Brakeman Falls From . Train in Clinton County Millcrsburg, Pa.. Nov. 28.—Gleim Gilbert, a Pennsylvania Railroad passenger brakeman, is slowly recov ering from Injuries sustained in a fall from a train. 'While on duty on a milk train, Gilbert tripped and fell from the platform to the ground. He was so badly hurt he has not been able to be out of bed or have the use of his hand or arms. The acci dent happened at North Bend, Clin ton county. He is at his home in this place. Use McNeil's Pain Exterminator—Ad "The Water of Eternal Youth" The beauties of the Austrian court of bygone days used a lotion which was so effectual in keeping the face smooth and free from wrinkles, even in the aged, they named it the or eternul youth." , Some one recently has divulged tho secret of this wonderful, thougli ex ceedingly simple, wrinkle lotion, which in her gratitude she has sim ilarly dubbed a preserver of youth: One ounce pure saxolite (powdered), dissolved in a half pint witch hazel— that's all there is to it. Any woman can get these Ingredients ut her drug store. put them together, and use the solution with entire safety. To bathe the face In 'he samo brings immedi ate results, even in caso of the deeper wrinkles and furrows. Tills is also effective for hanging cheeks and dou nie chin. RHEUMATISM Munyon's 3X Rheumatism Remedy relieves sharp shooting pains in the arms, legs, side, back or breast, or soreness jn any part of the body almost immediately. For lameness, stiff and swelling joints, stiff back and all pains in the hips and loins it gives relief so quickly that it astonishes all who try it. Munyon's 3X Rheumatism Remedy is especially recommended for chronic rheumatism, sciatica and lumbago. It seldom fails to give relief after a few doses and often cures before one bottle has been used. It contains no salicylic acid, no morphine, no cocaine, no dope or harmful drugs. For sale by all druggists. 81.20 a bottle. For constipation use Munyon's Paw Paw Laxative Pills. 30c at all druggists. Free diet and care charts sent upon application to Munyon's H. H. Remedy Co., 54th and Columbia Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Druggists Call Begy's Mustarine Triple Extract of Heat But It's Non-Blistering Heat and It Won't Hurt the Tenderest Skin Grandmother's old-fashioned mus tard plaster did tho work all right, but it blistered the skin and was a mighty mussy remedy. Begy's Mustarine is the original mustard prescription that has made grandmother mustard plaster but a relic of bygone days It's ten times better, cleaner and cannot blister; it is made of true, honest yellow mustard combined with other well-known destroyers of pain and a box does the work of tlfty mustard plasters. Why suffer for days using plasters or continuously rubbing on liniment when one application of Begy's Mus tarine will take out soreness in chest or any part of the body and will lim ber up stiff neck or rusty joints. It banishes backache, toothache, head- Christmas Opening and Souvenir Day Saturday, November 29th To all purchasers of 50c and over, a well made Japanese Hand Brush 1 Tin Pepper .... 1 Tin Cinnamon ... I All ¥7 OZ\ 1 Army and Navy [ /\ii rOF jUC Story Book J I 152 Xmas Seals i 2 Bottles Extract . . [ All For 60c 1 Hand Brush J 1 lb. Coffee Bev- "1 / erage a** 1 AH For 60c 1 Hand Brush ' Cut the high cost of living and buy here, where Coffee ' is right or your Money Back. Grand Union Tea Store Both Phones 208 North Second Street |J FRIDAY, EVENING, Son Is Badly Injured With Parents in West New Freedom, Pa., Nov. 28. — While Mr. and Mrs. John Swan are touring tho West, visiting relatives, u serious accident befell their son, Ken neth Swan, at the plant of tho Crown Cork and Seal Company, Bal timore. As u result of the accident he is in the Johns Hopkins Hos pital. His right arm was torn off below the elbow and the upper arm torn into shreds. Surgeons found It necessary to amputate tho arm at tho shoulder. After finishing his work at tho plunt, the young man was asked by the foreman to work extra. While working about the ilywheei, after tho plant had shut down, the night watchman entered the building and turned on the switch which controls the operation of tho wheel, thus catciilng the arm of tho young man. Besides tho injury to the right arm. ills left arm was hurt and his body badly bruised. Tho Injured man is 19 veurs old nnd was married on Thanksgiving Day of last year. FUNERAL OF CHII.D Lykons, Pa., Nov. 28. —Funeral services wero held this afternoon over the remains of -Jlttlo Dorothy lint email, 2-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bateman. The Rev. io. S. Jones, pastor of Zlon Lutheran Church, officiated. The little girl idled on Tuesday evening of pneu monia. ache in ten minutes —many times in live. If you want to get rid of sore throat, neuralgia, neuritis, tonsllitis. pleurisy or rheumatic agony dnd swollen joints—rub on Begy's Mus tarine right away—it's the quickest painkiller in the world—and the cheapest. Get Begy's Mustarine in the yellow box at any drugstore. One box is equal to 50 messy, blistering mustard plasters, and money back if it isn't the quickest painkiller you ever used. 30 and 60 cents. Always in the yellow box A . STOPS PA\^ MUSTARINB TEXT OF NOTE TO MEXICO IS PUBLIC Spanish Version of the Com- munication Shows Ex pression of Surprise El Paso, Texas, Nov. 28. —Surprise and exusporation wero expressed by tho Government of tho United Stutos in its note to the Mexican govern ment demanding tho releuao from prison of Wllllnm O. Jenkins, Ameri can consul agent at Puebla, Mex ico. Following is a rotrnnslatlon of tho Spanish version of the note sent to Mexico by tho Htate Department of the United States: "American Embassy, Mexico City, November 20, 1919. "To Hlliaro Medina, subtreasury of foreign affairs, Mexico City: "Sir: Referring to previous com munications in tho case of the con sular agent of tho United States at Puebla, Willlum O. Jenkins. I "have tho honor of informing you that I have received telegraphic instruc tions to notify the secretary of for eign affairs of Mexico, that In con nection with tho losses and injuries already suffered by Hr. Jenkins as the result of his being kidnaped—oc casioned by the Inability of the Me*- lcuii government to give due protec tion and his first arrest by Mexican authorities ,the Government of the United States of America is sur prised and exasperated to learn that Mr. Jenkins again has been arrested. "His new arrest seems to my Gov ernment, according to the evidence before it, entirely unjustified and an arblrtary exercise of public author ity. "The Government orders me to add that the persistent persecution and subsequent harassing of Mr. Jenkins cannot but have a very seri ous effect on the relations between the two countries —for which the Mexican governfhent will be solely responsible. "Therefore, I am ordered to de mand the immediate liberation of Mr. Jenkins. (Signed) "GEORGE L. SUMMER LIN, Charge D'Affaires." The text of the American note was received from Mexico City by the Consulate General here, with in structions to give it publicity. Strikers Vote to Work Fifty Hours Per Week Waynesboro, Pa.. Nov. 28. —"When the Waynesboro strikers returned to work, one of the terms of the agreement was that the men jshould decide how many hours a week they want to work. The vote has been taken and announced for all shops except the Frick Co. and it shows an overwhelming majority for a 50-hour week, two hours more than the international union has been demanding. The vote results were: Victor Tool Co., 38 for 50, 18 for 48. Landis Machine Co., 244 fof 50, 43 for 48. Emerson-Branhyham Co., 332 for 50, 27 for 48, with a number voting for 55 and -60 hours. Landis Tool Co., 337 for 50, 15 for 48. Landis Tool Co., Greencastle, 15 9 for 60. 18 for 48. Two Robbers Sentenced to Four Years in Prison Hagerstown, fa., Nov. 28.—An drew Jackson and Robert Alex ander found guilty by a jury here for entering and robbing the store and post office at Lydia conducted by H. S. Poffenberger were sen tenced to serve four years each in the Maryland penitentiary by Judge Wagaman. The court in passing sentence upon them said their past criminal record and the fact that they tried lo escape from jail, having concealed the means of accomplishing this purpose on their person did not commend them to the leniency of the court. This is the pair that confessed to several robbery jobs in Franklin county. They were shipping their lhot to Chambersburg. Parent Suies Coal Co. For Loss of Boy's Limb Sunbury, Pa., Nov. 28. Placing the value of his son's leg at $30,000, Joseph Knopik, of Shamokin, has brought suit for $5,000 damages in the Northumberland county court, against the<Carbon Creek Coal Com pany, pf Shamokin, for the loss of his son's leg. The boy was hurt last summer on a narrow-gauge lino of the corporation and his left leg was amputated at the Shamokin Hospi tal. It is alleged th&t a narrow gauge car was left standing un guarded on a grade and that the child with some others while at play got it started. Negligence is alleged in that the company faUcd to stop the children from using a dangerous gravity railroad for a playground. Kirbpik also asks SIOO for medicines and a doctor's care. Dallastown Couple Are Wed at New Cumberland New Cumberland. Pa., Nov. 2 B. A pretty wedding took place at Trinity United Brethren church on Tuesday, Nov. 25. The contracting parties were: Chauncey A. Heckert, and Miss Emily Jane Heisler, both of Pallastown, Pa., who were united in marriage by the Rev. A. R. Ayres. The ring ceremony was used. Miss lihoda Desenberger played the wed ding march. After the ceremony Mt and Mrs. Heckert left on a wed ding trip to Washington, D. C. Huntingdon Couple Call Parson From Sick Room Chambersburg, Pa., Nov. 28. The Rev. Dr. G. A. McAlister, pas tor of Central Presbyterian Church, was called from his sick bed to marry Emory R. Clouser and Abi gail L. Clayton, who had driven here in an automobile from their home in Huntingdon to have the wedding ceremony performed. The groom is 19 years old and the bride 16. Both had the consent of their parents. Adams Commissioners Decide on Bond Issue Gettysburg. .Pa., .Nov. .28.—The Adams county commissioners have determined to issue bonds to the amount of $55,000 as their share of the purchase price of three turn pikes in the county, the East Berlin- Hanover pike, the McSherrystown- Hanover pike and the Llttlestown- Hanover pike. The purchase of these three roadways will practically free the Adams county roads of toll. Tr A "RRTSnURG TELEGRAPH MINERS CHARGE BAD TREATMENT Declare the Men Must Work Under Most Inhuman Conditions Charleston, W. Vs., Nov. 28. Resolutions adopted at a meeting of the district executive board of dis trict No. 17, United Mine Workers, made public byFrod S. Mooney, sec retary-treasurer of the local union, havo been mailed to President- Wil son, tho members of tho cabinet, and to Congressmen. "We havo the assurnnces of a number of tho members of Congress that they will 'go to the mat with us' In securing a Federal Investigation of conditions In the Guyan valley field," Mr, Mooney said, "and wo are con fident from the Information wo havo that there will be ample sufficiency of congressional support to bring the desired action." The resolutions assert that the Guyan operators compel tho miners "to work under the most Inhuman and unjust conditions; that those miners are denied the right to have their coal weighed; that they are paid wages greatly below those paid In the union ftelds" and that "the operators of tho Guyan valley are now, and have for some years past, maintained a private army of thugs and gunmen for the purpose of pre venting any attempts of the men to organize into a union." The commission is styled a "noto riously prejudiced one;" and the statement is made that a "number of beaten and assaulted witnesses have appeared before the said com mission and exhibited wounds re ceived at the hands of the armed guards of the operators and upon returning to their homes by the ad vice of Governor Cornwell have again been brutally assaulted and driven out of tlrti fields." The charge is made that "Gov ernor Cornwell is now and has been doing all in his power to prevent an independent inquiry into the condi tins within his jurisdiction." The resolutions ask Congress "to immediately take some steps to pro tect the citizens of this part of West Virginia, and that a commission with fuil power to compel the ap pearance of witnesses be immediate ly appointed, and sent to southern West Virginia and particularly to the Guyan field,' Guy McConnell, Author, Takes Bride in New York Wrightsville, Pa., Nov. 28. —Guy McConnel, son of Mrs. Gertrude Mc- Connell, Wrightsville, were married at the Commonwealth Hotel, New Yorle, to Miss Olga Amonia Suppack, of Chicago, at (1 o'cloc . Wednesday evening. Mr. McConnell spent liis boyhood days in Wrightsville and Is a graduate of the Wrightsville High School. He has become well known as an author, having written several hooks, and is now engaged as a pheoplay writer. rStJouSayeSW toH92\ t YOU save $1 to $4 per pair on NEWARK shoes because WE SAVE THAT MUCH PER PAIR by produc ing and selling more than four million pairs of them to the public direct through our own 298 stores. That's why we say to you: DON'T PAY MORE THAN IS NECESSARY FOR SHOES OF QUALITY. You can wear the beat without paying exhorbitant prices. Simply buy at NEWARK Shoe Stores where quantity Sfiee Stores Go. urgui cum ston sftee CMP; aT* wee—no stww wir aim. HARRISBURG STORE 315 T.IARKET ST., Near Dewberry JL __ % m ========-■— CROWDER MAKES •ANNUAL REPORT Judge Advocate General of Army Defines Rights of Every Man Washington, Nov. 28.—The rights of every man in the army, from pri vate to general, are well defined and established by laws enacted by Con gress, or by common law, Major Gen orul Enoch Crowder, Judge advocate general of the army, declares in his annual report. General Crowder made no specific reference to the at tack upon his administration of that ofllco by former Brigadier General Samuel T. Ansell, once his assistant, but,, in an appendix, gave detailed statistics covering military courta murtlal, tending to disprove the ac cusation of severity. During tho last fiscal year 16,547 persons were tried before general courts-murtlal and 85 per cent were convicted. Of the charges against officers, more than one-third com prised drunkenness, absent without leave or conduct unbecoming an of ficer; in tho case of enlisted men one-half the total charges recorded were for desertion, absent without leave, disobedience and sleeping on post. The report made public for the first time an official summary of the "capital" cases occurring in the army since April 6, 1917, the beginning of the war period. Death penalties were adjudged in 145 cases from that date to June 30, 1919, and execution was con summated in 35 cases—lo In France and 25 In the United States. Murder was charged In two of these cases, murder and mutiny in 19; assault in 11 and assault and murder In three. . "In no case," according to the re port, "was a capital sentence for a purely military offense carried into execution." GIVE PIANO RECITAL Median ie.sburg, Pa., Nov. 28. A piano recital of unusual excellence was given in Columbian Hall, Irv ing College, by Newell D. Albright, director of music, and Miss Mary Blue, of the faculty. The program included well-chosen numbers. 112 |Sj|v used last to KILL * BILL'S cascaraQjquinine Ik. SOMIDt "PJI Standard cold remedy for 29 years —in tablet form—wife, eure, so opietee—break* up a cold la 24 hours—relierea grip in 3 day*. Mob back if it faila. The genuine box has a Red lUUnion with Mr. Bill'* VjJ jljijUr picture. At AU href Stmt INVITATIONS ARE OUT Greencastlc, Pa., Nov. 28.—Invi tations have been Issued for the marriage of Miss Mary Gillan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. 8. Gillan of this place, to Roy Haw baker, bookkeeper in the First Na tional Bank. The wedding will take place on Thursday afternoon. De cember 4, at four o'clock at the home of the bride-to-be. "Harrisburg's Dependable Store" DECEMBER BRINGS —Stormy Weather and Xmas and it behooves you to get ready for both wintry weather and Christmas—Many thousands of shoppers, wise with, knowledge gained through years, will throng Wm. Strouse & Co. during the next twenty three days. They know that something a little better can be had for a little less money—and they want their friends to benefit— Tomorrow Begins the Rush Suits — G coats —Bathrobes will go out in great numbers and a host of furnishing suggestions at this time can be made to the thrifty and early "Christmas shopper." We know that you cannot help being pleased at the beautiful selection we have, ready to show you—and we feel that our prices are very low. Metric Shirts--Xmas Neckwear—Silk Hosiery Vanity Hats — Bradley Sweaters—- Cuff Links Silk Mufflers -- - Dents' Gloves -- - Silk Collars LewisUnderwear-DuofoldUnderwear-SilkShirts Initialed Kerchiefs-Buckskin Gloves-Leather Belts Win. I&nmae & Cit 310 Market Street Harrisburg, Pa. NOVEMBER 28, 1919. WEI) ON THANKSGIVING EVE New Cumberland, JPa., Nov. 28. Chas. W. P. Trltt, of this place, and Miss Frances Mason, of Hamplon township, Cumberland county, were married by the Rev. A. R. Ayres, pastor of Trinity United Brethren church, on Wednesday evening, Nov. 26. Use McNeil's Cold Tablets. Adv. 15 * ■djrafiviMrarey :* N? Toiiiolit- ! Get a Feci Rioht iZ^Box
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers