Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, January 04, 1919, Page 7, Image 7

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    SIGHT IN STATE
FALL IN BATTLE
Total 0f1,945 Reported in Cas
ualties by the War
Department
Jan. 4.—A total of
5M Pennsylvanians are mentioned
the casualty report made public
by the War Department,
•nineteen hundred and forty-five is
bae total number in the lists to-day.
the 115 killed in action, only 8
"Yere Pennsylvanians. The summary
for to-day's lists follow:
tsx: cp lie fctad nj 2m free tiallkg. CaD 1 ike
George A. Gorgus Lrug Store,
llarrisburg. Pa.,
at once for a hp* of it. WonJorfut roeulir
• Aula leoni and hcalaeore membranes. Use this
fragrant healing antiseptic cream to stop sneer
tag asd breakup a cold inability. 25c a boa,
jLg OTHERS g
Reduce your doctor's
bilit by keeping
aiwa/s on nand—
vTour Boclvriuarrtr'
gaiiM
NEW PRICES—3Oc, 60c, $1.20
Don't Catch Cold
or the Influenza may get you yet.
At the itrst anlfSa. sneeze, sore
throat or headache, take soma
"Solof-Quinine"
tablets to break up your cold right
at the start. Don't let.lt get the
best of you. No bad head effects
as when quinine is taken alone.
Geo. A. Gorgas Drug Stores. Har
rlsburg. Pa.
V.
A plnte without a roof which doe*
not interfere with taste or ipeech.
Plate* Repaired While Yoa Walt
MACK'S DE OFnCES
' 15 DAY
SPECIAL
SHOE
REPAIRING
PRICES
Men's half-soles sewed 01 CQ
and rubber heels, .. A sOw
Ladies' half-soles seweddJl OE
and rubber heels
Children's half soles C 1
and heels ** "
Ladies rubber heels,... 40c
Work done while you wait
Best leather used. Work guaran
teed. Free deliveries
GORDON'S
1820 N. Third Street,
Cor. Third and Dauphin
ECZEMA Pi
CAN BE CURED 7
Free Proof To You JpJtok
All I want Is your name and address so I can send you J. C. Hutxii, n. p.
a free trial treatment. I want you just to try this treat- DRUGGIST
nient —that's all —Just try It. That's my only argument.
lye been in the Retail Drug Business for HO years. I am a member of the
Indiana mate Board of Pharmacy and President of the Retail Druggists'
Association. Nearly everyone in Fort Wayne knows me and knows about
my successful treatment. Over eight thousand seven hundred Men Women
and Children outside of Fort Wayne have, according to their own statements
been cured by this treatment since I first made this offer public.
If you have Kiieiiia, Itch, Salt Kheum, Tetter —never mind how bad my
treatment has cured the worst cases I ever saw—give me u chance to prove
Send me your name and address on the coupon below and get the trial
treatment I want to send you FREE. The wonders accomplished in your own
case will be proof. *
mamumaamMmni CUT AND MAIL TODAY iiwnnnm >aalalnin i
J. C. HUTZELL, Druggist, 3151 West Main St., Fort Wayne Ind.
Please send without cost or obligation to me your Free Proof Treatment.
vt Office State
Arret and No. '
| Can't sleep! Can't eat! Can't even digest what little you do eat! 4
fk 5 J One or two doses
E ARMY & NAVY
I T$M DYSPEPSIA TABLETS I
' JO2 J* nl nke yom feel ten yean yooneer Re*t I
Coastl P ation ' Sour Stomach I
25 cents a package at all Druggists, or
sent to any address postpaid, by the
CO. 260 Broadway, N.Y. I
FRIDAY EVENING.
Killed in action 115'
Died of wounds 120
Died of accident and" other
causes 13
Died of airplane accident .. 1
Died of disease 151
Wounded slightly 1093
Wounded severely 320
Wounded (degree undeter
mined) 20
Missing in action 112
Total 1915
Pennsylvanians mentioned this
afternoon follow:
WOVNDED SLIGHTLY
("orpornl
Sherman H. Moonshine, Annville.
Bugler
Angelo Esposito, Pittsburgh.
Privates
John F. Ganster, Pittsburgh.
Tony Juliano. Madera.
Edward J. Kirshner, Philadelphia.
Knute L. Hediund, Greensburg.
Herbert S. l.ister. Philadelphia.
Robert J. McClosky, Philadel
phia.
William J. EJUy, Philadelphia.
Russell Earl Bald. Oakmont.
Nik Demos, Pittsburgh.
Clarence Dentinger, Ephrata.
John O. Horner, Washington.
Charles M. Kummer, Pittsburgh.
Sam Sherman, Philadelphia.
Romolo Stefanell, Erie.
David K. Torrance, Swlssvale.
Clare Joseph Brocious, Brook
ville.
Walter Brown, Philadelphia.
Angelo Butto. McKeesport.
Albert James Cornelius, Pitts
burgh.
Edward Costello, Philadelphia.
Gitaliano Digregorio. Sharpsburg.
| George Eckhart, Pittsburgh.
Martin J. Fahey, Philadelphia.
Harrison E. Gibble, Manheim.
James F. MoMahon, Johnstown.
Charles Nabors, Cheat Haven.
I George Paolucci, Midland.
Harry Deforrest Chase, Meadville.
Ellwood L. Clark, Philadelphia.
Canido Comis, Lusk.
Thomas C. Cooney, Eld rid.
Michael Hnnula, Brazil.
Lawrence T. Kennedy, Plymouth.
Bolestaw Ketczewski, Phillipston.
Anthony Eonzetta, Hazleton.
Theodore Raisor, Warren.
Ignace Truskewskl, Philadelphia.
KILLED IX ACTION
Privates
Abraham Dewalt, Carlisle.
I Frederick Jackson. Williamsport.
Perry E. King. Philadelphia.
! Samuel Shuntan, Philadelphia.
DIED OF WOUNDS
Lieutenant
A RAW, SORE THROAT
Eases Quickly When You
Apply a Little Musterole.
And Musterole won't blister like
the old-fashioned mustard plaster.
Just spread it on with your fingers.
It penetrates to the sore spot with a
gentle' tingle, loosens the congestion
and draws out the soreness and pain.
Musterole is a clean, white oint
ment made with oil of mustard. It
is fine for quick relief from sore
throat, bronchitis, tonsilitis, croup, stiff
neck, asthma, neuralgia, headache,
congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lum
bago, pains and aches of the back or
joints,sprains,soremuscles,bruises,chil
blains, frosted feet, colds on the chest.
Nothing like Musterole for croupy chil
dren- Keep it handy for instant use.
30c and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50.
QUICK RELIEF FROM
CONSTIPATION
Get Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets
That is the joyful cry of thousands
since Dr. Edwards produced Olive
Tablets, the substitute for calomel.
Dr. Edwards, a practicing physician
for 17 years and calomel's old-time
enemy, discovered the formula for Olive
Tablets while treating patients for
chronic constipation and torpid livers.
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do not
cont.tin calomel, but a healing, soothing
vegetable laxative.
No griping is the "keynote" of these
little sugar-coated, olive-colored tab
lets. They cause the bowels and liver to
act normally. They never force them
to unnatural action.
If you have a "dark brown mouth"—a
bad breath—a dull, tired feeling—sick
headache—torpid liver and are consti
pated, youH find quick, sure and only
pleasant results from one or two little
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets at bedtime;
Thousands take one or two every
night just to keep right.' Try them.
10c and 25c per box. All druggists, -•
Ira Ellsworth Lady. Arendtsvllle.
Sergeants
John P. Martin. Philadelphia.
Ralph E. FYaker, Fort Littleton.
Privates
Joseph J. Blamick, Portsvue.
Jacob R. Colebaugh, Imber.
Charles Nabors, Cheat Haven.
James D. Thorp. Larimer.
DIED OF ACCIDENT AND
OTHER CAUSES
Privates
James V. Dunlcvy, 1014 South
Ninth street, llarrisburg.
Leon Spencer Reid, Bryn Mawr.
DIED OF DISEASE
Corporal
Frank Coughlln, Shaffer.
Privates
Frank D. Sturgeon, Fembell.
Konstandy Sulesky. McKeesport
WOUNDED SEVERELY
Sergeants
Joseph J. Baloga, Wilkes-Barrs.
Alfred P. Crease, Philadelphia.
Corpora is
James Quay Barnhill, Carlisle.
'Andrew Claycomb, Osterburg.
Micczylan Dolcwski, South Bethle
hem.
James J. Doyle, Pittsburgh.
John Marshall Grlffenberg, Phil
adelphia.
John R. Jennings. Washington.
Lawrence Pedlar. McKees Rock.
Privates
Archie Elliott. Wewanta.
John Esposito, Clearfield.
David N'ascimben, Taylor.
Robert X. Overholser, Reading.
James X. Bair, Saltsburg.
Di Marco Nicholas, Philadelphia-
Harry I. Jacobs, Philadelphia.
Martha J. Kelly, Scranton.
George A. Kerr, Hamburg.
William A. Leinin, Todd.
Clem C. Mellott, Harrisonville.
Harry M. Sanderson. Pittsburgh.
Harold S. Vella, Warren.
Joseph Paul Zavasky, Elmore.
WOUNDED (DEGREE IX
TER MIXED
Private
Francis P. Murray, Easton.
MISSING IX ACTION
Lieutenant
John Cornelius Roche, Bellevue.
Sergeant
George C. Wolf, Philadelphia.
Mechanic
Stanley G. Smith. Reading.
Privates
Francesco De Maria. Erie.
Joseph R. Hurst, Dixmont.
Clarence F. Shaffer, Brockway
villc.
Howard T. Wilson, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvanians reported this
morning follows:
WOUNDED SLIGHTLY
Sergeants
Howard P. Church, Stewartstown.
Henry O. Hesser, Wilkes-Barre.
Fred P. Sullenberger, Lancaster.
Corjorals
Fred S. Baird, Derry.
Harold Bolton, Bristol.
Albert E. Curtis, WadesviUe.
John W. Jose. Uniontown.
Hartwell C. Kreider. Easton.
Homer W. McClelland, Allison
Park.
Albert R. Piatt, Gwynedd.
Nicholas Stabile. Pittsburgh.
Abraham M. Ziedman, Turtle
Creek.
John E. Murdoch, Cochranton.
Felice Vincenza, New Castle.
James Sheridan, Huntingdon.
Anthtfny Gagliardino, Pittsburgh.
"William A. Giles. Reading.
Bugler
Victor Kopnitsky, Helvetia.
Wagoner
Logan B. Stormer, Johnstown.
Privates
Ray Livingston, Webster.
Peter Malasca, Uniontown.
Dors W. Patterson, Waynesboro.
Antonio Tarasl, Sharpsburg.
Andrew V. Vamos, Erie.
Joseph W. Badger, Portersville,
Grocer C. Bierly, Irvin.
Joseph A. Daily, Philadelphia.
Harold T. Esterbrook. Warren.
Benjamin Henderson, Philadel
phia.
William W. McLean, Pittsburgh.
John W. Barrett, Beadllng.
L Albert Hill, Scottdale.
Sylvester P. Korejwo, Reading.
| Kazimierz, Kostro, Pittsburgh.
Daniel E. McClarren, Graceton.
Nathan H. Rosenstein, Philadel
phia.
Charles G. Ross, Chester.
Michael Bodnovich. Greenshaw.
Salvatore Castelli, Allegheny.
Walter E. Graeber, Philadelphia.
Fred. King. Franklin.
Alexander P. Kirstein, Pittsburgh.
Harry E. Mclntyre, Pittsburgh.
Clyde E. McLaughlin, Connells
ville.
Benjamin F. Newlin. Chester.
Charles Pento, Philadelphia.
William Robert Bailing, Alverton.
Charles Crumbling, Hellam.
John E. Highley, Valley Forge.
KILLED IX ACTION
Privates
Julian Blaszkiewicz, Philadelphia.
Russell Chinn, Farrell.
John S. Cieplinski, Reading.
Charles Coyne, Philadelphia.
DIED FROM WOUNDS
Fred. Baumeister, Philadelphia.
Clarence R. Frederick, Pittsburgh.
John Heffron, Minooka.
Charles Himes, Langville.
Richard Simpson, McKeesport.
DIED OF DISEASE
Sergeant
William W. Malsberger, Pottstown.
Privates
Frank Brosnahan, Emelnton.
John H. Ehni, Pittsburgh.
Fred W. Gertler, Pittsburgh.
Gilbert T. Henry, Mulroy.
James A. Young, Clearfield.
MISSING IN ACTION
Privates
Harold Evans, Dickson.
Parker Hutchinson, Chester.
Alvin Kretchman, Meyersdale.
Joe Samolunsky, Pittsburgh.
Elmer E. Schaffer, Philadelphia.
Stanley F. Wezner, Upper Lehigh.
Albert B. Yates, Mount Carmel.
Harry Zeck, Philadelphia.
Antony Alulis, Parsons.
MARINE CORPS CASUALTIES
V-ie following casualties are re
ported by the commanding general
of the American Expeditionary
Forces:
Killed in action 5
Died of wounds received in ac
tion 9
Died of disease 2
Wounded In action, (severely). 53
Missing in action 36
Total 105
WOUNDED SEVERELY
Sergeants
David Golden, Philadelphia.
William R. Jones, Blalrsville.
MISSING IN ACTION
Privates
Marlon Gorby, Washington.
Luther A. Reed, Philadelphia.
Germans Sentenced For
Violation of Neutrality
San Frnnclscn, Jan, 4.—Robert Ca
p_Me and Joseph L. Bley, self-eon.
fesa -d leader In a plot directed by
the German government to provision
German warships at sea from this
port, In violation of American neu
trality, were sentenced yesterday to
twenty-one and eighteen months re
spectively in the federal penlten.
tlary,
Capeile was a former agent for the
North German Lloyd Steamship
Company here: Bley was a customs
broker.
BXRXUSBURa TELEGKkPH
Little Talks by
Beatrice Fairfax
"Do you believe there Is one groat
love of a woman's life?" a girl corre
spondent asks me.
Lovers and sceptics alike have for
centuries demanded the answer to
this question. Have the ages fur
nished it?
So far, I think, only conditionally.
Passionate, ringing answers there
have been in plenty, but they've
been cries from individual hearts.
And one heart's truth hasn't by any
means been truth for another.
Many wise men have argued that
love is too vast and sublime a thing
to be limited by any single person
ality. Love is the reality, they say.
I The man or woman who is loved is
merely the excuse for setting love
free. Love once? Yes, by all means,
if you've a heart big enough for lov
ing at all. But by the same token,
keep on loving, even though you lose
your beloved. Love twice, thrice.
Love Is as exhaustless as sunshine.
And doubtless there are enough
happy second marriages, or even
third marriages, to Beem to estab
lish the truth of this view.
And yet there are countless lovers
who agree with Elizabeth Barrett
Browning, the great woman poet,
whose own love for her poet husband
ranks among the great loves of his
tory, that "love strikes one hour"
—and only one. If love is real, in
sists Mrs. Browning, neither time
nor separation nor death can lessen
it, and to speak of second love is
blasphemy."
"Those never loved
Who dream that they loved once."
Is her final challenge.
And this is what the unhappy girl
who has written to me is herself in
clined to believe. Listen to her story.
"Three years ago, because of my
parents' disapproval, I broke with a
young man. We were not engaged
A Direct Message
To the People of Harrisburg
Introducing
•
Harrisburg's Newest Bakery
iHMMM WtVWHWWWWWWHWWW WWHW%HWWWHVWWWW\MW
0 ~T
We'll come right to the point.
€[[ We re going to open Harrisburg's newest bakery
on Monday, January 6th, and we're going to do
our level best to give Harrisburgers the best bread
they have ever had.
Cjf We' ve been in the baking business in Lancaster for
years and have built up a reputation there for the
finest quality bread—
Cjf We looked over the field in Harrisburg thoroughly
some time ago and quickly learned that Harris
burgers were supreme judges of bread and they
know good bread.
Cjf That gave us our inspiration. We decided that
Harrisburg would appreciate our bread, if they had
the opportunity to get it.
CJ So we set out to get a plant and succeeded.
•J Of course, the plant we secured was not equipped
the way we needed it for our bread so we started
in to install the proper facilities.
I
Cjf It takes time to set up machinery and get the plant
in running order but we've got the best baking ma
chinery concern on the job and it won't be long un
The GUNZENHAUSER Bakery
Eighteenth and Mulberry Streets
because my people thought It was
merely a silly nlTalr, as we were only
eighteen and nineteen years old.
However, he married In a few
months after our separation. I have
travelled a great deal and have
thought that I had forgotten men.
I have had many men friends and
several suitors apparently much
more desirable than he, and have
been engaged to one man.
"But as the time for our marriage
drew near, a great fear came over
me and 1 broke the engagement. I
believe I was afraid 1 should find
out I really cared for the first one
after I married. I am still afraid
to take that step.
"Why can I know through Instinct
when ho is anywhere near—and how,
ufer lliree long years, can I still
tell his step anywhere'.'
"I do know that he has a feeling
for me, but he is a man of high
ideals and does not try to exercise
any influence over me.
"Do you believe I love him, if there
is one love only for every woman?
Do you not bellevo I am right in re
maining single? And yet, it is so
lonely."
Shall She Marry?
Xot for a moment would I advise
this idealistic young girl to remain
unmarried indefinitely merely be
cause tho Image of her boy" lover
hasn't so far been successfully dis
placed. And yet she is, of course,
quite right in remaining single, how-
I ever lonely it may be, until she finds
a new love that is stronger than the
old.
I do not believe that she surren
dered her only chance of a happy
life when, to please her parents, she
resisted her love for that nineteen
year-old boy. On the contrary, it
seems to me that, with her capacity
for love, she will undoubtedly in
time meet some man to whom' she
can give her whole heart
It is, I know, a temptation to be
lieve that a thwarted love, or an un
happily ended love, is the only love
of one's life. It's a danger that 1
think women have especially to
j guard against Sometimes it affords
a not unpleasant kind of melancholy
to believe that the man we shall
never see again is the one man In tho
wor.ld we could ever have completely
loved or been happy with.
It helps us to dramatize our own
experience, to be a great deal more
Interesting to ourselves than we
should be otherwise. Once we be
come convinced of this, we can play
before our own mirror. If nowhere
else, the role of unhappy heroine.
Both the happy married woman
and the disappointed unmarried one
incline to this belief that there can
be but one love in a lifetime. But
they speak only from their own ex
perience. whiqh has held but one
full-sized love. How can theq speak
for all the other women of the
world?—for the women who have a
lurge-heartedly loved twice, or even
more, and ho glory in it?
One Way of Loving
And yet there are cases where a
single love has had extraordinary
Influence in moulding a'life.
Cases which have seemed very
wonderfully to bear out the theory
that there's but one love in a life
time.
And there are cases, I believe,
where at normal human love has
been touched by the magic wand of
imagination. There, 1 think, is the
secret of the whole matter. It's the
highly' Imaginative woman whose
one great love lasts undtmmed to
the day of her death. It is tho
Imaginative woman in whom a love
of this sort comes to gleam like a
golden thread winding through the
plain-colored tapestry of a life that
Is actually filled with a calmly con
tented marriage and happy mother
hood.
In the heart and mind of an im
aginative woman her one great love
becomes so rarefied and transformed
that it doesn't really conflict with
any other human emotion.
Do you remember the story that
Mark Twain tells about his mother?
Having married young, she spent
a long life apparently in perfect
contentment and peace. Both as
wife and mother she seemed to have
til we'll be ready to speed along in the good old
Gunzenhauser way that built our successful patron
age in Lancaster.
•J We've got big shipments on the way, of the best
flour in America and the best is the only kind that
goes into our bread. .jistajj
t| We're going to use the very best quality of milk irt
our bread. Every housewife knows that a liberal
quantity of milk means better bread. , .
flj We've got the best bakers in the land to make our
bread bakers with not only years of experience,
but with the ability to adapt themselves to modern
methods which are proven the best.
I]f We're not quite ready to deliver Gunzenhauser
bread in the way we'd like to, but it won't be long
till we do.
IjJ We're going to have our plant as clean as a new
pin and as appetizing a bakery as home instincts im
spire.
•J Our bread will be well baked, nutritious and
licious. It will be Gunzenhauser bread, which „
means QUALITY.
JANUARY 4, 1919.
achieved unusually happy relation
ships.
And yet—when she was a very
old lndy—she persuaded her grand
daughter to take a long Journey with
her to a city where she had read
thut a youthful lover of hers was to
be seen.
They missed him—but the inci
dent served to reveal the fact that
this child-love, so delicate, so un
dowered, that the boy and girl had
never even spoken of It to each
other, had throughout fourscore
years dominated the lmnginatlnatlon
of this Irreproachable wife and
mother.
Women's .lrearts hold strange and
secret chapibers. It won't do to be
11 W™£xj I II
Complete hot water garage "H
heating system only Jj) JJ3
The "WASCO" is a coal burning garage heating
system. Made for private garages holding from Ito
10cars Distributes heat evenly along entire width
jQ of radiators—economically and efficiently at a cost
'Sn of but 5 cents a day 4J"WASCO" prices aits 1 car
|j SB3; 2-car $110; 3-car $149, 4-car $182; 5-car $215; j
,B 3-car $248. "WASCO" is madeln stock sizes. Reg
t ulates the heat automatically Any handy man can
install. Steamfitter unnecessary.
(J 1U A'l'
ImJ. E. MATHER COMPANY
' mVSfX 204 WALNUT ST. HAItKISnUKG. PA.
too dogmatic as to what finds h>4gr
ment there. j,
*
Use McNeil's Cold Tablets. Jj&m,'
floltschall's
. Liniment
'StopsSf?miPain
7