Woman Fugitive in "Man Hunt" Following Murder of Two Men! By Associated Press• Macon, Ga., Oct. 9. A "man 1 hunt" with a woman as one of the I fugitives was in progress here to- 1 day. Sheriff Hicks of Bibb coun- j ty, with a posse of about 100 men. j was searching the woods near the | site of Camp Harris for a man and | a woman charged with killing A. J. Elkins and probably fatally in juring Tom Sanders near here late yesterday. The victims, both well-to-da farm ers, were driving toward home from Macon, each in his own wagon, CAN YOU BEAT THE "PROFITEER?" Sure! There is one food that sells at slight advance in price on account of the war—so slight you will hardly feel it. One SHREDDED WHEAT BISCUIT costs you a fraction over one cent. Two of these crisp, brown little loaves served with hot milk make a warm, nourishing, satisfying meal at a cost of five or six cents. They contain all the body-building elements in the whole wheat grain—nothing wasted or thrown away. The most real food for the least money. I Pianos Which You Know You | Can Depend Upon 1 here s a lot of satisfaction in choosing - from a line of pianos, all of which have been time-tested for lasting tone and durability, and by this hardest of all tests have proven unqualifiedly reliable. Such are the pianos we offer you. Xote these names. Everyone already known to you. because they have for many vears pleased discriminating buyers: Chickering. Sohmer, Mehlin, Haines Bros., Estev, Shoningcr, Bush & Lane, Kimball, Marshall & Wendell, Foster, etc. If you purchase one of these pianos vou will have the security of owning an instrument of guaranteed quality. And our prices, you 11 find, afford an important saving. Come in and see for your self. Foster Player-Pianos, At $575 are the equalof $650 Players elsewhere. They are $650 Players our price of $575 represents the saving' made possible bv our large cash buying for three stores. See them to-day, while we can make imme diate delivery. Easy Payments. Week-End Bargains Tiffany Pianos $l9O | Lakeside $250 Haines Bros $2lO Cabler Player $485 ~ *' " ■ * *i" ,vi" ■ l ' ■■■■ ,i : . .=ssj Vicirolas, Edisons, Vocations, Sonoras Records and Music Rolls J. H. Troup Music House Troup Building 15 So. Market Square THURSDAY EVENING. CANTEEN WORKERS OF THE RED CROSS WHO WERE ENTERTAINED BY MRS. FRANCIS J. HALL i when they overtook a man and a j woman walking. Elkins gave the man a lift and Sanders did likewise t for the woman. j After riding a short distance, the | man is charged with dealing Elkins I a death blow with a hammer he had j concealed on his person, and the j women simultaneously is said to j hove assailed Sanders in the same ; manner. Sanders was robbed of SSO j after which the couple took refuge in the forest, according to the police. Sanders and Elkins were brought here. Hammers similar to those with which two farmers were struck down were found in a Crawford county banking house shortly after a safe blowing according to the po lice. Not Out of Danger, Says Mrs. Sayre, of President Wilson Cambridge, Mass., Oct. 9. Mrs. Francis B. Sayre, daughter of Presi dent Wilson, has returned from Washington where she visited her father. She declared President Wil son was much improved, but that ho was not out of danger. "When I left," she said, "my father was in bed and no one was permitted to see him except myself and my sisters. The doctors told me I might return to my home, as there was no immediate danger. I shall return to Washington in a few days." Mrs. Sayre said that the Presi dent's illness was caused by a ner vous breakdown. HAHRISBURO TELJEGKAPIT ON THE WAY TO A BETTER DAY •Tlie International Sunday School Ix-sson For October 12 Is "Fishers of Men." —Mark 1:14-20. By WILLIAM T. ELLIS A noisy motorboat now runs on the lake of Galilee. It carries pas sengers from the station of the Haifa-Damascus railroad at the foot of the lake to the town of Tiberias, the only surviving community on the edge of this once populous sheet of water. Capernaum is a ruin; Beth saidu and Chorazin and Magdala and Gardara have disappeared. Tiberias is a Jewish town, where rival sects of old-world Jews maintain their theological and ecclesiastical ortho doxy to the mint and cummin de gree —in a town of indescribable stench and unsanitary condition. 1 Fellow passengers on the motor boat are Jewish colonists, British soldiers, Turkish prisoners, and na tive Arabs and Galileans. While wo wait for our journey across the lake to begin, olive-skinned small boys sport in the water, diving for coins, and show shining, smiling, winsome faces, with lustrous black eyes and beautiful teeth; reminding one of that Other Boy who used to trudge across the hills from Nazareth in order to go in swimming here; and who later made His home and did His work and spoke His words by this very lake. Of course I went swimming in Galilee, overboard from a native boat in the middle of the lake; and of course 1 went fishing there; thinking all the while of the othor fishermen, brawny, dusky fellows, just like my boatmen, who quit their nets in order to become fishers of men and moulders of the new world order which is still to-day the high-j est hope of mankind. One Prophet Dead, A Greater Comes Back of the short story which is the basis of to-day's lesson lies a great principle. John the Baptist, the rising star of his time, the most promising portent upon his day's horizon, was dead. That news sound ed like the knell of hope to many who had been fired by his assurance that the kingdom which spelled deliv erance for all burdened hearts was near at hand. It seemed as if the very existence of this better day which he heralded was dependent upon the continuance of the message and ministry of John himself. If ever a man seemed Indispensable to a critical time, that man was John the. Baptist. And ho was dead. What now of his good news and his promised kingdom? "God removes the work er, but He carries on the work." Sometimes He has to remove the worker in order to carry on the work. John had gone his limit; had spoken his word, had uttered his call. He could do no more. His place was only, that of a herald and a fingerboard. His success depended upon Somebody's coming after hini, with a larger vision and a greater word. Nobody knew this so well .is John. He joyfully laid down his tools, and gave up his life, for he saw that another could fulfi'l his be. I ginning. In Whlttier's words: "What matter. I or they? Mine or another's day. So the right word be said And life Jhe sweeter made? "Hail to the coming singers! Hail to the brave light-bringers! Forward I reach and share All that they sing and dare. "Ring bells in unreared steeples, The joy of unborn peoples! Sound, trumpets far off blown. Your triumph is my own! Tlic Key of Idfe's Puzzles Back to work went the men who bad followed John the Baptist. Did it seem a slump from the exciting times of the revival by the Jordan with the crowds, the commotion and the everchanging scenes"of interest? As those fishermen turned hack to the heavy, monotonous, arduous task of fishing in Galilee, their first In stinctive feeling, doubtless, was akin to that of the soldiers' return from the great war to humdrum tasks of peace. They were wise enough, though, to know that work is the sovereign remedy: to have work to do, and a will to do It, is to be in possession of the panacea, for most, of life's ills. The wise men of our own time are crying aloud this truth as a remedy for present social, eco nomic and political troubles. Work has slackened; production is below normal; labor is coming to be look ed upon as an evil, and not as a boon. Now is the time for all of us to follow the example of the .apos tles of old, and in a period of uncer tainty and of waiting, betake our selves to labor, hard, engrossing ungrudging labor. Much of what is wrong with ourselves and our era will be righted by sheer industry of a productive character. While we wait and work, the wav out will appear. God secnis not to like to do business with idlers: whereas the devil traffics chiefly with persons who are not busy. The four fishermen were toiling at the drudgery of their heavy calling—l am thinking of the huge oars and cumbersome boats of Galilee—when Jesus appeared to them. Nets were weighty, and the me nworked, often, these Galileans were doing, but the up to the middle in water. It wajs Ino fly-casting sort of fishing tho't ers. when they heard the Voice that called them to their careers. "News Sense" in a Ixvulcr Some men have that pictorial and pertinent quality called a "news sense." Their conception of timeli ness and opportunity is highly de veloped. The living present is their metier. They speak and write to the occasion and to the hour. Such an one was Jesus, the most vivid of teachers. On this tour of Galilee, wherein he called the four first dis ciples, he was preaching the present 'good news of a kingdom near at hand —"the time is fulfilled"— and I echoing John's great call to repent . nnce. i This fact is of tea forgotten. Je- sua began His ministry proclaim ing a better social order. He was the exponent of a kingdom, an or ganization of men and women with God as their king. Anybody who says that religion has nothing to do conditions in the world, and e welfare of people economic ally and socially, has been a blind win J 0t the Bible ' Moreover, there will be no new era for humanity un -5". a many persons have heard divine call and command, "Re pent le. Both nations and men will have to mend their ways if we are to have the good time which has ever been the burden of prophetic Things will never be with God men Unt " men Ket rie ' ;t . The "news sense" of Jesus was further illustrated by his manner of summoning the four fishermen to join him in his kingdom enterprise. always, he avoided set forms of speech. He would not use the ster eotyped phrases of the rabbis. His unconventional invitation was, "Come ye after me, and I will make you to become fishers of men." Isn't that a picture phrase? These seek ers after the finny creatures of the deep were given opportunity to catch men alive. There probably never was an old bore who did not have tales to toll of what lie might have been or might have done had he seized his hour of opportunity. Forty years hence thousands of young men of to-day will be telling their grandchildren that they were alive throughout the world's crisis hour, but failed to see its possibilities for them. They did not have the insight and the deci sion to forsake all and follow the great call. Not so these four fishermen. Our hearts warm to them as men of ac tion. They heard The voice of op portunity. the call of the New Lead er, and they answered with military promptness, "Here!" I was once visiting Culver Military Academy, at the beginning of a summer term, when the wife of the superintendent asked a new student a question about some boy's whereabouts. He answered politely that he did not know. With a smile, his questioner turned to me and said: "That is the difference between a new summer student and an old winter student. The latter would have said instant these cool Fall evenings and mornings j \\ J is a wonderful new invention in house heating. Burns about 2 cents worth of JJ gas per hour and will heat the largest room in your house WITHOUT ODOR. It Is Unlike Any Other Type of Gas Radiator No. 60 ®"Heat from the Radiantfire is like the warm rays of the sun, warming all the solid objects in the room without vitiating the air you breathe. THE RADIANTFIRE is a beautiful heater, with a mass of glowing radiants that resemble the embers of a fire-side. SOLD WITH AN ABSOLUTE GUARANTEE OF SATISFACTION in Harrisburg and Carlisle by Prices I SOO VE I $22.50 to $75.00 M JIL Furniture Company No. ao I————— —————J ~ 1415-1419 N. Second Street Photo by Roahon. ! ly, 'I will go and find out'." Blessed is the education which makes doers, of' youth; which teaches them in-, stinetively to put their shoulders un der responsibility. in the class- 1 room of labor, the young Galilc-an! fishermen had,learned to act with quickness of thought. That was one i of the outstanding characteristics ofj the American and Canadian and l Australian soldiers in France; theyj had initiative and a sense of prompt! action. They were doers of the I word. All taking up entai's a giving up. j Tlie four left their nets and their [jobs and their old ordered life.] They had the high spirit of adven-1 jture. They gave tip everything in j order to follow Jesus; which is the! I price he asks of all disciples. Ho j will accept no divided allegiance. j (Rut to those who follow Hint, what l | boons are theirs! This quartet ofj | obscure Galileans became intimate i friends of God's sent Son, and fish-' | ers of men by the million, and j [founders of the new kingdom which! jis to-day the one sure hope of hu i inanity. NATION-WIDE TRUCE URGED IN INDUSTRIES [Continued front First Page.l son, of the Department of Labor, and said to have the approval of President Wilson, was included in the proposals of the public group. It would provide for joint boards of employers and employes in each industry; for a general board ap pointed by the President 1o adjust appeals from these boards; and, in j event the general board failed to! arrive at an unanimous decision an j umpire to be selected either by un animous choice of the general board, or by lot from a standing list of twenty persons named by the Presi dent. "Whenever an ngreement is reach-1 ed, locally or by the unanimous vote of the industrial board, or by tliej unanimous vote of the general board or by the decision of the umpire, the conclusion arrived at shall have all the yorce and affect of a trade agreement which employers and em nioyes shall be morally bound TO accept and abide by," said the plan. "It is understood that this plan would not interfere with any system of joint wage conferences now in I existence, unless or until the failure! HAY FEVER? Why Suffer? See Man-Heil Automatic Inhaler. Ask Demonstrator GORGAS' DRUG STORE; • 16 North Third Street SEPTEMBER 18, 1919. to agf-ce in such a conference made] a strike or lockout Imminent." j, After being in session an hour and i a half the conference adjourned un- ] , til this afternoon. Meantime the ! committee of fifteen will consider ] resolutions submitted. It was an- j nouncrd that the employers' group i will attempt to prepare proposals ac-j ! ccptnhle to all dements of the group ; for submission to the conference. IM.WT V \KTI A I.I.Y RESUMES I VoiiagNtovrfi, 0., Oct. 9.—Tile Trum-i bull Steel, Company of Warren, an in-! dependent plant employing 5.000 men. I has resumed operation in part, it was] announced to-day by companv of-! ficials. Tlie statement followed an an- i nouncement by employes of the mill | after a meeting yesterday that an I amicable agreement bad been reach-] ed between the company and the men I and that the men would return to i work as soon as possible. Advice to the Lovelorn SHE WANTS TO CiO TO THE THEATER DKAR MISS FAIRFAX: , I am twenty and considered good I looking. I have been going about with, a man for several yenrs. Now he very 1 seldom takes me to any plaee of * amusement which consequently causes remarks among my folks. I don't' j think he is stingy, but it is iust that 1 l be doesn t think that far. I have been I told tliat lie must lie ashamed of me ]ann have been advised to give him up! i I love him dearly and don't know what to do. i j ~ , JUNE, j Possibly your friend can't afford to I take you out very often. Possibly he lerioys merely being with you, tatk-| ling and enjoying the friendly visit! I which "furnishes its own cabaret" and doesn't have to go rushing about] |in search of amusement us we citvi [folks too often do. Sure Way to Get Rid of Dandruff ' 1 There is one sure way that never fails to remove dandruff completely and that is to dissolve it This de stroys it entirely. To do this, just ' get about four ounces of plain, or dinary liquid arvon; apply it at night ! when retiring; use enough to moisten, the scalp and rtili it in gently with 1 the linger tips. P morning, most if not all. of ! yr ir dandruff will he gone, and three or four more applications will com pletely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it. no matter how much dandruff you may have. Ton will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop instantly, and your hair will be Huf fy. lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, j and look and feel a hundred times ■ better. I Vou can get liquid nrvon at any [ [drugstore. It is inexpensive, and! j four ounces is all you will need. This j simple remedy lias never been known I I to fail. j ONLY A POWERFUL MEDICINE WILL END RHEUMATISM ! It matters not whether you have | ] had agonizing rheumatic pains for 20 years or distressing twitches for 20 I weeks, Rheiuna is mighty and power ful enough to help drive rheumatic, poisons from your body and abolish I all misery, or the cost, small as it is, | will he cheerfully refunded. Druggists everywhere are author ized to sell Rheuma on a no-cure-no pay basis. It's absolutely harmless and after taking the small dose as directed once a day for two days you should know that at last you have obtained a remedy tiiat wlli conquer rheumatism. For over ten years throughout America Rheutua has been .prescribed [ and has released thousands from i agony. Kennedy's Drugstore will I supply you and guarantee money re -1 funded if not satisfactory. Actress Tells Secret Tells How to I>nrkeii Gray Hsir Witli u Home-Made Mixture Joieey Williams, the well-known actress, who was recently playing at the Imperial Theater in St. Louis, made the following statement about gray hair and how to darken it: "Anyone can prepare a simple mixture at homo that will darken gray, streaked or faded hair, and make it soft and glossy. To a half pint ot' water add 1 ounce of bay rum, a small box of Barbo Com pound and "A ounce of glycerine. These ingredients can be bought at any drug store at very little cost. Appiy to the hair twice a week un til the desired shade is obtained. This will make a gray-haired person look twenty years younger. It does not color the scalp, is not sticky or greasy and does not rub off. BIG ULCER ALL HEALED Now I Can Walk," Says Mrs. Southcott of Medina - "Here is another letter that makes me happy,' nays Peterson, of Buffalo. One that I would rather have than a thousand dollars." "Money isn't everything In this world. There is many a big hearted, rich man who would give all he has on eßrtli to he able to produce a rem - edy with such mighty healing power as Petersons Ointment, to sell at all druggists for 35 cents a large box." Read this letter, written February 14. 1918, by Mrs. Albert Southcott, of Medina, N. it seems like a miracle, but it i true, every word of it. I know it because I get similar let | tersi every day from people who have used my ointment for old sores ec l zema and piles. is it any wonder I am happy! Peters Ointment Co.. Inc., Buf | falo, N. V. j Dear Sirs— i "I was an untold sufferer from an | old running sore and ulcers. I had | tried most everything without any | relief from pain. A friend told me i of your wonderful ointment and the lirst box took away the pain that had not left me before in years, and after using just nine dollars worth of the salve I am cured. The nicer was 9 inches by f>V4 inches, is all healed and I can walk. Never, never will I he without Peterson's again. "You may use this to recommend your ointmerjt if you wish. 1 can ; not say enough to praise it." Yours ruly, Mrs. Albert Southcott. Medina, iN. Y. Mail orders tilled by Peterson j Ointment Co., Inc., Buffalo, N. Y. y SAND CLEAN, good River i Sand. Free from dirt and ] other harmful matter. May be used for ] any purpose where good sand is required. i j v United Ice & Coal Co.' Forster & Cowden Sta. i V . 15