Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, June 17, 1919, Image 4

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    [INTERESTING RATLROAD NEWS
i FOR FIRST TIME IN MANY YEARS PENNSY
REPORTS NO PASSENGER CREW VACANCIES
MAKE CHANGES IN MIDDLE DIVISION RUNS
Reports from Middle Division officials show no vacancies for passenger runs on the list of enginemen
I and firemen. This is the first time that changes have been made with out there being a vacancy. The new
I Arrangement went into effect Friday, June 13, and includes a number of extra men who are sure of work in
the future. •
Each run will have two crews. They will alternate in handling the trains assigned to them. The odd
f numbers are westbound trains, and the even numbers eastbound trains. On the Harrisburg side are 16 engi
i neers and 46 firemen. The Altoona side includes 24 enginemen and 24 firemen. The new list follows:
HARRISBURG SIDE
Crew No. 1 Crew \
Trains Enginemen Firemen Enginemen Firemen
45 and 20 S. Donnelly L. Troup O. L. Miller H. M. Cornpropst
19 and 34 Andy Shaull W. H. Richards Howard Beasor L. I. Emery
35 and 30 ....T. D. Trout E. E. Stone A. Brenneman P. L. Smith
11 and 3 J. S. Reynolds H. B. Strickler v W. G. Satzler E. M. Cope
3 and 664 S. J. T. Keith O. I. Holtzman W. D. McDougal F. Dysinger
37 and 26 H. C. Minter R. B. Wadsworth Graft Drake W. E. Smith
13 and 44 E. E. Ewing G. W. Boyd W. K. Drake H. B. Dunkel
601 and 666 J. H. Curry A. C. Foose G. W. Fleck J. A. Heisey
41 and 624 W. G. Frank B. F. Derrick J. B. Winters W. O. Bealor
M.-27 and 24 G. B. Dinger V. E. Rathfon W. C. Graham R. G. Baughman
15 and 46 AJ. Gardner W. E. McMurtrie S. C. Shull C. E. Gipple
25 and 18 W. H. Gardner L. F. Beverlin W. G. Gipple J. M. Hopkins
665 and 14 Thos. Tost A. T. Cook R. E. Crum G. K. McAlicker
P.-21 and 16 W. B. Glaser R. M. Lyter B. F. Miller B. J. Rice
5 and 42 J. McDermott G. T. Cramer Balser Beahm S. L. Kistler
667 and 50 H. F. Krepps E. E. Roller C. S. Cornman R. B. Pee
Pa--49 and 94 Dennis Keans H. S. Heiser F. McC. Buck H. A. Wehling
669 and 22 J. H. Collins E. D. Smith W. W. Winn H. J. Gladhtll
29 and 40 P. F. Allen C. H. Gray C. H. Dougherty E. Stever
S3 and 52 C. F. Sheesley D. H. Heister J. R. Ewing R. c. Dimm
47 and 32 W. H. Burris C., R. Pee J. L. Lutz R. C. Shelley
31 and 28 F. Stemler R. B. Sheeley J. H. Kauffman C .F. Loper
23 and 662 L A Shattpn C. W. Winand Curtin Moore H. O. Hartzell
6293 and 6292 S. S, Kirk J. C. Richards
ALTOONA SIDE
Crew Np. l Crew No> .
Trains Enginemen Firemen Enginemen F.iremen
4 and 661 G. G. Reiser T. A. Haverstein J. J. Kelley O. F. Whitesel
M.-22 and 27 J- H. Moreland W. R. Miles R. M. Crane J. W. Gramley
600 and 1 Jn° Healey W. Tussey W. J. Linn C. B. Swayne
8 and 21 C- W. Bohn B. I. Jacobs Thos. Patton R. M. Clark
M.-24 and 51 H. E. Martin W. S. Bell J. A. Spotts N. G. Gates
98 and 7 D- Webster J. E. Bowers D. Miller S. Fredrick
48 and 9 G. K. Leonard W. G. Weld J. D. Barnard A. C. Wise
668 and 93 t>- G. Steward H. F. Daveler Miles Fleck J. Kochenderfer
6ft and 53 C. H. Renmnger V. C. Ayers H. L Robley O. B. Zeigler
10 and 55 °. Taylor W. C. Cunningham A A Delozier H. Cameron
64 and 57 W. C. Sanders W. W. Hicks W. E. Books AC. CNeil
6 and 95 . ...| D. G. Riley W. A Keller J. h Haines I M Ackers
Extra passenger enginemen. S. H. Alexander. John Crimmel, J. W. Smith. F F Sohreck James Keane
!H. E. Warearo. P. H. Leonard, C. D. Hollenbaugh. W. C. Black. C. S. Cas ner. H. E Cook H S Weber A J
j Wagner. J. H. Diuner. W. D. Melcher, W. G. Jamison, E. E. Taylor, T. B. Heffner. J. R. Brinser H. F. Gronin
[ ger, H. Johnson, W. E. Turbett, J. W. Burd, A. C. Allen, L. H. Ricedorf.
Extra passenger firemen: H. A. Schrauder. D. F. Hudson. H. Naylor, G. B. Huss, G. L. Huggins R E
! Grove, W. G. Wood. J. N. Ramsey. E. M. Cramer, W. W. Beacham, Roy Herr. W. A. Nowark J L. Medling
iG. E. Tittle. S. R. Mearkle. H. B. Thomas, S. H. Zeiders. C. F. FousC R. E. Look, J. E. GarthofT. R. F. Mohlef
•J. R. Weibley, M. R. Kelley, F. A Ton. '
Standing of the Crews
HARRISBI'BG SIDE
Philadelphia Division. The 103,
i crew to first after 3.30 o'clock: 119.,
IIS. 101. 126. 120, 112. 114. 102. 124. j
Engineers .for 134.
Firemen for 119.
Conductors for 124.
Engineers up: Dolby. Bickle, An-.
■, drews.
Firemen up: Abel, Good, McMullen, 1
I Bamsey. Kimmich, Netiley, Craley, l
> Kerchoff. Leach.
Conductors up: Solomon, Reed.
Brakemeu up: Funk. Coulter. Ret-'
■ gel. Hoyer. Kassner. Schreiver, Bel
• ford. Hackman. Edwards, Lark.
• Smith. Hoffman, Anderson. Dare.
Middle Division. — The 224 crew to
i*o first after 2.30 o'clock: 217. 227,
land 223.
i Engineers up: llorets. Brink. Buck
t waiter.
Firemen up: Bickert, Norfard.
i Trimm, Arnold, Fonda.
Conductors up: Rhine, Bennett.
; Corl.
Brakemen up: Baker, Deckard.
, Foltz, Leithouser. C. F. Beers, Bell.
' Potter. Murry. Reynolds, Zimmerman.
Blace. Lentz. Predix. Woodward.
Eantx.
Yard Board. Engineers wanted
j for 10c.
Firemen wanted tor 10C. 2, 15C. and
I 28C.
Engineers up: Kautz. Wagner. Mc- 1
■ Cord, Shade. Wise. Watts, Clelland.
Firemen up: Spahr, Charles. Otstot,
Bryan, Lawrence, Paul. Ross. Sour
beer.
E\OLA SIDE
Philadelphia Division. The 246
crew to go first after 3.45 o'clock:
224. 204. 228, 222, 252. 230, 229. 206
and 210.
Engineers for 228.
Firemen for 225, 230, 210.
Conductors for 222.
Flagmen for 213.
Brakemen for 246. 206.
Conductor up: Cullen.
Brakemen up: Vogelsong. Morgan.
Rudisill, Breighthoff. Beers. Belling
er. Gardner. Mumford. Freedman.
Middle Division. —The 30 crew to
go first after 3.30 o'clock: 33, 105, 242.
and 253.
Engineers for 105.
Firemen for 33.
Conductors for 33.
Yard Board. —Engineers up: My
ers. Flickenger. Geib. Curtjs, Hinkle,
Kling.
Firemen up: Sadler. Albright. O. J.
Wagner. Swigart, Coldren, Taylor.
Snyder, Haubecker. A. W. Wagner,
Miiliken. Leightner, Wolf. Tetter.
Engineers for extra 102. 2nd 126,
3rd 126.
Firemen for extra 102, 140, 3rd 126.
PASSEA'GER SERVICE
Middle Division. —Engineers pu: A.
C. Allfn. A. J. Wagner. H. F. Gron
inger, L. H. Ricedorf, J. H. Dinner, S.
H. Alexander, W. G. Jamison, W. C.
Black. H. Johnson. C. D. Hollenbaugh
W. E- Turbett, J. Crimmel, J. W.
Smith.
Engineers wanted for 667, 3, 601.
Firemen up: G. L. Huggins. G. B.
Huss, J. R. Weiblev. s. H. Zeiders,
E. M. Cramer, C. F. Foust, R. E.
Look, Roy Herr.
Firemen wanted for 31.
Philadelphia Division: — Engineers
up: H. Smeltzer. J. C. Davis.
Engineers wanted for to cpL 2, cpl.
• 24
Firemen up: H. Stoner. F. H. Young,
J. S. Leing, H. Myers, B. W. Johnson,
J. S. Frankford, J. M. Piatt, J. M.
White.
Firemen wanted for Cpld. 2, cpld.
26. M-22.
Pennsv veterans on the retired list
received their pay to-day from the
Middle Division.
IT'S UNWISE I
to put off today's duty
until tomorrow. If
your stomach is acid
disturbed take
KI-MOIDS
the new aid to digestion
comfort today • A
pleasant relief from
the discomfort of acid- §j
dyspepsia.
HADE BY SCOTT * BOWNE U
■LASERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSIC3 I
TUESDAY EVENING,
jAltoona Man Receives
Important Promotion
; S. L. Shank, of Altoona, formerly
j traveling passenger agent of the
j Pennsylvania lines in the Pittsburgh
( territory, has been promoted to dts
i trict passenger representative. Ho
I has assumed the office and Jurisdic-
tion of F. W. Conner, who succeeds
C. L. Kimball as ranking assistant
general passenger agent of the
Pennsylvania lines west. Mr. Kim
ball has been placed upon the re
tired list of the company.
Mr. Shank began at the bottom
of the ladder and worked his way
up, his connection with the office of
which he is now the head covering
a period of eighteen years.
1
fiAIUUSBURG TELEGKXFH!
Schuylkill Veterans to Have
Outing at Washington
The annual meeting of the Vet
eran Employes of the Schuylkill Di
vision of the Pennsylvania Railroad
was hfeld at Norrlstown Saturday.
These officers were elected: Presi
dent, C. B. Hughes, of Pottsville;
vice-president, John J. Brown; sec
retary, Frank Lutz; treasurer, J. H.
trustees, W. C. Garrett, W.
J. Shick and L. A. Neiman.
The anual outing was discussed.
This year the Vets and their fami
lies will visit Washington on Mon
day, June 23. the company provld-
I ing a special train, which will leave
Reading at 6 a. m. They will take
dinner at the Metropolitan Hotel at
Washington and be served with a
box luncheon on the train returning.
Special entertainment will be pro
vided.
Railroad Notes
Reports from Altoona indicate a
record attendance of veterans at
the reunion and banquet in this city
Thursday. The Middle Division vets
have been preparing for a big time.
Notices have been posted in shops
and roundhouses calling attention to
the meeting of the Friendship and
Co-operative Club Thursday night,
June 26, at Eagles Hall, Sixth and
Cumberland streets.
Reading clerks are still working
on back pay schedules. When the
next distribution of regular pay is
made many employes will receive
what is due them on the increase
dated from January 1.
Robert Bamford. who for twenty
flve years has been running an ex
press train on the Reading, is mak
ing a tour of the west.
L. C. Clemson, retired road fore
man of engines, is in Altoona to
day. He will return to that city to
morrow ' and come" to Harrisburg
with the veterans on Thursday for
the big time.
Shepherd Lang, engineer on the
Atlantic City Division of the Read
ing. dropped dead after making his
run and returning his engine to the
enginehouse.
The Pennsy is abandoning water
coolers at all stations where there
is a supply of running water and
substituting sanitary refrigerating
systems.
Two of the features of the Phil
adelphia Division Veterans' picnic at
Mount Gretna will be a band con
cert and an aeroplane exhibition.
The June number of the Mutual
Magazine is out and has much read
ing of interest to railroad men in
Harrisburg and vicinity.
Heavy car movement continues
over the Middle Division. On Sun
day the total number of cars pass
ing Denholm was 6,544; while at
Tyrone the total interchange was 1,-
903, making a total movement of
8,457 cars.
GERMAN ENVOYS
SPEED TO WEIMAR
WITH THE REPLY
Teuton Foreign Minister and;
Delegates Bear Final Answer :
to the National Assembly
Versailles, June 17.—The reply of
the Allied and associated govern
ments to Germany's counter-pro
posals of the Peace Treaty and a
revised copy of the Peace Treaty
to-day are in the hands of Count
\ on Broekdorff-Rantzau, on his way
to Weimar, to present to the Ger
man National Assembly th% final
word of the victors in the war.
Few changes have been made in
the revised Peace Treaty. Five days
was the allotted period fixed for the
Germans to answer yea or nay to
the demands of the Allies, but two
days additional have' been granted
on insistent pleas. This will extend
the time limitation to Monday-
June 23.
With the revised Treaty, contain
ing interlineations in red ink, where
changes had been made in it, was a
covering note written by Premier
Clemenceau, president of the Peace
Conference.
Without ostentation, Paul Dutasta,
general secretary of the Peace Con
ference, at 6.49 o'clock last even
ing, placed the revised draft of the
Treaty and the note in the hands
of Gernlan Legation Secretary Si
mon and Baron Von Loersner, with
whom M. Dutasta held a conversa
tion lasting for several minutes, ex
plaining the nature of the instru
ment and the length of time allotted
for the Germans to reply. Hen-
Simon protested against the short
time allotted Germany to make
known her intentions.
M. Dutasta arrived in Versailles
by automobile from Paris at 6.20
o'clock, carrying the momentus
document in two parcels wrapped in
prosaic brown paper. He was re
ceived by Colonel Henry, master of
ceremonies at Versailles, and offi
cers of the Allied missions and don
ducted to the reading room of the
Hotel Reservoirs.
Here the party was grouped along
one side of the room. In front of M.
Dutasta was a large marble-topped
table, upon which the documents
were placed In two piles. There
was a considerable wait before Le
gation Secretary Simon and Baron
Von Loersner arrived, escorted by
two French officers. The Germans
took their place at the other side
of the table.
At 6.49 o'clock Herr Simon in
formally reached across the table
and took the documents and hand
ed them to Baron Von Loersner. this
actually constituting the formal re
ceipt of the Treaty and the ulti
matum. A receipt from the Ger
mans for the doeumenet was re
quired by M. Dutasta.
After the brief conversation be
tween M. Dutasta and Herr Simon,
the Germans returned to their
apartment in the hotel. Von Loers
ner carrying the documents under
his arm in a green portfolio. Later
Count Von Broekdorff-Rantzau |
boarded a train for Weimar, taking
the documents with him.
Mammoth of Lena Delta
Dug Their Own Graves!
In the region of the Lena delta, in
far northern Siberia, according to an
old tradition, there is a gigantic spe
cies of mole which, burrowing under
ground. dies if by chance exposed to
! light. It has enormous tusks, and the
half-savage nomads- of the country
sometimes use strips of its thick hide
for reindeer harness. Truth to tell,
the "mole" is the long extinct man
moth, and the last surviving specimen
perished long before the earliest dawn j
of human history. Indeed, it may very
well be that 100,000 years have passed
since the youngest mammoth walked
the earth. In their day these huge
mammals roamed in herds all over
northern —Siberia, where the climate
was mild and salubrious. But there
came a sudden change and Jack Frost
I established a permanent reign in that
I part of the world.
The mammoths, huddled in the val-
I leys, were overwhelmed by snow
j drifts which hardened to solid ice.
, preserved their bodies intact even
Ito the present time. Now and then
the hot sun of the short Arctic sum
mer melts out and revealß to view
one of the great carcasses—the meat
still fresh enough to be fed to the
dogs. The eyeballs of one specimen
found on the Tas river, between the
Obi and the Yenessei, were as per
fect as if the animal had been killed
only a day or two earlier. To the
northeast of the mouth of the Lena,
which is one of the great rivers of
the world, rising in eastern Siberia
and flowing northward to the Arctic
ocean, is a group of islands which
must formerly have been connected
with the mainland.
There an American naval expedi-
PHYSICALLY FIT
AT ANY AGE
It Isn't age, it's careless living that
pnts men "down and out." Keep your
> internal organs in good condition and
you will always be physically fit.
The kidneys are the most over
j worked organs in the human body,
j When they break down under the
i atrain and the deadly uric acid ac
cumulatea and crystaltizea look out!
Theae abarp crystals tear and scratch
1 tnt delicate urinary channels causing
excruciating pain and set up irrita
tions which may cause premature de
, generation and often do turn into
: deadly Bright'a Disease,
i One of the first wtrnings of slug
gish kidney action ia pain or stiffness
in the small of the back, loss of appe
tite, indigestion or rheumatism.
Do not wait until the danger is upon
1 you. At the first indication of trouble
go after the cause at once. Get a trial
box of GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil
; Capsules, imported direct from the
; laboratories in Holland. Thev will give
almoat immediate relief. If for any
cause they should not, your money will
be refunded. But be sure to get GOLD
MEDAL. None other is genuine. In
seeled boxes, three sizes.
JUNE 17, 19T9.
tion, whftn sought Wurvivors of the
iU-fated Jeannette, found deposits of
mammoth tusks that were literul
ivory mines. The frozen soil of the
islands was so crowded with mam
moth skeletons as'to suggest that the
mighty pachyderms must have had j
there a "dying place." to which I
[ through thousands of years they re
| sorted when death approached. Lieu
tenant Scheutze, who was a member ]
I of the expedition, told the writer that I
there was a big fortune to be gained j
by a few adventurous men who should i
take a stanch vessel through Behring
straight at the opening of the Arctic |
summer, dig for ivory and return in j
half a dozen weeks. They would on
counter perils, however, for the coast
is most inhospitable and almost unin
habited. Mammoth ivory is more
_j
JiYlfpLYßi
I Kattw'i Tonic Of Herbs
GET THE PROPER
NOURISHMENT FROM THE
FOOD YOU EAT!
Are you Thin and Run-Down and
■till Eat as Heartily as a person in
Normal Health?
A weakened Digestive System does
'■ not take Its proper nourishment
from the diet. ,
VTFOIJYN, Nature's Tonic of
Herbs, will assist Nature to per
form the proper functions for the
I entire Digestive System, making
RICH, RED BLOOD, and BUILD
! YOU UP. VITOJ.YN creates ap
petite, aids assimilation of food and
invogo rates the entire System.
YITOIiYN is put up in convenient,
' Tablet Form insuring accuracy.
Our Open formula
Cinchona Bark Rhubarb '
Valerian Root Flaxseed
i Gentian Root Dandelion Root
Glngar Root Culver Root y
Juniper Berries Cascara Sapradn '
Licorice Root Ceylon Moss
Cardamon Seeds Vegetable Charcoal
Sold by All Druggists
STEVENS MEDICINE CO., Inc.
M V underbill Avenue, Brooklyn. N - Y.
I ROUND AND SQUARE
PEACH BASKETS
Truck Baskets, Berry Boxes, Berry Crates. A Carload just
arrived. Get them now so you have them when needed.
Half Bushel Peaeli Baskets, round. $10.75 per 100; $1.50 per doz. B
Square Peach Baskets. (14 quarts), $12.75 per 100; $1.75 per doz. B
I Truck Baskets, %bushcl, six brace, SIO.OO per 100; $2.25 per doz. B
j Berry Boxes, (quarts) SB.OO per 1,000; SI.OO per 100 M
Berry Crates, (32-quart size complete) 85c each 9
WALTER S. SCHELL fj
L— QUALITY SEEDS—
Tlicy Grow Better —They Yield Better
1507-1300 Market St.—Both Phones.
highly valued than any other, being
worth $4 a pound. A tusk of a full
grown specimen may be fourteen feet
long, weighing four times as much as
the largest elephant's tusk. This
| great relative of the elephant at
l tnlned a height of sixteen feet and
a length of twcnty-six_ feet, with a
j body girth of thirty feet. The sole
| of encli foot was three feet across.
I It had a shaggy mane and was cov
ered with long—hair. Baltimore
American.
WORST IS BETTER
I *
! G- J. Worst, a real estate dealei,
| 622 7 Limekiln pike. Philadelphia,
J said recently: "I suffered from gas
tritis and stomach trouble. There
was bloating and distress, with pain
at times. 1 heard of Tanlac through
a friend. I followed his advice, and
the gas fermentation stopped. My
appetite got better, and I sleep more
restfully. There seems to be a per
manency about my return to health.
I recommend Tanlac because it Is a
real tonic."
The genuine J. I. Gore Co. Tanlac
is sold here by Kramer's and &'teev
cr's and other leading druggists.