Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, January 18, 1919, Page 8, Image 8

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    8
MORE PENNA. MEN
RELEASED FROM
GERMAN PRISONS
%
,\Var Department Names Sol
diers Reaching France
From Rastatt
Washington, Jan. 18.—The War De
partment made public last night a
list of Americans who have been re
leased from the German prison camp
at Rastatt and have reached France.
The enlisted men include:
William F. Owens, Pa.;
Nlcolo Pellegrino, Glrardvllle, Pa.;
Michael Plcclano, Dumont, N. J.;
Charles J. Plney, Keyport, N. J.: An
"tonlo Pytel, Gray's Landing, Pa.;
Harry R. Ray, Josephine, Pa.; Al
fred Rector, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Stanley
J. Rfgula, Philadelphia; Harold W.
Rhawn, Erie, Pa.; John P. Cleaver,
Somerset, Pa.; Clyde Burton Cobaugh,
Philadelphia; Frank H. Congdon,
Scranton, Pa.; Thomas Connelly, Bay
onne, N. J.; Donata Cuglnl, Philadel
phia; Joseph H. Demkowski. Netrona,
Pa.; Henry E. Dietz, Baltimore;
Julius Anderson, Kane, Pa.; Thomas
H. Allen, Philadelphia; Frank G. An
derson, Beaver, Pa.; John C. Hartley,
i£ew Castle, Pa.
Edward F. Bassett. Philadelphia;
Sdichael C. Bedner, Johnsonburg, Pa.;
Louis H. Bell, Pittsburgh; Emanuel
It. Bigler, Carlisle Pa.; Henry Biras
mewskl, Erie, Pa.; Orval B. Holland,
Reaver. Pa.: James W. Boiler, Home
stead, Pa.; Sam Thomas, Philadelphia;'
Henry E. Thompson, Turtle <?reek,
Pa.; Francisco Trapasso, Walls, Fa.;
Raymond Turney, Kittanning, Pa.;
Frank J. Ushler, Philadelphia; John
<V. Vhnce, Carlisle, Pa.; Frank R.
Vannear, Somerset. Pa.; Melvin V.
Virgin, Pittsburgh; Harry Wallrath,
Philadelphia: John Wacklawek, Har- |
irlson. Pa.; Ralph Weiraer, Somerset, '
Pa.; Warner S. Weston. Altoona, Pa.: j
Stanley Wernicki. Pittsburgh; John I
K. Wilson, Somerset. Pa.; Joseph j
Widkowsky, McKeesport, Pa.; Guy I. I
Breckllne, Columbus, Pa.; John D.
Andrews. Mlllvllle, N. J.; Walter R.
Brink, Wflliamsport, Pa.; Alorgio C. i
Brooks, Brookville, Pa. I
John W. Carl, Newport, Pa.; James j
B. Chapman, North East, Pa.: Philip |
Levlne, Irvington, N. J.; John E. #
Morrow, Beaver, Pa.; Thomas A.
Conely, Duquesne, / Pa.; Frank C.
Becker, Jersey City, N. J.; Floyd O.
Titus. Erie. Pa.; Ferdinand Thull,
New Brighton. Pa.: Fred Well, Gould
boro, Pa.: Joseph Reolo, Wilkinsburg,
Pa.; Benjamin Clemson, Philadelphia:
Robert Conner, Philadelphia; Nicho
las Perugin, Waterbury, Conn.; Johq
Nellson, Anita, Pa.: John Koshko,
Clarence, Pa.; Carl 51. Kohler, Pitts
burgh; John M. Russell. Camden, N.
J.; Raymond' Schneider, Pittsburgh;
Lawrence F. Shields, Aetna, Pa.; Hen
ry C. Stone, Mount. Oliver, Pa.; Hlmer
Stout, Vanport, Pa.; Roger S. Porter,
Broughton, Pa.; August J. Quering,
Glassport, Pa.; Frederick Raisler,
Baltimore.
Germany Must Deliver
58,000 Agriculture
Machines to the Allies;
Berlin, Jan 18.—Under the terms |
of the prolongation of the armistice, j
Germany must deliver February
17, some 58,000 argicultural ma
chines of various kinds.
As a guarantee for the fulfillment
of the demands the Entente also re
serves the right of occupying the
sector of the fortress of Strasbourg
formed by the fortifications on the
right bank of the Rhine together
with a strip of territory from five
to ten kilometres in front of it.
New Polish Cabinet
Is Being Co^tructed
Warsaw, Jarf* 18. —Ignace Jan!
Paderewski, having reached an ,
agreement with General Pilsudski,
has succeeded partly in forming a'
new Polish cabinet. General Pil- |
sudski will be foreign minister '
under M. Paderswki as premier •
which will permit Pilsudski to re- ,
tain much of his power.
Three members of the present I
cabinet will be in the new ministry, ■
which will be constituted primarily
of non-polltica! expeHs. The new
cabinet is subject to file approval of
German Poland. It will continue in
office until elections are held within
the next fortnight.
18.MW BIRTHS IN SEPTEMBER
Therjcwere 18.693 girths and 10,794 '
deaths (Furing the month of Septem
ber last year, according to the re
port of the State Health Department.
Influenza was the cause of 558 of the
deaths, and 846 were claimed by pneu
monia. x
See the Plowman Tractor at the State Farm Products Show
| j That's The Work The WIU Do
THF OVERLAND - HARRISBURG CO.
4 212-214 North Second Street Open Evenings
SATURDAY EVENING
LYCOMING LEADS
IN DEER KILLED
190 Shot There During Past
Season; Clearfield Next
With Total of 178
Lycoming- county led the state in
the number of buck deer of legal
variety shot by the hunters in the
season of' 1918, the figures compiled
at the office of the State Game Com
mission showing 190. Clearfield is
next with 163 and then Pike with
150. Huntingdon has 116. The
South Mountain counties show the
following: Cumberland 70, Franklin
75,* Adams 40 and Fulton 11. Bed
ford having only 3 and Blair 6.
Central and eastern counties show
some good hunting. Elk and Cam
eron had 75 bucks each; Pfitter 19;
Cambria 26; Mifflin 70; Perry 21;
Juniata 5; Somerset 18; Snyder 5,
and Union 34. Westmoreland report
ed 27 and Fayette 10. Monroe kept
up its reputation with 80 bucks and
Carbon 33, while Lackawanna had
one buck killed, Lehigh 3 and Lu
zerne 15. Northampton and Wayne
had five each. Dauphin turned up
with on<>.
Twenty-one baby bucks, or bucks
not having horns were killed by il
legal hunting, four being found in
Clearfield alone, while not less than
111 does were reported shot, this
being fiat against the law. Thirty
seven of these were found in Hunt
ingdon, eleven in Clearfield and ten
in Franklin, v Nine were discovered
in Cumberland, 7 in Adams. In most
cases the illegal hunters have been i
Us is Is It—
i.
The Wonderful Moline Universe! Tractor
MoreS^eed-Mo^^wer-MoreWork
Buy 3 Moline Tractor N >w —Get An Early Dclivsry
Do not consider the purchase of a tractor from a PRICE standpoint only—you buy a tractor not
because of its* price but as a business investment that must replace horses save those hnnXaf c j ii
o feed bills, save your physical strength, do more work in less'time, mateyour farmin^^a
of a burden. The "MOLINE" is a real profitable investment. iarming a pleasure instead
See Our Exhibit at the State Agricultural Show
JAN. 21ST TO 24TH—TENTH AND MARKET STS
SCnELL'S SEED STORE
1107-1309 MARKET ST. S„d.- . , HARRISBURG
prosecuted. Two does were killed in
Philadelphia.
Clinton is the leading bear county
Jiavlng 80 of 382. Cameron was
next with 60 and Lycoming follow-t
ed with 50. Sullivan showed 39 and
Elk 19.
Huntingdon. Yields 800 Turkeys
Huntingdon led all counties in
wild turkey shooting, due to the sys
tematic stocking of preserves and
co-operation of sportsmen. It re
turned 800 "turks" out of 2761 shot
in the State. The adjoining counties
of Juniata and Mifflin were up
around the 300 mark with Cambria
at 300. Dauphin had 7 5 and Cum
berland 90.
Dauphin, Lancaster and York
were returned as the three big Vir
ginia quail counties, each having
übout 2,000.
Mercer and Lawrence were lead
ers in"rabbits with 160,000 and 120,-
000 respectively. All counties re
ported rabbit hunting. Philadelphia
among them with 2,000. Allegheny,
Bucks, Chester, Butler, Delaware
and Washington were away up with
rabbits. The total kill in the State
is given as 1,434,000 in round num
bers. Dauplfrn had 9,000 and Cum
berland 6,000.
Honors for squirrel hunting went
to Lebanon county with 17,450 re
ported out of a total of 175,000 in
the State. Bedford was next with
15,000 and Adams third with 14,-
400. Philadelphia with 116 nosed
out Potter for last pjacc. Every
county reported squirrels shot and 11
also raccoons. Philadelphia report
ed ten "coons" taken, while first
honors went to Cambria county" with
3450, followed closely by Butler with
3,000. Northumberland was third
with 2,000. Dauphin bagged 225,
There was no illegal deer shooting
in Dauphin county. The county re
ported 200 pheasants shot and 2,000
wild water fowl and 2,700 shore
birds.
-York had the most accidents, hav
"ELAJRRISBUna TELEGRAPH
ing two of tho 19 fatal and nine of
the 48 non-fatal. Centre reported
two fatal accidents. Berks had six
non-fatal and one fatal, while Phila
delphia had one gunning accident.
Dauphin, Cumberland, Blair, Ches
ter, Fayette, Huntingdon, Juniata,
Lebanon and Washington also re
ported accidents of a non-fatal char
acter.
Says Boat Owners
Took Advantage
of the Government
..New York, Jan 18. —Charges that
boat owners In New York harbor
chose the period when the govern
ment was making its maximum ef
fort to get soldiers to Europe as op
portune for "greatly increased" tow
ing charges were made on the wit
ness stand here late yesterday by
Captain William A. Maher, manager
of the Harbor Boatmen's Unions,
before the sbb-sectlon of the War
Labor Board which Is taking testi
mony In ttio controversy between
owners and boatmen. The Increases
were put on transport towing, "the
"witness said, and other classes of
business.
Two Brothers of Leon
Trotzky Make Escape
Geneva, Jan. 18.—The Swiss news
papers announce that two brothers
of Leon Trotzky, the Russian Bol
shevik minister of war and marine,
who were Interned in France, es
caped into Switzerland, near DelS
mont, Thursday, after shooting and
wounding a French soldier. The
j ounger of the brothers has been
arrested.
Farrell Shortly to
Call Foreign Trade
Council For Session
The National Foreign Trade Coun
cil will hold Its sixth National For
eign Trade Convention at the Con
gress Hotel, Chicago, on Thursday,
Friday and Saturday, April 24th,
25th and 26th, 1919. Tho formal
call will be lssured shortly by the
chairman of the council, James A.
Farrell, president of the . United
States Steel Corporation.
In the past these conventions have
drawn an increasingly large number
of the prominent business men of
the country, representing all forms
of industry, commerce, finance and
transportation. To these will now
be added the representatives of la
bor. In this way the delegates are
supplied with a broad view of the
business situation, with specific in
formation to meet their individual
needs, and with advice and Inspira
tion for the coming year.
The convention in April will deal
with foreign trade as a factor In
stabilizing American industry, prob
lems involving the conversion of war
industries to the needs of pouco;
•development of our foreign trade to
provide employment for our sol
diers, sailors, and war workers; and
tho formation of a definite policy
dealing with the future of our new
shipping.
The proeeaure of the convention
will bo ttlong the lines that have
proved so successful In the past;
general sessions with prepared pa
pers by the leading authorities, fol
lowed by djj£ussion; group sessions,
consisting rpulnly of discussion. In
which the special interests of diff
erent types of business are treated:
individual conferences with Govern
ment representatives and trade ad
visers. •
It Is expected that the attendance
this year will be unusually large.
There Is a growing realization
throughout the country that foreign
trade Is essential to continued pros
perity, and many concerns are turn
ing to the foreign field for the first
time. For these, the convention of
fers an unusual opportunity to profit !
by the experience of older export 1
firms and to learn the general pol
icies of the country In respect, toi
foreign trade. . •
Goes to JVarsaw to
Arrange. Terms to
Release the Poles
Warsaw, Jan. 18. —(By The Asso-|
elated Press)— Colonel Grove, of the ,
American mission In Poland, ac
companied by British and French j
officers, left Warsaw Thursday for I
Lemherg to arrange armistice terms
which are expected to permit the;
release ot Polish troops in that re-'
glon for transfer northward to op- '
pose the Bolshevik tide from Russia,
Better Plowing Secures Results
• m
t \
' r The plow that does more and better plowing i.i worth more.
The Oliver No. 78 Tractor Plow—built to stand the rough
usage in our eastern conditions, docs better plowing, lasts
longer—is worth more.
Perfect seed bed depends on quality plowing. Oliver plows
* have established quality plowing—soil experts are unanimous
in their praise of Oliver plows, knowing that perfect seed bed
preparation is possible only with the use of Oliver plows.
• r , .
The Oliver Tractor Disc Harrow is an important factor in the
final preparation of your seed bed. It is actually a tractor har
row—built heavy to stand the work you require of it—weight
and special construction of design give you great penetration
in the most difficult conditions.
It will be a pleasure to see you at our exhibit at the Pennsyl
vania State Farm Products Show, Tenth and Market Streets,
January 21, 22, 23 and 24, 1919.
Oliver Chilled Plow Works
v \
Harrisburg, Pa.
® ur Office and Warehouse Are
Located at 14th and Howard Sts.
JANUARY 18, 1919.
CASE I
Tractors—Farm Implements—Autos
Do not fail to see the CASE TRACTOR EXHIBIT at
the State Farm Products Show, Corner of Tenth and Market
St., January 21st to 24th, inclusive.
Representatives there to give full information in detail.
CONOVER MOTOR CO., INC.
1334-44 Howard Street
Harrisburg, Pa.
4 ■