6 NEGRO HANGED TO TREE WHERE HE ASSAULTED GIRL Confessed Assailant Is Then Burned Before Orderly Crowd By Associated Press. Ellisville, Miss., June 27.—Trailed for ten days through Southern Mis sissippi by posses which included several hundred members of his own race, John Hartfleld, negro, confessed assailant of an Kllisville young wo man, was captured desperately wounded in a brake yesterday j morning, rushed by an automobile to j . the scene of his crime, hanged to a | gum tree and burned to ashes. Ills j victim identified him and witnessed ' his execution. Governor Bilbo, petitioned during the day to intervene, in a statement ! issued at Jackson shortly before the lynching declared himself "utterly ' powerless' and said that interference [ would only lead to the deaths of hun- | dreds of persons and that "nobody , can keep the inevitable from hap- ! pening." Lynching "Orderly"- The lynching was conducted in a I i manner which the authorities char- j acterized as "orderly." Guarded by j FRECKLES t ' Now Is the Time to Got Rid of These Ugly Spots. There's no longer the sligliest I need of feeling ashamed of your! } freckles, as Othine —double strength j ■ —is guaranteed to remove these j ■ homely spots. > Simply get an ounce of Othine—j ; double strength—from any druggist| and apply a little of it night and : morning and you should soon see j ' that even the worst freckles have j begun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely It is I seldom that more than an ounce is! needed to completely clear the skin and gain a beautiful, clear coni-| plexion. Be sure to ask for the double j strength Othine as this is sold under' guarantee of money back if it fails , to remove freckles. 7 and 9S. T IyiVjPCTAIIpC 7 and 9S. Market Sq. LI V IPIu3I UIM 3 Market % I I • $6.50 Dresses, Friday $10.50 Dresses, Friday SIB.OO Dresses, Friday $35.00 Dresses, Friday .."jay"',s3.9B °,';;i,y'":.s6-98 as :;;^sl7> $7.50 Dresses, 1-riday $12.50 Dresses, Friday $20.00 Dresses, Fridav $30.00 Dresses, Friday ?mlav'":.s4.9B 'i"ly a '.".57.98 -t^;sl4. 9S °;^slß. 9S $8.85 Dresses, Friday $15.00 Dresses, Friday $22.50 Dresses, Friday $35.00 Dresses, Friday $5.98 $8.98 $ 15. 98 $23. 98 1,000 Waists to go at $1.50 Waists, 98c Entire stock of Skirts $1.50 Skirts, 98c sharp reductions—Geor- $2.25 Waists, $1.49 at greatly reduced $2.00 Skirts, $1.49 ? ettcs, Crepe de Chines, $3.35 Waists, $1.98 P rices ' Materials are Skirts, Tub Silks, Voiles, $4.35 Waists, $2.49 Serge ' Po P lm ' 1 afteta , $5.00 Skirts', s2^9B T , , ~T . Georgette, Satin, Gabar- $6 00 Skirts S34Q Lawns, etc. Brand new $a.35 Waists, $2.98 ~ , , . • , i-'en ci • v ' v dine and wash materials. $7.50 Skirts, $4.49 styles; newest shades; $6.50 Waists, $3.49 AH sizes and shades, SB.OO Skirts, $4.98 sizes up to 50. $7.50 Waists, $3.98 sizes to 40 waist. $10.50 Skirts, $6.98 500 children's white Q Boys' Suits In Every Material Dresses in plain and em %A \X wonderful selec- _ . broidery trimmings; sizes t ion j n s j zes U p to Suits reduced for 6 to 14; values $1.50 to 18 years. Special quick .clearance <| AX AX for Friday and $3.50. Friday and Satur- 1 Saturday. day ti $5.00 Boys' Suits, Men's Palm Beach and $7.00 Suits, Kool Cloth Suits, in dark SB.OO Boysj Suits, and light patterns; all NkU UK $8.50 Boys' Suits, $Mco and r- Resular ,sias ° |9' Su " s Jpllpyp Men's Work and p a B „ Dress Pants Hf kH fj (V W for Friday and Saturday White Hn° IjISBS $3.00 Pants ... .$1.98 $6.00 Pants ... .$3.49 Sizes, 6to $4.00 Pants ....$2.49 $7.50 Pants ... .$4.49 {J p^ ar s 2 I $5.00 Pants ....$2.98 SB.OO Pants ..•,$4.98 values . . SOF / - * - - < - • ' rv* ■ '• v? ■ - • ♦ • >■ • -■ - < • •. •-. •-- J ; FRIDAY EVENING, HAItRISBURG TE!LEGRAPH JUNE 27, 1919. - a committee of citizens of Ellisville. Hartfleld was taken first to the of fice of Dr. A. J. Carter, who after ex aminations of gunshot wounds re ceived when the fugitive made his fight against capture, declared the negro could not live longer than 24 hours. In the meantime a group of silent men were piling cross tics and ] brush in a depression in the ground near the railroad trestle. There was no shouting. Arrangements appar ently had been made days ago. After Hartfleld had been identified on being brought here, there were quiet conferences. Members of the committee circulated in the crowd. Reports that there-would be a "burn ing" at 5 o'clock gave way to. state ment that there would be it "hang ii? at the big gum tree." Hartfleld was told what the crowd intended ! doing with him, but only repeated, "You have the right man." Confesses Act From the doctor's office, Hartfleld was taken to the street and faced the crowd. "You have the right man," he reiterated. Then a noose found I its way around his neck and the trip j to the big gum tree was started, the I crowd all silent. Under this big gum tree Hartfleld J forcibly detained his victim all of the night of Sunday, June 15. It was j under a limb of that same gum tree I that he was hanged as soon as the | rope could be pulled up by hundreds I of hands. I Then occurred the first demonstra i tion. While the body was in its death struggles, pistols were pro ! duced by men in the crowd and fired | point blank at the swinging form. Be fore the rope had been cut by bullets, | burning faggots were thrown under I the body and an hour later there was ! only a pile of ashes. No arrests were made after lynch '■ ing and to-day the little town is I quiet. Use Gas in Robbing York County Hen Roosts Mount Wolf, Pa., June 27.—The j application of the science of war ! time, the gas attack, to such a - peaceful pursuit as the robbing of I hen roosts, is the new "stunt" intro ! duced by the "knights of the night." | This latest method of securing an ! other man's hens without any ' noise, was introduced in the | Druck Valley, near here, several nights ago, when a raid was made j on the hen house owned by William j Fisher. The raid resulted in a net | gain of probably upwards of 100 I choice hens for the thief. Observa- I tion of the actions of the few hens | left behind by the thief, gave rise to i the theory that an anesthetic had j been used to "quiet" the chickens | and to render their removal übso- I lutely noiseless. WILSON AT DINNER BIDS FAREWELL TO FRENCH REPUBLIC Sags Visit to Europe Has Allowed Him to See the Damage Wrought by War; Defends Slow Policy of Allies in Arriving at Terms of Peace With Central Powers ' By Associated Press. Paris, June 27. President Poin care last night gave a dinner to President Wilson- and all the dele gates to the Peace Conference. Mrs. Wilson accompanied the President. Responding to an address made by M. Poincare, President Wilson said: "I thank you most sincerely for the words that you have uttered. I cannot preterxl, sir, that the pros pect of going home is not very de lightful to me, but 1 can say with the greatest sincerity that the pros pect of leaving France is very pain ful to me. "I have received a peculiarly g.en erous welcome here, and it has been pleasing for me to feel that the wel come was intended nut so much for myself as for the people whom I rep resented. And the people of France know how to give a welcome that makls a man's heart glad. They have a spontaneity about them, a simplicity of friendship, which is al together delightful. Trip to France a T/osson "I feel that my stay here, sir, has enlightened both my heart and ray mind. It has enabled me personally to see the evidence of the suffering and the sacrifices of France. It has enabled me to come into personal touch with the leaders of the French people, and through the medium of intercourse with them to understand better, I hope, than I understood be fore the motives, the ambitions and the principles which actuate this great nation. It has, therefore, been to me a lesson in the roots of friend ship in those things which make the intercourse of nations profitable and serviceable for all the rest of man kind. "Sometimes the work of the con ference has seemed to go very slow ly indeed. Sometimes it has seemed as if there were unnecessary ob stacles to agrreemer.-t; hut as the weeks have lengthened I have seem ed to see the profit that came out of that. Quick conclusicfis would not have produced that intimate knowl edge of each other's mind which I think has come out of these daily conferences. "We have been constantly in the presence of each other's minds and motives and characters, and the comradcsships which are based upon that sort of knowledge are sure to be very much more intelligent not only, but to breed a much more inti mate sympathy and comprehension than could otherwise be created. "These six months have been six morvths which have woven new fibers of connection between the parts of our people. And something more than friendship and intimate sympathy has come out of this inter course. Says Plan Will Broaden "Friendship is a very good thing. Intimacy is a very en-lightening thing. But friendship may end with senti ment. A new thing that has hap pened is that we have translated our common principles and our common purposes into a common plan. When we part, f.'e are not going to part with a finished work, but with a work one portion- of which is finished and the other portion of which is only begun. "We have finished the formation of the peace, but we have begun a plan for co-operation which I be lieve will broaden and strengthen as | the years go by so that this grip of i the hand that we have taken now will need to be relaxed. We have been and shall continue to be com rades. We shall continue to be co workers in tasks which, because they are common, will weave out of our sentiments a common conception of i duty and a common conception of the rights of men of every race and of every clime. If it b|- true that that has been accomplished, it is a very great thing. "As I go away from these soenes, I think I shall realize that T have been present at one of the most vital things that has happened in the his tory of the nations. Nations have formed contracts with each other before, but they never have formed partnerships. They have associated 1 themselves temporarily, but they [ have never before associated them selves permanently. "The wrong that was done in the waging of this war was a great wrong, but it wakened the world to a great moral necessity of seeing that it was necessary that men should band themselves together in order that such a wrong should never be perpetrated again. "Merely to beat a nation that was wrong once is not enough. There must follow the warning to all other nations tjiat would do like thin-gs that they in turn will be vanquished and shamed if they attempt a dis honorable purpose. "You can see. therefore, sir, with what deep feelings fhotje of us who must now for a little while turn away from France, shall leave your shores; and though the ocean is broad it will seem very narrow in tho future. It will be easier to un derstand each other than it ever was before, and with the confident intercourse of co-operation, the un derstanding wilt be strengthened into action, and action will itself educate alike our purpose ant our thought. "So, sir, in saying good-by to France I'm only saying a sort of physical good-by; not a spiritual good-by. I shall retain in my heart always the warm feelings which the generous treatment of this great peo ple has generated in my heart. And I wish in my turn, sir, to propose, as you have proposed, the continued and increasing friendship of the two nations, the safety and prosperity of France, the closer and closer com munion of free peoples, and the strengthening of every influence which instructs the mind and the purpose of humanity.'' German Ministers to Sign the Treaty Off For Versailles By Associated. Press. Paris, June 27. Dr. Herman Mueller, the German foreign min ister, and Dr. Bell, minister of col onies, who have been selected to sign the peace treaty, will arrive at Versailles Saturday morning, the Havas Agency learns. Dr. Mueller and Dr. Bell are leav ing Berlin by the ordinary train. Lancaster Businessmen Ban Booze at Their Club Dancaxter, Pa., June 27. The Hamilton Club, a social organization of this city, will be bone dry from the first of July. The directors at a meeting this week decided that they | would comply fully with the'pro vision of the war-time prohibtion I act a r.-d will not allow evasions of ! the law by the locker system or any i other plan. Uiquor is to be banished from the club and whether its sale is restored or not the club will remain strictly j dry. Gilbert Succeeds Finegan in New York School Post Albany, N. Y„ June 27.—Frank D. Gilbert, of Albany, chief of the law I division of the state department of 1 education-, has been elected unani mously as deputy state commissioner of education by the board of regents. He succeeds Thomas E. Finegan, who resigned to become state super intendent of education of Pennsylvo j nia. Allentown Baby Drowns in a Bucket of Water Allentown. Pa„ June 2 7.—Falling out of bed into a bucket of water yesterday, IS-month-old Robert Rati, son of-Linn- Rau, of South Allentown, was drowned. HIGHER PRICK FOR WHEAT New York, June 27.—An increase in the Government's guaranteed price of wh.eat from $2.28 to $2.30 a bushel at I the terminal markets of Galveeton and New Orleans, effective July 1. I was annonuced last night by Julius I Barnes. United 1 States Wheat Direct or, under authority granted him in I an executive order Issued yesterday j by President Wilson. FUGITIVE ARRESTED By Associated Press. New York, June 27. Howard j France, charged with having es i caped from the State prison at | Trenton, N. J.. where he was serv ing a term of from ten to twenty years after being convicted of 29 burglaries at Atlantic City, was ar rested here last night. WATCH NEXT STEP IN THE ESCAPE OF EX-CROWN PRINCE Peace Dclegatps at Paris Be frain From Official l)iscussion By Associated Press. Paris, June 27.—The Peace Con ference has not yet been officially advised of the escape of the Crown Prince from Holland, the news hav ing come through British sources. Pending details official discussion of the event and its bearing in Ger man affairs and the question wheth er it involves violation of neutrality by Hollond is withheld. Recent Berlin despatches printed in the Paris newspapers are recalled, in which unnamed but alleged well placed persons commented on the sinking of the German fleet in Scapa Flow and the burning of French 1 You Pay Less for Better Quality at Miller & Katies |1 "SATURDAY SPECIALS!! !| IF YOU WANT SOMETHING jj I ! lB l A -w- -w- y Wj r ■ -W w M wAy yw y lADI4. 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Market Square JK battle flags said they were not nii. j prised and declared that other equal ly startling events might be antici pated Since the Scapa Flow incident the ; Paris press has insisitently alluded to the possibility of the former Gcr- j man' Emperor's escape from Holland,: coupled with the indirect question j as to what measures had been taken ] to prevent such a movement In I military quarters the belief was ex- | pressed to-day that the Crown Prince ! and Prince Max of Baden are on ! their way to East Prussia where the military r-eacjtionary element is strong The opinion' is that there I may be among the old junker officer class those who, whatever opinion' is held against the former Crown; Prince personally, might try to use him as "the man on horseback" i The presence in Germany at this| moment of Frederick William, when the fate of the Peace Treaty still | hangs in the balance, has caused i disquietude in Paris and there is j considerab I speculation regarding the next development in the situa-! tion. OUT FOR GOVERNOR Newark, N. J., June 27.—James: R. Nugent announced'at a confer-! ence of Democratic leaders from all parts of Northern New Jersey here i that he would seek at the primaries • the party nomination for governor 1 of New Jersey. ■■MBttMaHnanmnBHHMMEMHMHMM JHfe Absolutely No Pain\S My Improved nppll- nnrn, IncludlnK in ozyicen- X*' k Wmm Ir.rd air nppuratua. nikta vV * DM cxtrnctlnp nnd nil dental^ nurk ponltlvely and la perfectly leaa (Agr no objectl^^^^r Full act of EXAMINATION „JyJf„. ■•? FREE ✓AV X -- bridge wrk, *3, *4. *3 llepriaterrd a KK sold crown, 10.00 Orndunte a Ofllce open dally BJW A>*iatnn>a to 0 p. m.| Monday, Wed 4k'Ov T neadny and Snturday, till o p . m . BELL PHONE 3322-R. Jy y EASY TERMS OP ' i /bV 32© Market St.^^P* (Over the Hub) • HARRISBURG, PA. It didn't hurt n bit