2 m\''■" . f 1 I I • . >v, '• ,>• •; v V A -*"* •fc * >, \ , ' : ... V.• > - ,' V " .< :>" ••lr t ' 'ti • • ' « - • * .*< J '■ • f . . " \ v A • • - 1.. • - ' ..... V — " - : The Life Experiences of a Family of Traction Experts Are Embodied in Tm MORTON TRUCK flw ion you Imy a Morton Truck you Imy something more thtin a mere motor propelled vehicle of the ordinary type. Back of the finest materials that can be put into a modern motor vehicle, are the years of study and experience of an entire family of traction experts who have devoted their life to producing trac tion and motor-propelled machinery. <| As designers and experimental experts for several of the largest machinery corporations in the world, father and sons have invented and perfected self-pro pelled machinery that are famous in every country on the globe. Consequently, when they market a truck under their own name, backed by ample local capital and experienced machinery manufacturers, you are assured of a product that is equal to the best in its price class. «.-lneh bore, s'i-lnch stroke. Horse- thlok. BHAKKS—'Two; brakes, foot and emergency , in ii i> Ti>io ...iii -- ij i> ,t brake, both applying directly on rear hub. Brakes lus motor will de\elop H. I. at ar)l g p ef .| u ]iy large and designed to give good service. 1.500 r. p. in. Cylinders ure . ast in pairs. Carburetor: Foot brake of the external type contracting on brake l'j-lncli Carter i 'irburetor. Lubrication: Positive drum, emergency or lever brake expanding "tvpe inside plunger pump system with constant level having one of brake drum, which is 17 inches In diameter, with lead o; oil t" the timing g-ars and one to the rear iMj-inch face and will hold the car on the deepest main "earing. Water Pump: Centrifugal, of ample grades. Wheels—Front: 36-inch bv 5-inch with four sue. Fan: Pressed steel. 18-inch diameter, with belt teen 2'.,-inch spokes of the oval tvpe. Rear: US-inch tension and adjustable. Ignition: Bosch dual with one by 6-inch with fourteen :-inch' spokes of the oval ' unit of dry .11 batteries. Motor Control! Motor con- type. TIRES—Front: S6-im-h bv 5-inch single. Hear: trolled i\v tlirottle on top or wheel. Governor: Pierce :!X-!neh bv 6-inch single Firestone solid unless others type, operating butterfly valve in manifold. CLt'TCH— are specified. WHEKL. BASES— 140-inch. Tread: 60' - Multiple disc type. TRANSMISSION'—Cotta. three (3) Inc-h. Chassis length, back of driver's seat: 10 ft. -pee-.is ronvanl. one (11 reverse, of the selective type. 6 in. KRAiStG—Frame is made of Channel Steel 5-inch I.EVE" ("KN'TRUL—Is right hand drive, levers oper- by 9-inch. 5 lbs. per ft. Height from floor to top of a-ied on right hand side of main frame. AXL«ES— frame, 36 inches, Percentage: Rear axle. 60 p-r Front: Front axle is made from a solid block of drop cent.: front axle. 40 per cent. STEERING GEAR. Of forged steel, spring pads and steering knuckle brack- the bavigne Type. Model "C." TANKS —Gasoline: Made ets are all forged integral with the axie. This axle of pressed steel, serfmless, provided with division plates is made aft. r our standard construction and is one of in center. Capacity, twentv (20) gallons. Water* the oldest and most successful of any type known. Capacity of radiator is S gallons. Oil Capacity: Two Rear: Worm Drive Type. Worm made of 3U per cent. (2) gallons. I>ocation: Attached to bottom "part of Nickel Steel, hardened and ground to si*/.e. Worm engine in crank case. Normal Speed on the toail is wheel made of a special mixture of phosphorus bronze 20 to 25 miles per hour. COOLING—Wat»r is cooled by specially adapted and made' for this kind of worm. a force circulating water pump. Radiator is of the Katio of worm and worm gear is 6to 1. Full floating honey-comb type, made especially heavv for this par type worm shaft is mounted on annular ball bearings ticular service and is ample to cool the'motor running ith ball bearings to take end thrust. Driving wheels the car under the most severe conditions. FENDERS are mounted on seK-aligning ball bearings. Springs— Are made from sheet steel of ample thickness and are Front and rear springs are semi-elliptic and are made held to frame with heavv forged steel brackets, from a high grade of Manganese steel and are of ample DRIVER'S SEAT—I 6 inches'wide. 50 indies long, back slxe and length to carry the load and give great resil- 16 inches high. Upholstered in good grade of black jency without jar or jolt. Front springs are 45H leather. EQUIPMENT—Two (2) gas head lights, oil indies long, 2? s inches wide and 10-ply thick. Rear tall light, horn and tools complete. Fire Apparatus, Commercial Trucks, one-and-one-Half to Three-andOne-Half Tons Capacity. Four-V\ihee\ Drive Trucks and Heavy Tractors MORTON TRUCK & TRACTOR CO. 19th and Manada Sts. Harrisburg, Pa. BELL PHONE RAPIDLY CONSTRUCTED ROADS IN MODERN WARFARE r •• -t.. S-. . I ' , . , *. • , •£' • " '4 The ..bore picture shows a roar] made by Germans in five hour« In East Prussia, which afforded • rapid more men t of troops, following a fierce engagement. There are emergencies occurring like this very often during the great conflict, wiien it Is necessary to construct roads, when Impossible passes are encountered, and quick action is most necessary in modern warfare. ; • V-• - - - > r .- . ,-v- - - "*• "/ - ' " • •-?. ' -v.- • : "•'*■' ' v " • -' #• V\ * . fIARBISBtTRG STAR-INDEPENDENT, THURSDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 18, 1915. EPILEPSY I The Koslne Treat ment relieves all (ear M| of the dreadful at* ■ WIE taoju which are so ■ ■ ■ frequent to the suf ■ ■ ■ V ferers of Bpiiepsy. Koslne has been used with remarkable sdc cess for fifteen years. Buy a bottle of Koslne for $1.50. If, after using, you are not entirely satisfied, your money will be refunded. Ask us for booklet Geo. A. Gorgas, UN. Third* street, and Penna.. Railroad Station. C. K NEWS flHt'T "BANG" CIGARETTES Seventy Children Will Tramp All Stub* They Find Lying Along the Street* Waynesboro, Fob. 18.—Seventy chil dren of the local Loyal Temperance Legion will make a very determined on tho cigarette. At the meeting ot the legion Tuesday afternoon in the Wayne building it was decided to help slamiji out tho cigarette not only by not snictking it, but by tramping on all the cigarette stubs "they see on the streets. HE RUBBED HEK ANKLES Hagerstown Boarder Gets at Dining Table From Angry Husband Hagerstown, Feb, 18. —Because his wife had been nudged on her ankles by a fellow boarder as they sat at the dinner table. Wade W. Wiles struck Newton O. Morris over the head, felling him .to tbe floor, in the dining room of a boarding house here. ! Haled before Justice Daniel W'. l)oub, who fined Wiles for assault, Wiles declared that his wife had been insulted by Morris. Mrs. Wiles com- Vlained that as she sat at the table, with Morris opposite, the latter several times uudged her on the feet. Tea Agent Robbed Waynesboro, Feb. 18.—Charles E. Howe, an Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. agent, who resides at trolley stop t 4, near Rouzcrville, Tuesday night was robbed of goods belonging to the com pany valued at between S6O and SBO. Air. Howe packed up the goods for delivery to Ureencastle and Mont Alto. Robbers broke into the outkitchen, where the goods were stored, and made off with them Kept Wedding a Secret Gettysburg, Feb. 18. —That a num ber of Gettysburg girls married sol diers at the time o f the Fiftieth Anni versary celebration here in July, 1913, and that their marriages have success fully been kept a secret was stated yesterday bv Ccporal Charles L. man, late o£ Company K, Fifth United States infantry, who yesterday an nounced his marriage to Miss Grace fi. Svkes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis R". Skves. recently of Gettysburg. Mr. and ' Mrs. Widnxan are now guests of the latter's sister, Mrs. Neal Reinecker, in the McPherson building. Their marriage took place at Hagers town on August 19, 1914. the cere mony being performed by the Rev_ Mr. Highbergcr. I Joseph C. Snyder Dies HagerstoWii, Feb. 18.- —Joseph C, Snyder, a well-known citizen ot' this city, died Tuesday afternoon at 3 o'clock in a hospital near Baltimore, aged 63 years. Death was due to paralysis. Mr. Snyder had been in ill health for the past six months, but had been bedfast for the past five weeks. He was formerly employed with tne Antietam Paper Co., for which company he had worked for a number |of years. Mr. Snyder is survived by ! his Wife, Mrs. Florence Snyder, and ; one son, William, who is located in the j South. To Build Apartment House Carlisle, Feb 18. —Announcement 'of an important business transfer was j made yesterday, when it was stated I that the property located at North ' Hanover and Dickinson rfvenue known [ as the Boas coiner has been purchased ! by Jacob Wiener from the Boas heirs, j This property, one of the most historic : and valuable in the town, will be re i built as a modern store and apartment I building. To Curr A ("old ■■ Onr Tiny i TRke LAXATIVE HROMO QUININE i Tablets. Druggists refund money if it tails to cure. E. \V. GROVE'S signa ! ture is on each t>ox. 2»c. | LOVE LETTERS IN HER GRAVE Sealed Package Is Buried With Miss Mary A. Wade, ~4 ; Vonkers, N. Y., Feb. 18. —The will of Mass Mary Ashton Wade, of Yonk i ers, who died on January 11 at the age of 74. was admitted to probate by i Surrogate ye>teriiay. Miss j Louisa Bradford, of 956 Weet End ave j nue, Manhattan, a friend of Miss ! Wade, tiled an affidavit stating she had carried out the testator's dying wish | that a certain sealed package among I her effects should be buried with her. Gerrit Smith, the executor's counsel, I said the mysterious package- was suj>- ! |«stwi to contain love letters. The will I disposed of an SII,OOO estate to re'a- I tives. j Normal Bcrubs Beat Waynesboro Shippensburg, Feb. 18.—The Cum berland Valley State Normal school scrubs easily defeated Waynesboro j High five on the Normal school floor last night. Wolf, of Penbrook, again showed himself well, having eight field goals. The line-up: Xormal Serubs. Waynesboro Houfeld F ICsbenshade Wolf F Snivelv Mellinger C Neal Gruver G Heffner Boughman G E. Price Substitutions, Williams for Hosfeld; Sleichter for Gruver; Covle for Bough man. Goals from field, Wolfe, 8; Hos feld, 6; Mellinger, 2; Moughmau, Schleichter. Williams, Esbenshade, Snivelv, Neal, Heffner, Price, 2. Goals from fouls, Snivelv, 2; Esbenshade and Williams. Timekeeper, Sla.vbaugh. Ref eree, Railing, Shippensburg. Time of halves, 20 minutes. Where He Learned Juggling Rankin—"Do you know Professor Toshemup, the great jugglert" Phyle—'"l should say so. We were raised together." "How in the world did he ever learn alhof those wonderful stunts!'' "He started to earu bis living as a photographer, and he learned all of those tricks while trying to amuse the babies whose pictures he took " Youngstown Telegram. BOARD OF PARDONS DELAYS EXECUTIONS OF 2 SLAYERS Grant# Delay in Allegheny to Per mit Introduction of New Testimony —Tioga Murderer WUI Undergo Mental Examination Andrew Malinowski, who murdered his wife in Allegheny county and who was under sentence to be electrocuted during the week beginning February 22', has a chance to escape the death chair. The Board of l'ardons yester day decided to hold under advisement the application of Mafinowski for com mutation of the death sentence until the Board can get some additional tes timony promised by the condemned man's attorney. This will mako nec essary the postponement of the electro cution. Arthur Simons, of Tioga, who mur dered his sweetheart because she would not marry hi«i, will be examined by an alienist to ascertain h's mental condi tion before the Board passes on his application for commutation of the death sentence, and he will not likely be electrocuted on March 22, the date set. Rocco Tassone, the Lancaster mur derer, will be among the first to I be led from the death house to the new elec tric chair, in March. Following him will be Nicollo Mondolo, the Fayette murderer, whom the Board refused to consider favorably in hts application for commutation and who will be elec trocuted on. April 5. Uwvid Kaufman, of Harrisburg, a flim-ttammer. who is serving an inde terminate sentence up to three years, failed to get a pardon. The applica tion of Atilton Weaver, of Harrisburg, convicted of sodomy, also was rejected. tieorge Whaefer, of Adams county, convicted of larceny, was recommended for pardon. Thomas E. Patterson, Cumberland, serving an indeterminate sentence of from 15 to 60 years on several convic tions, and known as "the bad man of the Cumberland Valley," failed to get a pardon. The Board recommended twelve par dons of the thirty-four petitioned for. FOR 'EASY DIVORCE' LAW Nerada Senate Reverses Itself and Passes Measure Carson City, Nev., Feb. 18.—The "easy divorce" bill, which revives the old six months residence provision abolished two years ago, passed the Senate yesterday by a vote of 12 to 10. The bill has passed the House and it will either 'be signed by the Gover nor or go on the statute books auto matically. The passage of the bill marks the end of a loug fight, and there is in tense rejoicing in Reno particularly, which hopes to reap again the riches that came to it for years when it held the easy divorce colony of the country. Most determined in the against the hill were tbe women organized in societies. The bill all but passed the Senate several days ago, but it was discovcre.l that one of the Senators who favored it was too ill to vote. So the measure was sidetracked. The bill was taken out of the Ju diciary Committee of the Senate and placed in the Railroads Committee, where it was to lay until there were sufficient votes to pass-it. In order to avoid a quorum on one occasion a.bout all of the so-called "di vorce Senators" simultane ouely. The sergeant'at arms was or dered to look for them, but he reported that they could not be found. However, they turned up and the movement for the passage of the bill got under way. BUCHANAN'S SECRETARY DEAD J. B. Henry, Former President's Nep hew, Passes, Aged HO Annapolis, Md., Feb. 18.—.Tames Buchanan Henry, aged 80, a nephew of James. Buchanan and his private secretary while Minister to Great. Brit ain anil President, died at Miami, Fla., yesterday morning. He is survived by his third wife and six sons. One son is in the navy and one in the army. The funeral of Mr. Henry will take place in Annapolis Sunday afternoon. Dogs Kill Albino Deer Williamsport, 'Pa., Feb. 18.—An al bino doe was run to death by dogs on the mountain near Trout run last night. The dead body of the animal was found in a field near the foot of the moun tain by Raymond Cupp, a railroad op erator," on his way to work yesterday morning. FOODSOURING !N STOMACH CAUSES INDIGESTION, GAS 'Tape's Diapepsin" Ends All Stomach Distress in Five Minutes Wonder what upset your stomach— which portion of the food did tho dam age —do youT Well, don't bother. If your stomach is in a revolt; if sour, gassy and upset, and what you just ate has fermented into stubborn lumps; head dizzy and aches; belch gases and acids and eructate undigested food; brcnth foul, tongue coated —just take a little I'apo's Diapepsin and in five minutes you wonder what became of the indigestion and distress. Millions of men and women to-day know that it is needless to have a bad stomach. A little Diapepsin occasion ally keeps this delicate organ regulated and they cat their favorite foods with out fear. ' If your stomach doesn't take care of your liberal limit without rebellion; if your food tf a damage instead of a help, remember the quickest, most harmless relief is Papc's DiHpep sin which costs only fifty cents for a large case at drug stores. It's truly wonderful—it digests food and sets things straight, so gently and easily that it is really astonishing. Please, for your sake, "don't go on and on with a weak, disordered stomach; it's so un- Relief for Catarrh Sufferers Now FREE You Can Now Treat This Trouble in Your Own Home and Get Relief at Once. tHow the Remedy for Catarrh Was Discovered. By the nry r T , HIS terrible disease method the .tose I has raged unchecked ami throat are A. t • i ■ treated by an for years simply be »me'dy ap%ed cause sympims have been d •*«''* "" treated while the cause of Cranes. the trouble has been left to circulate in the blood, and bring the disease back as fast as local treatments could relieve it. C. E. Gauss, who experimented for years on a treatment forXDatarrh, found that after perfecting a balm that relieved the nose and throat troubles quickly, he could not prevent the trouble beginning ?Fl£vk On test cases, he could direct influence completely remove all *ou*membranes signs of Catarrh from nose b the "dii and throat, but in a few ease by remov- weeks they were back. tng the cause. ' Careful experiments and investigations have shown that as the troubles were expelled from the nose and Goes to the Root of throat, the real cause of flie disease was overlooked and in a short time the Catarrh would return stronger Stopped-up noses than ever. Mr. Gauss has gone way ahead of the Constant "frog-in-the ordinary methods of treatment and has provided a throat" remedy that Nasai discharges j - Hawking and sp'tting Removes the Cause r^ a a t t h ni^1 and Immediately Give* Re- Tv«? ue i n \. coldu j. . pp. . Difficult breathing lief to the Nose and Throat Smothering sensation in Reese Jones, of Scipnton, Penn.. says that after trying dreams tnany other treatments, he used this new method and— Sudden fits of sneezing My nose is now entirely clear and free and I am not r>rv mums in nn«» bothered by the disease any more. The New Combined / » Treatment is worth its weight in gold." an d any of the other symp- Temporary relief from catarrh may be obtained in other toms that indicate ap ways. but the New Combined Treatment must inevitably proaching or present catarrh be accepted for permanent results. Sarah J. Cape. Mount Pelia, Tenn., says, "II - - suffered the pains and distress of catarrh for ■ C a „J iL. T..i, T'„ . L t tWrteen years and needless to state, tried nearly ■ OClia in© 1 eSI 1 reatmenC every method. But by your new method I was I CD 17 17 completely cured and you cannot imagine the rKcH joy that has come over me." I C E GAUSS Tfjal Tfpafmpnf pp P p f Main Street, Marshall, Mich. i riai i reaimeni ri\LL If your Ncw Combincd Treatment wm This new method is so important to the wel- " relieve my Catnrrh and bring me health fare of humanity, so vital to every person suffer- I and good spirits again, I am willing to it* from any form of catnrrh, that the oppor- _ be shown. So, without cost or obligation tunky to uctually test it and prote its results. I t0 ■»«* prepaid, the Treat* will be gladly extended without one cent of cost. | went and Book. A large trial treatment, with complete, mi nute directions, will be sent free to any catarrh- I v ame sufferer. . Send no money, take no risks, make no * promises. Simply clip, sign and mail the cou- | Address...., Sm and the test package of the New Combined _ reatment will be sen*, fully o repaid, together ■ frith the valuable book on Cetarrh. I W'J J / 1 |H M ANNETTE KELLERMAN In Neptune's Daughter at Photoplay To day. —Adv.* - ..JL II 11^ U I Jefferson Old Storage Corn Whiskey Finest Virginia Made Corn Whiskey The Drink of the Souths Gentleman. It Has the Tang That Delights. TO YOUR HOME Four Quarts or One Gallon $4.00 Express Prepaid. JEFFERSON L PETERSBURG, VA j VIRGINIA'S BEST MAIL ORDER HOUSE ■ J ARTISTIC PRINTING AT STAR - INDEPENDENT.