Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, December 30, 1919, Page 3, Image 3

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    Club Members Trade
Places With Employes
at Their Dinner Party
Chicago, Dec. 30.—Employes of
the Chicago Automobile Club traded
places with the members last night,
and were the guests of honor at a
party and dinner given ii recogni
tion of their faithful service during
the year.
Waiters, porters, bus boys, bell
boys and other employes found on
their arrival at the club that a
prominent contractor was the door
man. while they rode up in an ele
vator operated by the advertising
manager of a large steel corpora
tion, and their hats and coats were
checked at a booth by the vice
president of the club.
The employes also played some
pranks, such as giving five-cent tips
to their employers and making the
"bell boys" carry suitcases filled
with bricks to the top floor.
Free Motion Pictures
For Poor Children
The poor children of Harrisburg
are going to get another free movie
show, on New Tear's morning at 10
o'clock. Peter Magaro, owner of the
Regent, will then throw open the
doors to the youngsters and present
some comedy films.
Tickets are to be distributed by
the Boy Scouts and the Salvation-
Army. Special arrangements will be
made for the youngsters of the Chil
dren's Industrial Home, the Sylvan
Heights Orphanage and the Nursery
Home, in order that they may be
brought to the theater. The show
will he preceded by a parade of the
• hltdren.
ASK FOR and GET
Horlick's
The Original
Matted Milk
For Infants and Invalids
Avoid Imitations %ad Substitute*
.X
KEYSTONE BANK
THIRD AND CALDER STS.
HARRISBURG. PA.
J. P. MrCI'LLOIGH H. S. SMELTZEK
President Cashier
H. 1.. BRIGHTBII.I.
Assintant Cashier
A Fat Purse For
Next Christmas
By depositing' a small amount weekly in
the Keystone Savings Club, you provide
yourself with a fat purse for next year's
Christmas shopping.
25c weekly gives you $13.00 plus Interest;
50c weekly grows to $26.00 plus Interest;
SI.OO weekly allows you $52.00 plus Interest
—in time to do vour Christmas Shopping
Early.
' a6i^^666iis6SsSi*Sss6S
A. BRAND
1 (ED new
Not Exactly \
But our efficient Dyeing, Cleaning and r
Pressing Processes put your clothes in a j
condition that is the very next thing to |
brand new.
When You Want the Very
Highest Grade Work
Just Phone —Our Auto Will Call j
IEGGERT'S
1243 Market Street
& I
2 CIJEAXIXG, DYKING, PRESSING
•' RKLL 4806 DIAL 3*17 B
■"i " ■
IJjplk Absolutely No Pain J
My lilnl Improved appll
n arinfltft *TT nllrfa ' InelaUlnc on ox 7 %.r n - •
lord nlr upparntua, maka
EKw extracting nnd oil dtilal (V* V
nf/SfWdBtJM work poaltlrrly palnlraa O
~n,, '■ perfectly harm- \ _
Iraa (Amr no objection)
EXAMINATION S * FSS&E&
FREE /'.V / .Br*.-.r"sc
______ T Gold rrowna nod
fcrldgo work. UK
Rerf.tcred jT Oklcc.PC.d.llyJUM
Aa a lot n o't o X\V S *cd-r.d.y M - , n.d" d S :f:
xk nrdny. till % r. H.
BEX.L PHOIfB ir-R
A f "pATBEXTS <>F
Market St.
HARRISBURG, PA. didnt fcart a Ml
TUESDAY EVENING,
Thirty Cases Listed
For Common Pleas
Thirty cases have been listed for
trial at the office of Prothonotary
Charles E. Pass for the sessions of
j Common Pleas Court to be held dur
ing the week of January 19. The list
follows:
Sarah J. HamaUer vs. Walter S.
Scholl, feigned issue; Sadie Mumina
vs. Philadelphia and Reading Railway
Company. trespass; Lillian M. Swails
vs. Valley Railways, trespass: Thom
as E. Cleckner vs. the Valley Rail
ways Company; trespass; Arthur J.
Quigley vs. Norman C. Heckert. tres
pass. Pierce Rettew vs. Morris Hursh,
appeal by defendant; Lawrence 1-e
--trow vs. Morris Schondorf. assumslt;
Ruth Willoughby vs. Central Trust
Company, trespass: Morris Schondorf
vs. Eleanor Hen* Boyd, et al, assump
sit: Fuller and Warren Company vs.
George B. Weast.
Byron F. Sheesley vs. Joseph 1 1-
rieh, trespass; Pennsylvania Railroad
Company vs. Abe Gross, trespass;
Mercantile Trust Company, vs. W. H.
Murphy and Sons, replevin; Brent
wood Realty Company vs. C. M. For
ney, assumpsit: H. F. Greenawalt vs.
Denby Sales Corporation, appeal by
defendant; Robert Solomon vs. W. H.
Murphy and Sons, trespass; David J.
Kline vs. Harrisburg Railways Com
panv, trespass; David Levin vs. Hat -
risburg Railways Company, trespass;
Sarah R. Sheets vs. S. H. Zlmmer
merman. assumpsit; Mltody Jordan
oft vs. Atze Chrlst.i Abrashoff. tres
pass.
Louis C. Goldman vs. Max Williams,
assumpsit; Haywood Brothers and
Wakefield Company vs. Charles P.
Hoover, assumpsit: J. H. Butterworth
vs. Harrisburg Railways Company,
trespass; George W. Watson vs. Alice
C. Watson, divorce; Edwin F. \V eaver
vs. Nelson and Levin. Inc.. foreign at
tachment; John Baker vs. Harrisburg
Railwavs Company, trespass: \> esley
M Stanford vs. Harrisburg Railways
Company, trespass; Zoll C. Stanford
vs. Harrisburg Railways Corapanj.
Company, trespass: Carrie Dinger \s.
M. B. Stewart, trespass; O. F. Schmidt
Chemical Company v. Samuel Z.
Shope, assumpsit.
REPUBLICAN CLUB
ELECTS OFFICERS
Plans For Coming Year to Put
Organization Well to
the Front
WILLIAM H. HOFFMAN
Members of the Harrisburg Re
publican Club, meeting at their
headquarters. 26 North Second
street, last night elected William H.
Hoffman, chief deputy sheriff of
Dauphin county, as president for
the coming year.
Other officers who were elected
were Otto M. Baker, vice-president;
Leßue Metzger, secretary; DeWitt
A. Fry, treasurer; William £>.
Block, Herman Geiger and George
B. Nebinger, trustees; Hiram Eisen
herger, Charles McKay, C. A. Tress,
Edward A. Falter and A. J. Bohl,
membership committee.
President-elect Hoffman has been
deputy sheriff in Dauphin county
since 1900 when he t6ok office un
der ex-Sheriff J. S. Reiff, of Lykens.
He has been reappointed each term
and recently Sheriff-elect George W.
Karmany announced that he had
retained Mr. Hoffman again.
The meeting last night was well
attended and was an enthusiastic
one. Plans for the coming year
were discussed and a number of ac
tivities are being considered.
To-night the West End Repub
lican Club will meet to elect offi
cers. Alderman C. J. Householder,
of the Tenth ward, has been nom
inated for the presidency.
Attorneys Gather at
Easton For Big Meet
East on, Pa., Dec. 30.—One of the
largest gatherings of attorneys ever
held in Easton was that which met
in the Pomfret Club yesterday when
the regular midwinter meeting of
executive and' other committees of
the Pennsylvania Bar Association
was held, with Judge Edward J.
Fox, of this city, recently elected |
president of the association, presid- i
ing.
Prominent attorneys from many
cities In the State were in attend
ance, and a pleasant time was spent
at the luncheon.
Attorney General Schaeffer deliv
ered an impressive address after
Judge Fox had made the address
of welcome. The Attorney General
of Pennsylvania called attention to
the part played by members of the
legal profession in public affairs In
the past and the great part they
must play in solving the perplexing
problems of the future.
DIES FROM FA IX
Falling from the cab of an en
gine to the ground, H. M. Blair. 56
years old, of West Fairview, suffered
injuries from which he died this
morning.
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j Ask Any Druggist How Repeated
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j of Pyramid Pile Treatment of any
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I protruding piles, hemorrhoids and
' such rectal troubles. A single box
I has often been sufficient in one
night. Send coupon for free trial.
Take no substitute.
FREE SAMPLE COUPON
PYRAMID DBDG COMPANY.
583 Pyramid Bldg., Marshall, Mich.
Klndlyaerd me a Free sample of
Pyramid Pile Treatment, in plain wrapper.
Name
Street
City State
rad^^
FOR ALL CONGESTION an* INFLAMMATION
h Shseiw. Oaaan and Move Coanslest
than the Old F' hioaed Mnatard Plosion—
and Does Not But or.
IN jOTTItI - OB JELL TO Mi - IN A TOR
II ai l. DRUGGISTS. 34 Coma sad 70 Coats
HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH
Gen. Barry, With Record J
of Service in Islands and i
World War, Is Dead
By Associated Press
Washington, Dec. 30.—Major Gen
eral Thomas H. Barry, retired, for
mer commander of the Central De
partment and the Department of the
East, died at the Walter Reed Hos
pital here at p.4a A. M. to-day, after
an illness of three weeks. Uraemic
poisoning was the direct cause of
death.
Arrangements for the funeral
have not been completed, but it was
announced that the body would be
sent to New York for burial.
Ger.-aral Barry was 64 years of
age, and was retired from the Army
last October 13, at which time he
was commander of the Central De
partment, with headquarters at Chi
cago. Before that he organized and
trained the Eighty-sixth National
Army Division at* Camp Grant,
Rockford, 111.
After his retirement, the General
came to Washington with Mrs. Barry
and was on retired duty here until
taken ill. His wife and his son,
Johr? Barry, were at his bedside
when he died.
General Barry was born in New
York and graduated from the Mili
tary Academy in 1877. He served as
adjutant general of the Eighth Army-
Corps and Department of the Pacific
in the Philippines from August, 1898,
to February, 1900, and on his return
to the islands was chief of staff. Di
vision of the Philippines .from No
vember, 1900, to July, 1901.
On Western Front
In 1907 General Barry was given
command of the Army of Cuban
Pacification and on his return to the
United States with his troops in 1909
he was appointed commander of the
Department of California. In 1910
he .was made superintendent of the
Military Academy and later was as
signed to command the Department
of the East. He also served as com
mander of the Department of the
Philippines and was commander of
the Central Department from 1915 to
1917, when he was sent to Camp
Grant.
With other divisional commanders.
General Barry was sent to the west
ern; front for a tour of inspection
after the United States entered the
war, and on his return made strenu
ous efforts to obtain an active divi
sional command at the front. He
was examined physically at the time
and Indications of the condition that
brought about his death were discov
ered by the surgeons, although the
General himself was not informed of
the fact.
Because of his physical condition,
however, he was not held to be avail
able for front duty and when his di
vision went overseas he was reas
signed to command the Central De
partment.
New Year to Be Ushered
in at the Penn-Harris
New Year's eve at the Penn-Harris
Hotel is going to be a regular old
time. pre-prohibition affair with the
exception that old John Barleycorn
and his gang of headache producers
will be nonattendants.
Manager Horace Wiggins, it Is
said, will personally appear in the
vaudeville performance which is to
be given in the evening in the lounge
where a special stage will be erect
ed.
Beginning with the dinner in the
evening .there is going to be just
one event after another; dancing
will begin early in the evening in
the ballroom and continue until
10.30 when the big show in the
lounge is scheduled to begin. Mana
ger Wiggins and Assistant Manager
Worthington have secured the best
vaudeville talent that New York af
fords, and a regular show will be
presented. Guests in the diningroom
will get the customary foolcaps and
rattles: then there will be souvenir
gifts for the women and cigars of
some sort or other for the men. At
12 sharp the lights will be turned out
and after a few minutes the crowd
will hike for the ballroom again to
take up their interrupted dancing.
Catholic Churches to
Usher in the New Year
"The Old and the New Year" will
be the subject of the sermon by the
Rev. Walter Conner, of Philadelphia,
when Solemn Vespers and Benedic
tion will be given in the St. Patrick's
Cathedral on New Year's eve at 8
o'clock The Rt. Rev. Bishop Philip
R. McDevitt will be present in the
sanctuary and the Rev. D. J. Carey
will be celebrant of the vesper ser
vice. Special music by the choir will
be given under the direction of Pro
fessor Brodeur.
On New Year's day the feast of
the Circumcision of Our Lord will
be observed in all of the Roman
Catholic churches in the city. Be
ginning with the first mass cele
brated by all the ghurches at 5.30
o'clock, there will be various masses
throughout the day.
At seven o'clock mass will be
celebrated at St. Patrick's Cathedral
and at nine o'clock in St. Francis'
Church. The last mass of the day
will be a high mass, when St. Mary's,
St. Lawrence and the Church of the
Sacred Heart will celebrate it at
eight o'clock.
After all of the high masses the
benediction of the Most Blessed
Sacrament will be given.
First Million-Dollar
Budget Passed Finally
Harrisburg's first million-dollar
budget ordinance was passed un
animously to-day at the regular City
Council meeting and the tax rate
for 1920 was fixed at 12 mills, two
mills higher than this year. The
greater part of the revenue pro
vided by the advance in the tax will
be used for improvement work and
to pay for increasing cost of labor
and materials.
The budget measure provides for
appropriations totalling $1,062,-
516.06. Immediately after its pass
age Mayor D. L. Keister signed it,
together with the tax-rate measure.
According to State laws both meas
ures become effective at once.
Ordinarily ordinances by councils in
third-class cities do not become ef
fective until ten days after passage.
Shoplifting Increases,
Merchants Report
Harrisburg merchants are com
plaining of an increase of thefts
from the store rooms.
According to several, more articles
have been stolen from the counters
and racks during the past six montns
than in any similar period in the his
tories of the organisations. This
fact, it Is reported, has been respon
sible for the addition of extra assist
ance in many instances to cope with
i the trouble.
fiowmaMZ
BELL IMI—23M I'KITED HARItISBL'RG, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1019. FOUNDED l7t
.
i dwT Tou N I
ffiTrnen's fust-f*n>of oorsef*
The Modern Woman 1
II is much more useful and probably ornamental than women
> used to be.
\ She is busy,, energetie, full of enthusiasm; but she is (just js
in confidence!) a bit hard on her clothes, and especially on jg"
) her corset. ■ j® j
Warner's Rust-Proof Corsets 1
) hold their shape through the hardest of hard wear; they allow you sit
I to move about, exert yourself, work, play—rest even —and al
ways assure you of comfort and a well-groomed appearance. And §
they are g
Guaranteed Not to Rust, Break or Teart
A splendid medium priced corset at
r '• ••■-.SB
$2,00 to $7.00 |
BOWMAN'S—Second Floor. SB-
Evening Slippers Serge and Velour
A season D^SSCS
of the year demand
lLjjOk the most approved
in footwear to give Q H £
the fi ni sh.m
Black Kid or Calfskin ; to $ 5 14.00.
Silver Cloth; $9.50 to $14.00. In 'I f-
All with hand-turned soles and Louis XV rj 1
Spats in all shades, either "Tweedie" or r 1 / J 1 1
Standard; $3.50 to $5.00. %r\ j* l
Buckles in Rhinestone, Beaded or Cut Steel; . j
$3.00 to $14.00. , f
BOWM.AN'S—MAIN FIOON I'oresighted women will avail themselves of [■ \
—■ USUntMpr t'e IV*in thc opportunity to save in this sale of dresses ;
rr nuttutr t j I\CW tri which are both seasonable and thoroughly desir- ■
I y • 1 WT T T T f able. Future needs as well as present should be ; 1
IlSir LjOOuS—— W C ±T3VC 1L considered while the assortment is large, for it i \
~ ! 7 ~ is highly improbable that such values will not .
Our ample assortment provides styles to repeat themselves very soon,
suit your fancy at prices that ht your purse. 1o- v
morrow you may choose either a Serge and Velour Dresses for street and v
XT * it •, i_ semi-dress. Becomingly trimmed in embroid- J |
Naturally Wavy owitch or er braid and buttons. Included arc straight ?
T f ** rt ■ OC line an <l tunic effects. A good variety of sizes
1 ransrormanon at .pD.yj an( j co j ors including navy and black. Specially * j
Exceptionally fine quality hair in all price, $19.75.
shades except gray. BOWMAN s—Third fioor
BOWMAN'S—Third Floor, |
' 1 x • ;1
DECEMBER 30, 1919.
3