Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, November 25, 1919, Image 11

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    FREE MOVIES TO
BE SHOWN FOR
CITY CHILDREN
Youngsters Will Be Guests of
Kiwanis Club and Peter
Magaro at Regent
Many hundreds of city children
will have a happy Thanksgiving:
Day, due to the efforts of the Kiwanis
Club in co-operation with Peter
Magaro, owner of the Regent theater.
Every child in Ilarrisburg is invited
to appear at the Regent on Thanks
giving morning at 9 o'clock and en-
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE
A LARGE NEW STOCK
J YOHN BROS. \
I Which instrument will you
select for your boy or girl this
Violins, SIO.OO up. Ukuleles, $3.95 up. BBpT
Guitars, $0,50 up. | Banjo Ukuleles,* \
y- JB? ggj Banjos, $6.50 up. $8.75 up. HlHllliil
tl 9l Mandolins, $lO up. „
Jgr Mandolutes $5.50 up ■ ' 9 ' s *°° \I|PF
Banjo Mandolins, lolin Cello, $85.00.
Banjo SIO.OO up. i Autoharps, SB.OO up. violin
Cases and supplies for all •*!
oß| above instruments. A full line ci||
of rolls and satchels for carry
-1 ing music, $1.25 up. Come in
and see if we have what you
J||k want. Our stock is very com- .
plete at present. gyP&H
IfjYOHN BROS.®
13 N. Fourth St.
Mandolin Across from Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart Guitar
Our Prdfit from
all Sources
The American Public does not believe all it reads.
It insists on being shown.
When Swift & Company says its profits are only
a fraction of a cent per pound, many believe we are
not telling the whole story—that there are hidden
profits.
Here Are The Facts:
Our net profit on our entire business for the year
1918 amounted to only 1.76 cents per dollar.of sales,
or less than one-half cent per pound, and
L Included profits from hides and all ether
by-products.
2. Included profits from all sundry side-lines.
3. Included profits on all subsidiary corporations.
4. To sum up—it included the entire profit from
every source of revenue in which
Swift A Company has any interest
There are no other profits.
Furthermore our accounts have been checked and
certified annually by leading public accounting firms. --
Swift & Company is sincerely trying to get the
facts before the public. If you have any questions re
garding our business—write us—and we will do our
best to answer them. In discussing the packing
business be sure you have the facts and that you are
not unintentionally spreading misinformation.
If you get the fhcts we have no doubt as to
the verdict
Ktgfjl Use Red Cross
WRfiam Christmas Seals x
Swift & Company, U. S. A
Harrisburg Local Branch, Seventh & North Streets
F. W. Covert, Manager
TUESDAY EVENING,
joy a special "kid" comedy
Mr. Magaro has secured.
The Kiwanis Club will bring the
boys and girls of the Children's In
dustrial Home and th® Sylvai l
Heights orphanage in motors which
the members have volunteered for
the morning, and after a few hours
of the performance will take them
back home again. No child will re
ceive a special invitation or anything
of that sort, but every youngster in
the city may enter the theater If r.e
or she will but appear at the hour
announced, 9 o'clock Thursday
morning.
This has been another opportunity
for the Kiwanis Club, and the mem
bers have grasped It as they did
several like chances this summer o
make the children of tl.e city a little
happier.
Mr. Magaro has promised to pre
sent one of the funniest films it is
possible to get, and remembering,
the treat of the Motor Club some
months ago, the youngsters of this
city are eager for Thanksgiving
morning to come arojind.
Erie High's Record
Erie, 41; Dunkirk, 0.
Erie, 41; Reenville, 0.
Erie, 7; Loekwood. 0.
Erie, 54; Fifth Ave., Pitts'h, 2.
Erie, 88; Jamestown, 0.
I Erie, 20; Towanda, 6.
i Erie, 33; Lafayette High, of
I Buffalo, 13
Erie, 13; Carnegie Tech Fresh-
I men, 0.
i Total, Erie, 297; opponents, 19.
Fritz Kreisler Not
Invited to Give
Concert For Legion
By Associated Press.
I.oulsvllle, Ky„ Nov. 25.—Fritz
KreD'ir, AiMti.ir. v.c- nlst, has not.
as reemtly reported, leeti invited by
the American legion to appear at any
benefit In Nw York State. Lemuel
Bolles. national adjutant of the Le
gion. snid in a telegram received at
headquarters of the local chapter.
Socialist Lecturer
Sent Out of Elmira, N. Y.
F.tmlni. N. Y„ Nov. 25.—William E.
Krenes, Socialist lecturer from Chica
go. who came here to address a mass
meeting in the interests of the free
ing of Eugene V. Debs, and Kate
Richards O'Hare, found hasd gbing.|
Refused permission by Mayor,- Hoff
man, a foi mer National Guardsman, to
speak in the City Hall, Kreues mus
tered the local Socialists for an open
meeting.
Before the plans could mature mem
bers of Harry B. Bentley Post, Ameri
can Legion, together with ex-soldlers
from practically every branch of
service, had organized temporarily,
sought out the visiting lecturer and
offered to escort him In safety to the
railroad station. After some parley, in
which Socialist candidates at the re
cent election took part, the offer of
the soldiers was accepted.
16799
DIED
in New York City alone from ki&•
ney trouble last year. Don't allow
yourself to become a victim by
neglecting pains and aches. Guard
against this trouble by taking
GOLD MEDAL
The world's standard remedy for kidney*
livar, bladder and uric acid troublaat
Holland's national remedy since 169&.
All druggists, three sizes. Guaranteed.
Leek for the name Geld Medal en avers has
and icc.pt no imitation
V _
HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH
Personal-Social
Plans Nearing Completion
For Central Alumni Hop
Members of the entertainment com
mittee of the Harrisburg High
School Alumni Association report
that great interest has been aroused
in the Thanksgiving hop to be held
at Chestnut Street Auditorium Friday
evening, and that the sale of tickets
has tar exceeded expectations. Tick
ets- can be obtained at the Slgler Mu
sic Store or the Diener Jewelry Store
up until 4 o'clock on Friday after
noon.
For the Information of those hold
ing invitations to the hop it was
statfd that it is not necessary for in
vitations to be e*fhanged for tickets
beforehand.
Rumors to the effect that the hall
will be overcrowded were dispelled
'this morning by the statement that
only a limited number of Invitations
and tickets have been printed. . Ade
quate and dependable service will be
maintained in the checkroom
throughout the evening.
Miss Ruth Fickes is in charge of
refreshments, and other members of
the committee are: Thomas D. Cald
well, who will direct the special en
tertainment during intermissions;
Karl E. Peters, invitations; Carl B.
Stoner, door and admission; Miss
Sarah Maloney, program; Miss Ade
line Paul, who will be in charge .of
the card tables; Miss Hazel Rexroth,
auditorium; Miss Mary Laverty, mu
sic; Mrs. Eliza Bretz Feeser, decora
tions and committee designations;
Miss Martina Mullen, secretary and
patrons; and Mrs. Frances Dunlap
Schaffmeister, posters.
G. Laurence Shepley will be floor
manager of the hop. A membership
booth will be conducted under the
auspices of Horace D. Jackson, who
has been appointed general chairman
of a membership campaign, which
will open in the near future. He will
be assisted Dy Harold E. Eckert, sec
retary of the Association. The Banjo-
Saxo Orchestra will play for the danc
ing which will begin promptly at 8.30
and end at 12.30 o'clock:
Tech High Alumni Dance
at Winterdale, Dec. 1
It was announced this morning, by
a member of the committee, that the
Tech High Alumni Dance will be
strictly informal. This event, to be
held Monday, December 1, at Win
terdale Hall gives promise of being;
one of the most delightful affairs of
the Thanksgiving season. The Seur
bcer-Meyers ten-piece orchestra will
play for the dancing, giving an en
tirety new program of the latest
music.
A few invttatipns still remain and
can be obtained by applying to any
member of the committee. "While
primarily an event for the Tech
Alumni, many persons not identified
with the school have been invited to
attend and a special invitation has
been extended to the men now stu
dents at the institution, the latter
are represented on the committee by
the senior class president, Charles
Lingle and the senior treasurer,
Blair Hefkin. The other members
are William G. Hilton, George L.
Stark, John Molts and Rees M.
Lloyd.
History of the Organ
Told in Lecture-Recital
An illustrated lecture recital on
"The History of the Organ" will be
given by Clarence Dickinson in the
Fifth Street Methodist Church next
Thursday evening, December 2.
Mr. Dickinson is organist at the
Brick Presbyterian Church, New
York city, and is noted throughout
the country as one of America's
leading musicians. The lecture,
which will be illustrated by sixty
lantern slides, takes in the entire
period of the progress of organ
building from the earliest date to
the present time.
The Association of Organists have
arranged the recital.
Old-Time Sewing Party
With Twenty Guests
Mrs. Hartley Davidson, of Penn
street, entertained yesterday after
noon with an old-time sewing party,
in honor of her house guests, Mrs.
Leßue Caines and Mrs. Samuel B.
Saunders, of Oswego, N. Y. The
women brought their knitting, darn
ing and fancy work, spending sev
eral hours happily In chat and music.
Supper was served in Thanksgiving
fashion, with cunning little turkeys
as favors. There were twenty in at
tendance. *
Y. W. C. A. SUNDAY SFRVICE
The Vesper Service at the Y. W.
C. A. next Sunday evening from 5 to
6 o'clock will be of unusual interest
and a large attendance is expected.
Mrs. Roberta Swartz Harling is the
speaker. Mrs. Harling will tell the
story of "Blind Bartimeus." A largo
chorus from the Moorhead knitting
mill led by Mrs. Florence Ackley Ley
will sing a number of Gospel hymns.
HONORING MTSS FLEMING
Miss Susanna Fleming will be the
honor guest .at a dance to be given
Saturday evening by Miss Margaret
Kennedy, of Ragged Edge, Cham
bersburg.
Miss Mary Carroll, of 1709 North
Third street, is entertaining Miss
Rose Dougherty, of Chester, over the
Thanksgiving holidays. Several so
cial events have been planned Tn her
honor.
E. Pierce Shope, a senior at Johns
Hopkins Medical School, Baltimore,
is the guest of his parents, Dr. and
Mrs. Samuel Z. Shope, 610 North
Third street.
(Other Social News on Page fl.)
Aviator Makes Record Trip
to Lebanon and Return
W. F. Deihl, the aviator in charge
of the Aeroplane Mechanical School
made a record trip to Lebanon and
return Saturday. His actual flying
time was thirty minutes. In making
the trip, an automobile started about
a half an hour before the plane,
yet the plane beat K down. Whilo
at Lebanon, several passengers were
taken trips over the surrounding ter
ritory. It is possible thnt in the
near future regular daily trips carry
ing passengers between that city and
Harrisburg will be made.
FOR XWAS
You can secure a slightly uapd pi
ano or player piano, like new, in fol
lowing makes: Knabe Player, Royal
Player. Behntng, Straube, Braumuller,
Livingston. Pricqp and terms right.
Yohn Bros., 13 North Fourth street,
opposite Dives, Pomeroy and Stewart.
•—Adv.
t
AIR PATROL TO
WATCH SHIPS
ALONG COAST
Fifth Squadron to Guard Ves
sels From New York to
Virginia
Mincola, N. Y., Nov. 25. —Bring-
ing assistance to ships in distress at
sea is' the latest duty given to the
Army air service. The formation of
a coast air patrol, the first in this
country, is announced. Colonel
Archler Miller, the commandant,
said the patrol will be maintained by
the Fifth Aero Squadron and will
have charge of the coast from here
to Langley Field, Va
The First Aero Squadron, the
Army's oldest aviation organization,
and which won many honors in the
i World War, will begin a series of
cross country fights next week, it j
was announced. The purpose of the
flights will be to keep the squadron i
in readiness for instant duty any- i
where.
Visits will be made to cities In New !
England nnd in the southern and
western states.
New Gas Field Best in
Country, Experts Say
Pittsburgh, Nov. 25.—Drillers and
gas experts who have inspected the
new gas field in South Versailles
township, near McKeesport, express
ed the opinion to-day that it was one
of the best producing regions in the
United States. In the three months |
since the first "strike" was made, the |
field has produced more than SI,OOO,- J
OOl 1 worth of gas.
Property valuations in the field |
have soared. A hillside lot which
sold for SIOO three months ago, now 1
is priced at 3,000. In South Versail
les the School Board lias leased the
school yard to a gas company and a
well is being put down.
U. S. Army Meets
Shortage of Sugar
By Associated Press.
Washington, Nov. 25.—The United
States At my is suffering from the
sugar shortage. A statement said no
surplus stock for the army remained
and tne purchasing department had
failed to obtain any in the market.
Negotiations have been begun in an
effort to find a source of supply to
meet future needs.
CHILI) BURNS TO IXEATH
Gettysburg, Pa., Nov .25. —Pauline
Bowers, 4-year-old daughter of
Lawrence Bowers of New Oxford,
was burned to death yesterday while
alone in the kitchen at her home.
Her father, in the next room, going
to the kitchen when he heard the
child's screams and found her in a
mass of flames. How the clothing
caught fire is not known but the
father succeeded in extinguishing
the flames only after the child had
been severely burned.
GREEK PLOTTERS CAUGHT
Athens, Monday, Noy. 24.—Plot
ters arrested following discovery of
a conspiracy to assassinate Premier
Venizelos, overthrow the present
regime and re-establish King Con
stantine on the throne have made
full confessions, according to the
authorities. They were formerly of
ficers under King Constantine, it is
said. They wil be tried before court
martial.
"TIME after time patients come
TO ME and say, 'Doctor, I
DON'T know what is the
MATTER with me but I worry
ABOUT everything; I am
IRRITABLE, run down and
WEAK; I don't sleep like I
USED to and I have no
APPETITE. Can't you fix me
UP?' " In practically nine out
OF ten such cases, according
TO A well-known New York
PHYSICIAN, the nervous
SYSTEM was found to be
WEAK, deranged or impaired
—AND usually the disorder
WAS accompanied by anaemia
OR lack of iron in the blood.
TO overcome just
CONDITIONS there is nothing
LIKE Parto-Glory, that
REMARKABLE combination
OF NERVE and blood food
WHICH has been used so
SUCCESSFULLY by run down,
WEAKENED men and women
FOR many years. Hundreds
OF PEOPLE report that they
HAVE obtained renewed
STRENGTH and vigor from
PARTO-GLORY within one
WEEK'S time. All good
DRUGGISTS sell Parto-Glory
IN ITS concentrated form, with
THE guarantee that it will give
ENTIRELY satisfactory results
TO every purchaser or money
REFUNDED. Obtain Parto-
GLORY to-day and nbte
i ITS quick, gratifying action.
A plat* a ma! which dace ,
aat Iclaihra with teste er speech. I
5
Plata* WMIi Tmrn
BAAPK'C DENTAL
ailAvIV 9 OFFICES
t> MARKET Tlt3BT
Will Return to
Canada Often, Says
the Prince of Wales
By Associated Press.
Halifax, N. S., Nov. 25. —The
Prince of Wales was chcereil when
he told the guests at a state dinner
| at the Halifax Club last night that
he was "intansely Canadian" and
that he hoped to return to Canada
often and "to travel as a Canadian
in his own country." Sir Robert
Borden, premier of Canada, presided
at the dinner. Among the sixty
guests were the Duke of Devonshire,
Governor General of Canada; the
Lieutenant Governors of Nova
Scotia, New Brunswick nnd Prince
Edward Island and the Premiers of
the eastern provinces.
After the dinner thfc prince and
his suite attended a ■Btatb ball at
government house.
DIES FROM INJURY
Edward Hawbeeker, of Chambers
burg, the Central Construction Cor
poration driver who suffered a frac
tured skull when he fell from a wag
on last week, died in the Harrisburg
Hospital last evening.
United States Grain Corporation Will Sell
Flour to Wholesalers and Jobbers
The United States Grain Corporation is prepared to divert
from its flour purchases, and to sell and deliver to wholesalers
and jobbers straight (either soft or hard) wheat flour, clean and
well milled, packed in 140-pound jute sacks, (gross weight)
basis of $10.25 per barrel, delivered in carload lots on tracks in
territory east of the Illinois and Indiana line, and east of the Mis
sissippi River, from Cairo to the Gulf. ,
Wholesalers and jobbers in purchasing flour from the United
States Grain Corporation must guarantee not to sell at more than
seventy-five cents per barrel additional, and the wholesalers and
jobber in turn must require a guarantee that the retailer will not
sell at mofe than $1.25 per barrel over the wholesaler's prices, in
original packages, and at a price not higher than seven cents a
pound for broken packages of any size.
All applications originating in New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
Ohio, Indiana and the Lower Peninsula of Michigan must be sent
to the undersigned.
UNITED STATES GRAIN CORPORATION
H. D. IRWIN, Second Vice President
272 Bourse, Philadelphia, Pa.
Hw JgSa I BBH I * B
5 C a package
before the war
5 C a package
during the war
and
\ * *
5c a package
NOW
)
THE FLAVOR LASTS
SO DOES THE PRICE!
>
NOVEMBER 25, 1919.
Dr. Jacobs to Preach
at Thursday Service
A Thanksgiving Day meeting of
unusual interest is to be held in the
Stevens Memorial Methodist Church
Thursday evening at 7.4 5 o'clock.
The Rev. Dr. Hornce Lincoln Jacobs,
of Willinmsport, will be the speaker.
Professor John W. Phillips and a
ibig chorus are busy getting ready
(for'the Thanksgiving musicale to be
given in connection with the service.
Dr. Jacobs is well known in Harris-
FREE
A Great Story of the "Texas
Rainbow"
telling of the over-night fortunes
made in Texas oil. A vivid story,
based upon absolute truth—a mod
ern Arabian Nights. Told by an Oil
Operator from years of experience.
Free on Request.
CrtAS. E. JACKSON
Box 485, Independence, Kansas
burg, having at one time served afl
minister in charge of Stevens churcH
and Ridge Avenue 9Jwrch.
MOID MM BEFORE '
HISMjJKO
"I was beginning to think I fM
getting to be an old man before my
ti*e," said A. Pariera, 2139 N. 15th
St., Philadelphia. "I actually lived
on bread and milk, as heavier foods
would upset my stomach and cauee
I untold ugonies.
"Recently a friend urged me to
give Tanlac a trial. Why, my
tite hf# increased. My nerves am
O. K. I am gaining weight rapidly.
I now heartily recommend Tanlao.™
People suffering from headaches,
i spots before the eyes, pains in the
head, melancholia, depressed spirits,
twitching, sleeplessness, Imperfect
digestion and poor appetite are evl
dent'y suffering from nervous debil
ity. These kinds of folk should take
Tnnlac. as it supplies the necessary
nerve food, the right proteid matter
and more Vitality and strength. Tan
lac is sold here by all leading drug
-1 gists.