The star-independent. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1904-1917, November 17, 1914, Page 4, Image 4
4 [SAFETY FIRST T Wn I!S t#rium l SAFETY FIRST PENNSYLVANIA INDUSTRIAL, WELFARE AND EFFICIENCY EXHIBIT EXHIBITS OF ESPECIAL INTEREST - l' , , > • | The Pennsylvania Steel Go. |i i; Steel Products in Small & Large Quantities ij Manufactured Under Safe ;! 3 J and Sanitary Conditions <; <; !>ee exhibit and consult representatives in booth. ;[ Booth 33 Chestnut Street Hall HARRISBURC PIPE & PIPE BENDING CO. iBOOTH v 23 BENT PIPE PRODUCTS FOR ALL PURPOSES . Seamless Cylinders for carbon dioxide, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, chlorine and other gass«a. Shrapnel Shells | . Made for the I*. fS. Government. ft . J I 1111 I" I| Common Sense Screw Plates BOOTH 35 W. L BRUBAKER 0 BROS. j Manufacturers of ; TAPS, DIES AND REAMERS Main Office and Works i Millersburg, Dauphin Co., Pa., U. S. A. ! Sales Office 50 Church Street, New York Branch Offices 2HICAGO PITTSBURGH BUFFALO DETROIT NEW ORLEANS ATLANTA SAN FRANCISCO BOOTH—S7 HENRY GILBERT £ SON \ Harrisburg, Pa. 219 MARKET STREET Builders' Hardware—Mill Supplies, Tools, Cutlery—Pipe and Pipe Fittings, « Packing—Paints and Oils. — 1 -WW -~ - I PEN'JiSY EMPLOYES LITKY One Man Drags 175 Pound Busk Three Miles to Station Two employes of the Pennsylvania Ha-.road Company, Frank Stewart and "Mike" Kunkel, have returned from : Biai k Log where eieh shot a buck ; iteer and bagged fifteen pheasants and n lumber of rabbits. They are both :iiembcrs of the shintown Hunting i.jb and they say that two other mem -i hers of the club. Albert Tripp and ( (-■o.fe Drake, of Shintown. each got; a buck. A. Maxwell, of Sunburv, who went rabbit hunting on Saturday was un usually lucky as he killed a "four prong" buok weighting about 175' pounds. He was three miles from the station at Milball and had only an hour and a half to catch his train. He tugged his trophy single-handed to the station and got there minus a great portion of hide of the buck, eight minutes be fore toe train came. Lebanon Man Dies Suddenly Lebanon, Nov. IT. —Christian N. £eidle, of 427 Cumberland street, for! thirty years the proprietor of the Standard boiler works, of this city, <fied suddenly on Sunday night at his borne, at the age of 70 years. When: he retired he was in good health, but before midnight he was stricken. He; Ijad been subject to similar attacks»for j several years. Oyster Bupper Thursday Night ' An oyster supper will be given by tjie Men's Bible class of Penbrook, for! Wie benefit of the families and friends | «i' the class. The supper will be given ! fiext Thursday night at S o'clock in J tin: town ball. J TELEPHONE SOCIETY MEETS W. A. Eipper. of Philadelphia, Main Speaker of the Evening The regular monthly meeting of thei ! Telephone Society which was held last 'night in the Board of Trade building i was addressed by W. A. Eipper, of Philadelphia, superintendent of main tenance of tiif Bell Telephone Company. Mr. Eipper spoke on "Efficient Main 1 , tenance." * ! Following the main address of the! evening a discussion followed in which! several officials took part. Among! these speakers were H. 1\ Hope, plant i • superintendent of the local plant: P. l. I Harking, Scranton; S. X. Palm, superin tendent of methods, Harrisburg, and A. j I Markle, geading. WILL RESUBMIT CASE Pottsrille Dentist Accused by Young Woman of Attacking Her Pottwville, Pa.. Nov. 17.—Court ves terday ordered the charges brought by , M*iss Rosie Zaeko. a young and pretty ; stenographer, against Dr. Os<ar 3. Crawford, to be resubmitted to the Jan : J uary Grand Jury. Miss Zacko charges' that Dr. Crawford, who was treating 1 her teeth, made an attack three months 1 ago while she was under the influence ; of an anaesthetic, i The Grand Jury last week ignored j the four charges against the dentist. ; and ordered the county to pay the costS. i Passenger's Loss Offset by Gain Altoona. I'a.. Nov? 17. —When train No. 4, over the Pennsylvania. arriveJ I here yesterday Mrs. 1 harles Mover. ! • aged 28, was removed to the Altoona j hospital, where she was visited by the i stork. She reported that she had lost | her pocket'look, containing $4 and her | ticket. She was en route from Pitts burgh t» HiW-risburg. HAKKiiSttL flu S TAR-IN PEP KXDEXT, , • ► ' ! | BOOTH NO. 30 ! SUPERIOR OXYGEN CO. Pittsburgh, Pa. ; Manufacturers Oxygen Oxy-acety :j lene cutting, welding apparatus and J | supplies. \ . I »U | IROBT. ROSS JONES! * Engineer and Distributor | ! % BOOTH 33 | | If Jones' High Grade Automatic Systems! i * ? 1 *:• Automatic. Boiler Feed System for feeding boiler with £ * pure distilled water at 200 to 380 Fahrenheit. I * T. i* : <• Automatic Condensing aud \ aeunm Puller for Drawing Hydrants or ! "S" Low Pressure Steam Heating Systems. * £ Automatic Vacuum Paus and Lines. Automatic Lift Traps. * I Automatic Air Bali Bearing Ventilators | | | D =ini-i—i-im—! IF ir===ini—i —im, mcg=in I Burroughs Adding I | Machine Co. ( | Booth No. 34 B | Exhibit of | Adding, Calculating, Ledger Posting and Pay Roll II Machines j rr-=g=in' urn ifii—BßßgaE—'El' 'Hi ißi iBl inr==iniagl fWILLS. IN IHRKE-UP OF A ! TRAMP, BRINGS HUGHS I Widely Known Comedian Injects Lots of Fun in the New Orpheum Bill ! The Program Includes Some Other Clever Numbers | Nat Wills, who heads a good bill at ! the Orpheum Theatre this week, could j have used tho conventional evening (clothes he wore in the "Follies ' but. i he did not, preferring to stick to the I tramp role that has brought him fame j ;in vaudeville. He is the same old Nat with new jokes and a bit of war stuff . from bis pals who arc supposed to be at 'the front in the European l'racas. His I best turn is, of course, a parody—a new •one in which his automobile figures and- it provides an opportunity for Nat to do full justice to his fun-making abil -1 i ity. « An aphasia victim, a four-day "'jag'' aud a kleptomaniac are the basis of a plot of a one-act skit billed as "Mar ried." It is decidedly funny. Homer B. Mason, as the "jag,'' comes home to his hotel room to find it occupied by Miss Marguerite Keeler, the aphasia ! victim. He comes to the conclusion ! that he has inarrieij during his period ] of fotgetfulness due to overindulgence jin drink and has no trouble in con i vincing the girl, who has suffered a to- I tal loss of memory for teil days. They | fall in love and to make sure of every j thing they have a marriage ceremony ' performed by the kleptomaniac who turns out to be a clergyman. The Berreus are accomplished ma i sician?. Marie Fitzgibbons is a funny girl wit.b a monologue without a song. Cole. Russell and Davis, two men and a girl, present a funny skit. " Waiters Wanted." Two acrobatic acts complete ; the bill. , "SPY" KNOWN IN BALTIMORE | "Baron Horst von der Goltz'' Stayed at Hotel in That City * . Baltimore, Md., Nov. I^.—The my • sterious person arrested in Londou on ; Saturday, suspected of being a German I : spy, spokeu of in cable dispatches as] j Horst von der Goltz and Bridgman Tay i lor and described as a Major in the Mexican army, was a guest at a local ' hotel on August 28. He registered a» : Ma jor Baron Horst von der Goltz. He then talked freely about himself' 1 and said he was Chief of Staff of Gen-; era! Raoul Madero, of Mexico, and a i i-ousin of General Goltz, the German Governor of Belgium. He was bitter in his denunciation of England and placed the blame for the war on England's desire to crush Germany so it could control the trade of the world. PALMER SAYSJE'LL SfICK t Denies He and Morris Plan to Beiin ! quish Their Control of the Dem ocratic Organisation in State 1 The Philadelphia ''Record'" of to- | j day thus disposes of a story current ;in Democratic political circles to the; effect tlvat Congressman Palmer and j Democratic State Chairman Morris arej to retire as leaders ot' Pennsylvania! Democracy: "Definite announcement was madej by reorganization leaders, yesterday, j that Congressman Palmer proposes to! | continue as the Democratic State iead | er and Poland 8. Morris as chairman ! ; ot' the Statj Committee for the next. , I two years at least. Prominent Demo crats have been hopeful that Palmer j and Morris would retire as the initial • step toward promoting harmony in the j ranks, but the reorganizes now declare | that these leaders intended to hold on ! , i firm to their present control of the' party machinery. •! "Close friends of Mr. Palmer de-; ! clared that he was in no sense a seek | er after a job from President Wilson, | 1 and was particularly disinclined to re-' tire from politics by entering the Dis-j strict of Columbia judiciary. On behalf; of Mr. Morris, it was declared, that he j ■ ■ was equally unwilling to resign as i State chairman, and thus desert his a!-' lies in the reorganization movement. I The reorganizers plan to retain their • grasp on the party machinery uutii! 191t! at least, with the intention of | controlling the Pennsylvania delegation j jto the next national convention. At ! the present time the reorganizers are] well in control of the State Committee.; and no serious effort to dislodge eit her I Palmer or Morris is regarded as fea j ; sible.'' KABBI CHARCED WITH THEFT Isaac Lubleigh Denies Knowledge of Lace Coats Worth $370 Nevx York, Nov. 17.—0n a charge of , ha> mg stolen twenty-one lace coats, I > allied at about $370, from Harrv Deutsch. 4238 Atlantic avenue. Wood ! haven, Isaac Lubleigh, aged 53, a ral>bi j of Wdridge and Stanton streets, Man : hattan, was held yesterday in $1,00(4 '! bail for a hearing to-morrow in the ■ Magistrate 'a court at Jamaica. Lubleigh, who was arrested Suudar iat the synagogue, *4.352 Atlantic ave nue, denies all knowledge of the theft. Accuse Brothers of Murder F'ottsville, Pa., Nov. 17.—Two Shen • andoah brothers, John and Anthony 1 Cheruntski, were placed on trial yes ' terday for murder. It is charged that on October 12 they staibbcd Ale* Zu kolski. -Counsel for the defendants ob i jected to both being triad together, and Anthony was placed on trial. TUESDAY KVENCKCi. XOYK.MKKK 17. 1914. '"r— \ MACHINE WAY HAND WAY The Machine Way always supplants the Hand «av when -need aud ; accliracy are required. See STENOTYPE DEMONSTRATION at Booth S4A CHESTNUT STREET AUDITORIUM : • i v . t Safety Always The uninsured man is mad — ; Wm. S. ESSICK General Agent and Adjuster LITERATURE—BOOTH No. *JI Pennsylvania Industrial Welfare & Efficiency Exhibit I * i <. •>•>•{••> •> •:< •> •> <• * ❖ •:« »> <• •:> >;• •> :• ■: ' f I I* We guarantee the Haynes Light Six to be the : f »> \X cheapest high-grade Six Cylinder Car in America. * '* ' Fully equipped, $1485.00 % j... The lightest well-made car, 2950 pounds. | j♦> To give the most mileage on gasoline—2o miles per gallon. * I* To go up any hill faster on high, second or low gear. £ s To go up any hill slower on high gear than any other ear of tlie same "j 1 i•> gear ratio and is equipped with *f j Rayfield Carburetor, '£ Leece-Neville Starting anil Lighting system. j * Remy distributor, * i ; * Vacuum Gasoline system, J, | Arch frame construction, ❖: I * One-man top —Every up-to-date I'eutWe. SOME CAR. * i HARRISBURG AUTOMOBILE GO. I | Booth No. 47 on the Stage % , •*' 'J v-X-<"4 i *s* •S'❖❖ o "S* 'i* j VVTTTTTTTTTTTYVTVTVTTTT'f TT FOOTBALL SQUAD ARRESTED Clemson College Team Set Free After Blame Is Put on Coach Columbia, S. C., Nov. 17.—-The en ! tire football squad of Clemson College, j consisting of eighteen members, was ar : rested Sunday night by direction of | the college authorities upon the return j of the team from Richmond. Va., where jit defeated the Virginia Military In | stitute on Saturday. The offense charged against the play ers was absence from the college with out permission. Upon investigation it 'was found that / the coach of the team | was to blame rather than the players, I so the latter were set free yesterday, j What punishment may be meted out to j the coach is not disclosed. JOSE GOMEZ WILL-BUN AGAIN ;Cuban ex-President Willing to "Ac cept Sacrifice" Havana, Nov. 17.—Ex-President I Jose Miguel Gomez, who returned here | on January 1 of the present year after i trip to France and Spain, has >ll i formed his friends that he is willing to | sacrifice himself for the country 's good; ; in other words, that htf is willing to be 1 a candidate for the Presidency again. The former President is said to be worth several million dollars. He was j not very wealthy when he became Presi i dent and his salary as Chief Executive | was $25,000 a year for four years. Crops Prove Failure for Farmers ! Marietta, Nov. 17. —Dr. George R. | Rei.h and Krank Shields returned Sun | day night from Al'berta, Canada, where j they were engaged in farming for the i pa*t six months. Their crops were a ! failure on a.vouut of t'he dry weather. | Last, year they lost heavily in the same place by a forest fire. Typhoid Kills Man and Wife j York, Pa., Nov. 17.—Mr. and Mrs. j Jonas Spangler cited from typhoid fever ; within a period of about two hours at I their home in Dover yesterday. A ■ young son is in a critical condition from the disease, which is prevalent in several sections of tiu county, due, it is believed, to the low water. Young Woman Dies in Hospital Lebanou. Nov. 17.—Miss Edith Henry, aged 21 years, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William A. Henry, of Pal myra, died on Sunday at a loc-al hos pital following an operation. Until her last illness she was very active in the social life of Palmyra. Legislator Celebrates Birthday Lebanon, Nov. 17. —State Assem 'blyman Henry C. Suavely, of West mont, this county, one of the best known agriculturists in Lebanon coun ty, yesterday celebrated his seventieth birthday anniversary at his country home at Westmout. r V VTVTTTT » '»■ V TV 'f V v 'f V • V v V V V *•' V THRUST ARM UNDER SAW j :r | Lake Thus Saved Own Life When Ma chine Caught Sleeve i-1 Atlantic City, No\'. 17.—David j Lake saved his own life yesterday by ■-1 thrusting his right arm under ona of f the circular saws in bis mill at Pleas nj an till e. ej The saw had -.'aught his coat sleeve j i-1 with sucll a grip that it was dragging! i him under its teeth. He had but an r . instant in which to choose between' .! certain death and the sacrifice of the t j sleew arm. The twist he bad to make j , i>ut the arm in the path ot' the saw < j but cleared his body. r. I Help came after the sacrifice had 0 j been made and he was speeded here ! in an automobile. Doctors in the City j hospital think he will recover. YELLOW FEVER IN MEXICO : " j Two on. Steamer Arriving at Havana Thought to Have Plague ' Havana, Nov. 17.—Two passengers Jon the steamer Esjperan/.a from Pro | greso, which arrived here yesterday, 0 slirtwed signs of yellow fever and were ; i isolated for observation. Mexican; ej papers, which arrived on the steamer, j report two cases of yellow fever at ■e | Merida, in the State of Yucatan, is j The steamship Monterey arrived; i r j yesterday six hours late. She was lial e \ tered by the storm. Youth Accidentally Killed Itiiaca, Nov. 17. —Roy Menzie. 19 1.1 years old, was accidentally shot lo 1 j death yesterday afternoon near Will e seyville. by Melville Jordan. Menzie e was driving w ith his brother, w hen a I they passed Jordan and invited him to '■ j ride with them. As Jordan clambered | e i into the back of the wagon his shot i gun was accidentally discharged, the I charge entering Menzie's back. j Progressive Party Wiped Out tj« Cheyenne, Wyo.. Nov. 17.—The V | Progressive party will receive no ofii n j cial recognition in Wyoming at the n ; next election. The State law requires | t ! that a party, to be entitled to an otti •cial column on the ballot, shall have cast at least ten per ceet. of the total i vote in the last preceding geueral elec h I tion. The Progressive candidates fell r. far short of polling ten per cent, of I- the vote east. November 15. i- —— il The "Antique" Craze u Those of us who can afford it steal j and borrow and beg the arms, the dre«s, the emotions of Greece and j j Rome. Too often we hang their rot-1 i-j ting trophies upon our walls, ignorant' -- j of their origin, unacquainted with their | 11 meaning and not even sympathetic j 'with the emotions that produced them. ' 1' ; bent only upon the paltry respectabil-! y 1 itv that their presence argues.—World 's i Work - | ~ , \ THE WIPING OUT OF 3.003 I GERMANS AT YPRES TOLO BY A WOUNDED SOLDIER Unidon, Nov. 17, 4.46 A. M. All , reports from tne scene of lighting in Northern l'"in uve indicate that the weather conditions for the past fe..v days have been terrible. Heavy rain, • falling continuously for thirty sis hotnV, iias turned all the roads into quagmires, while the trenches are Hooded and tli lowlnnds everywhere lire larg'elv cover ed bv water. F.verything possible is being done to . make the troops comt'orta ide to pre ; vent their being flooded out of thri • trenches and to avoid cave ins. The | trenches are being shored and braced j and the 'bottoms covered with brush and ] straw. Meanwhile the artillery battle continues. The following story of the wiping i j out ot 3,000 Hermans comes from a wounded soldier from the Veres front: Ihe lighting at. Vpres was terrible i in violence. For forty hours we fought foot to loot with the enemy, emploviug every resuoree of inl'antrv and tiitil lery. "On Sunday a regiment of D.OU-O Germans attacked oilr position. At n. dislance nt'noO \ards our artillery o, en i ed a terrible fire and mowed them down. I hey recoiled but reformed and retiirn ! »•>'. This time tboy reached the hun dred yard inni'lt and again recoiled an I I reformed. "With only a third of their original ; strength the\ advanced ugain. Our of hefs ordered !is to holil our lire an I lei , them advance. At twenty yards the or der came to 'let them have We did .Tint the German regiment ceased to ev | ist. In less than an hour :!,Oltll men j had been exterminaed.'' FRENCH TARING CAREFUL | ACCOUNT OF DAMAGE DONE | BY THE GERMAN INVADERS St. Die, Department of Visges, ' France, Nov. IT, Via Paris. 11 A. M The French goverilment is taking care j ful count of the damage done by tli ■ j German invaders to French proper* \ j and of alleged offenses on the part or' | the enemy deemed to bo in contriiven i tion of The Hague treaty defining the ' rules of war. Various members of the Cabinet, in , eluding Premier Vivaui, Minister of I Justice Briaml, Minister of War Mil ; larami ami Minister of Finance Kibot, i have visitel towns ami Milages in the | territories evacuated by the Germans ] ana have made first hand inquiries ; along these lines. President Poincare, j (.hbriel Hanotaux, a former Cabinet of ! feel", aud Deputy Maurice Barros have j d me the sinie filing, and they are all i convinced an enormous amount of prop j i-rty has been destroyed, the olditera- I lio.'i of whi -h served no military pnr- J "j Minis!i~" Mallard is chairman of a | commission new taking testimony in the St. Die region as to eertnin alleged oflenses on the part of the invaders, as well as the identity of the ipdivid na.s conceri eii. Tli-* | 'opcrty losses undoubtedly wiil .lai into hundreds of millions of francs. The town of St Die is an ex ample. Tin German Occupation lasted 15 days. Doling this time forty j luuse.<. R.i datov er 000,0011 francs I ($12r.00.(;), vi re burned, anil there ai'e 1 many insist.ces of pillage on record, j Tim oinm-ssiii' under M. Mollard dis tieguisl.es between damage resulting from bombardment an I destruction i withe ut military object. St. Die has bo MI subjected t« intermittent boin ; ho t.n.fi t foi more than forty days. FRENCHMAN SENTENCED TO DEATH FOR TREASON i i halons Sur Maine, Via Paris, Nov, li. '>.ls A. M.— A Fienchmau, Alfred : Durot by name, has been sentenced U) j death by court-mnrtiai for treason. During the battle which raged around Hlieims •on September 9 the French artillery operating near the vil | lage of Puiseulx was subjected to u ter rilie bombardment by the Germans, no matter how often they changed their position. A careful watch was kept and it was discovered thi«t a mile in | front of the French batteries a ahep ! herd was feeding his fioclt, among which were five snow white goats. The shepherd was arrested and in quiries showed that during the German occupation of Puiseulx he was the on! inhabitant who had not been molested and that he had been given the whit • goats, whose presence was to signal the position of the French guns. Durot, I .it. nis trial, admitted his guilt. | T; ussuaii S.jUaaron to Moet Germans London, Nov. 17. 10.05 A. M. -A | dispatch from Copenhagen to tiie , "fetar" says it is learned from a Get man source that a Russian squadron has left Helsingfors. Finland, anil is steer l.ig southwest with the supposed in ten | tion of engaging the German Baltic isquadron. No More Leaves of Absence Zurich, Switzerland, Via I aris, Nov. 17. 12.25 A. M. —A dispatch received I htri from Koblenz says that the lie - j muii General Von Kluek has issued or uer., that "no more lea.es of absence will be granted officers because uf nerve strain," as every officer "is re ' quired on the tiring line." Movements of German Cruiser Berliu London, Nov. 17, 5.59 A. M.— Dis patches stating that the German aux iliary cruiser Berlin has appeared at Trondhjem, a seaport of Norway, pruj ablv indicate, according to the under writers, that she is endeavoring, to es cape from the North sea to act as a commerce raider.