A State Armory j f Board for con-1 struction of four armory buildings are to be maxed; It before the War ; itdlf SIU"Si Industries Board at Washington in, tbe hope that tiio Riif ■ national authori ty will gV.mt the structural mater ia! needed The armories are in Pi- 'jdelpli:. Pittsburgh, Reading ar.i Ti'ton. All have parts of builil incs in scr v -t. , 'it is stai. i that the Armory nddi- A o '-j is ne din Pittsburgh where rcr t is. being paid for temporary bn iJir.gs id where government t r ';.-k train- are being housed and to maintain interest in Reserve jil tia org. uzations in that city asj v . f :: as other places. * Funds for the 'construction were rctei by the ast Legislature, .largeely or . a plea bv the late Adjutant Gen era! Thomas J. Stewart. >lr. Swop- Honored—Charles P. Swope, for • eral years chief clerk In the bureo of engineering of the j- :i Servn Commission, was giv e,ll dinner by.the heads of bureaus end staff of the Commission at the Li.u.neers clu in honor of his depart ure Washington where he be comes secretary to Senator Penrose. Mr Swope wis tendered the best v.. s of his f. iends in the Commis sion and Commissioners sent their appreciation ol his services. He is well (mown to many Harrisburgers, who wish hint well at the Capitol. Diill .At Sell 11ils. —Courses in mil itary training tave been established in t' ree of the state's normal sctK Is, Indi. Ira, Millersvllle and tVes" Chester, and the young men haw been cntnlled for special in stru ion in tt. ctics, drill, war aims, French and English The work has started with bt ndreds drilling. fir. Kulbfus View.—"The fact, that the national government pro vide? for an open session for wood k in this state other titan that prov ed for by our tate law will not -hange or alter the season in state as fixed by state law' says Dr. Joseph Kalbfus. State Game i'o ■ mission Scci-tary. in a letter to nr. ' tie man who asked about the ion aused b ya Federal wood season starting October 1, while • . 'ennsylvhni game code speci etober 20 s the tirst day fol ds woodcock. "You have no •ity to shoot any game in this except as provided for by the state law " continues Ithe doctor. ( "In my opinion the ifiited States, authorities have no rlht to t>P OU the game season In atv state at , a ; period prior to the peßod fl* ed by the state laws for that lubject.' To Midi Thursday.-l The special; committee of the Stdle B° ard °,, - Education named to Traft the bin, providing for an increase of twenty; nve per cent, in teachers' salaries i and for a state appropriation to cover that advance will meet in Pin'" | adelphin Thursday. The idea Is to j submit the bill early in the coming; season. Roixls Take Money —lndications are that the $249, 711.<5 of the metoi | vehicle license fund remaining ,n „' nP| i State Treasury at the dose of Sep-,, tember will be exhausted before vei>, long owing to the heavv demands or ! repair of state highways, nota >• i the Lincoln Highway which is used ( for motor trucks. In the last niontn • i over <700,000 has been drawn from, j this fund to meet repair and main ) tenanee bills. Attended Meeting— Commissjonei i ; of Health Royer was In Philadelphia yesterday attending tw meeting ot the advisory board on the influenza . situation. | Four Examined—The state poli " e . ! department to-day lied an exaniin I tion for vacancies, which are iu W j greater than ever known. -John i Meyers, one of the members of t, i office force, left yesterday for t. ■ j Dickinson College training camp- In Washington—Adjutant Gener Frank D. Beary was in Washington I to-day on militia matters. Prisoners to Help—Arrangement were made yesterday between tn' I State Prison Labor Commission ana I the United States Army whereo. j I prisoners in the. Eastern penitentiary | , will help make rifle parts for the "; j ernment. Attorney General Brown | was consulted and jtatcd that the : state laws would permit such work, j especially in war-two. l ittle Changi>—Ore of the thing- j I commented upon abMut the Cav toij to-day was that then balance in tne ! state treasury had nil changed much, j In the last three moKghs. It has been I between the <9,000,A0 and 1000 marks for thrtH months. \>_s- j I terday the balances aggregated 3 .- 152,248.67 or <4 8,040 less than on, j August 31. Important Meetin; f, n—The Stitel i Compensation Boar is meeting in ; Pittsburgh to-day, tb s: of aser.es jof important session- which mat ters in regard to injured men will be I dismissed and the r iafion of munl | tlons plant employes to various I claims will be consi ered. Mrs. Caroline Moyer Dies After a Long Life As a result of C' nfirmiies of | old age and a const ; nt complica , tion of diseases. Mr "aroline Mc ! Ilhenny Moyer, 82 rs old, for a .number of years r of Paxtang's : best knewn rest A died at 3 • o'clock this morrlm at her late ~ home, 3518 Derry st:\ '. All of Mrs. , Moyer's children* pro laughters, and i ' two isons, were with her wherf the | ; end came peacefully to-day. The I deceased had bee r. a widow for j thirty-eight years and was a sister of the late Samuel Mcllhenny and aunt of the late John L. Mcllhenny .and the late John W R. Blough, all of this city. Surviving Mrs. Moyer are the fol lowing children: Mrs George Martz, . of Bellwood; Mrs Fred Giede, of Harrisburg; Will r.i ,f oyer and | Harry Moyer, botio ; s city. In addition to the igo'.n. the de ll ceased Is surviv. i y tea grand | children and threi great-a-andchll dren. One of the former ' George D. Martz, of Bellwood. a r nber of | Company A, One Hun d and ■ Third Military Headquarters. A. A. , ! F.. now serving in France with the; j colors. Two sisters, Mrs. Amanda (Conrad, of Tiffin. 0., and Mrs. Ma | tilda Stewart, of aVd three I brothers, John Mcllhenny, Tiffin, ! O.; Alexander Mcllhenny. Ut Pen ! brook, and William Mciihßny, of j Paxtonia, also survive the Sceased. The late Mrs. Moyer, 'o was 1 greatly beloved by her fa.ily and numberless friends, was for iwenty five years a member of the! Unite'd Brethren Church, of HarrisbJ rg. She belonged to no secret orgafiizaHun or society. Funeral irunements for the deceased have :f>t yet been I completed. Recalls How Trohky Tried to Sei e Church Newark, N. J — The Lev. Alex inder John Chechilia, a- or o£ St. Michael's Russian Orth ■ x Church at Van Buren and Oliv greets, re called yesterday a day •■■me nineteen months ago when Leo 7 tzky, un der whose dictatorship ' e "Reds" of Russia have heen nil iging and persecuting the f'hurch f Russia, first showed his teeth a 1 it church. The portentious f nter took place late one Thurslay afternoon in February, 1917, Fa her Che chilia at that time w* st-perlntend j ent of St. Vladiir.ar' lonte, a kind of parish house for ,he church of that name, at 231 Ea-t Seventeenth .street. Attendar .':med Father Chechilia that a .j- rf dubious aspect had been . , he. doors of the home, and h to the office floor to irvestiga'- There the ligl ts ha not yet been turned on, and in th< darkness he blundered full into a man of sur prisingly short utatui who evi dently had just found ! way inside and was groping ab t. Without apology or preamble; the Intruder announced: "I'm Trotyl I've come to talk things over." Wanted Keys u Bunk Some one turned on lights and Father Chechilia c 0 his first glimpse his abrupt visitor. He appeared to be less t.Jtn five feet tall and was en .and nervous. though the weatafwas cold, he was clad in a sua.■suit of many seasons, whose and fringed hems proclaimed jt®ithful service. The coat gaped wjj at the neck, exposing an undenF dirty shirt. A ready-tied bow ■ brilliant ved drooped from a gMy collar, en tirely falling in itslisslon of con cealing a brass rollaf>utton. A tri angular, lynx-like fro was tufted with a black mustahe and a tiny goatee. ."You know." decided the vision of untidiness." we h v chased the Czar out of Russia ad all property now belongs to th< People. That means not only la n . but churches. I am a member of rh people's party and I want you t,,nand over the keys to this buildingincluding those to the bank on 'he g#und floor; aha the combination of he safe In that bank." * Utter amazemeru held Father Chechilia sllen- u nt ' his caller had finished. Then corinced that he was doling with a madman, he seized Leon Tr .tzk "of the people's party" by the *ar, 'wed him to the front door and klckd him down the steep stairs to the 'reet. t Visitor Threatus Revenge Trotsky picked pnself up, sharl ig like a vicious cat. His teeth gleamed in the ||ht . of a street lamp. . , ' "I will be the 'uler of Russia soon," he said, -'at* I can wait for my revenge." He departed, hi head turned to maintain a fi*'l gr at the priest In the portal, and hificeth showing. . "The Live Stored Reliable^ Yes We All Bought "Liberty Bonds" But We Must All Buy More I Today Doutrichs Means More I I Than Ever to Harrisburg I The place that Doutrichs occupies in Harrisburg has I grown more important in these times than ever before —Every advantage and benefit of big buying power and vast resources have been mobilized to lighten the burdens of K war-time conditions and to continue a clothes service that has set new records of efficiency and value-giving. 1 In purchasing all of our fall and winter stock of clothing, hats, shirts J or furnishings, we bought up-to-quality standards We believed that our customers would I- feel the same way about their purchases That they would sooner pay a little more and be sure of getting quality, service and value, than experiment with merchandise of doubtful quality—The fact that we are selling more merchandise of better quality has shown that we are right. i • . I In the purchase of this characteristic Doutrich pqlicy, we are glad to say that we have the close co-operation of such famous clothes makers This is the Harrisburg home of Hart Schaf f ner & Marx 0 Kuppenheimer g "Society Brand" Clothes 1 This means that we will not only be sure of showing varieties of Suits and Overcoats that are the equal of pre-war times, but assures f' our customers of perpetual high quality, good style and unsurpassed values. I "Manhattan Shirts" "Monito Hose" "Stetson Hats'" Try the Dependable Doutrich Service That Everybody Is Talking About