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Harrisburg Telegraph from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania • Page 10

Location:
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 THE HARRTSETTRG TELEGRAPH, SATURDAY. APRIL 14, 1906. ore That Saves You Easy to Pay OPEN SATURDAYS UNTIL, lO P. M. Beautiful Display of Home Furnishings of Surprising Uncertainty May Continue Until the Republican Delegates Meet Here, June 6 esigns rifv hn thpi ft hen nrh an arrsiv nf PitrrJtnr Jmve.

i furnishings shown under one roof as we are offering to the good people of Harrisburg and vicinity. Excellence and elegance without extravagance form the keynote of this store's success. We solicit your patronage. MANY GOOD MEN BEING MENTIONED Justice Stewart Will Not Take Nomination Unless Unanimously Offered The New Go Carts and Refrigerators 10 mm mi I GII01IF IS I DIB The St Money. aty 5 and Artistic KT This $7.50 Iron Bed 4.98 Prettily enameled in white; has heavy posta, high head and foot; trimmed with brass rods and brass knobs; In all sizes; strong and substantial.

$4.50 Iron Bed $2.95 Prettily enameled iron beds, heavy prists, trimmed trith brass knobs; etrpng and sanitary; in all sizes. Cash or Credit KEW YORK CITY. The Westminster Hotel Irving Place and 16th Street. One block east of Union Square. Remodelled at a cost of over $100, 000.

Telephone and electric lights In every room. 75 New Batii Rooms. European Plan, $1 per day and up. Room and Bath, $2 Per Day and Up. A.

W. EAGER. ATLANTIC CTTS, N. J. Galen Hall Hotel Sanatorium, Atlantic City, N.

J. Elegant Mew Brick Building. No more luxurious accommodations on the Coast. With half an acre of curative Baths and a swimming pool. Booklet.

F. L. YOUNG, Gen. Mgr. i CURE FOR The most successful remeay knowa for the speedy relief and absolute cure of Goner rhoea and Gleet is GONOLA 2 PEARLS.

A These Pearls have cured cases where all other remedies 4 have failed. If taken in the beginning of the attack the cure will be positive, no glety discharges will annoy the pa tlent atterwara. rney are a com bination of remedies that do the work that no other rem edies are able to effect. Accept nothing just as good. The MoKo Medical Company SCamp Hill, Cumberland, P.

O. Box 50, I For Sale by all druggists AT $1.00 PER PACaAGE if, EfTiSSri One of the most popular styles ever shown in GO OARTS. Full swell sides, guaranteed rattan; adjustable back and dash; 1G06 gear and all modern attachments; like cut; $14 value. Underselling price, A new and pretty style in Reclining Go Carts; best construction; strong springs; new 1906 gear; adjustable dash and back. Regular 59.00 value.

Underselling price, SS.75 Full reed body Go Cart; new scroll pattern; 1006 gear; best springs. Worth $3.00. Underselling prioe, S4.50 Folding GO CART; leather back and dash; has rubber tirea, and is stoutly built; $4.50 value. Underselling price, $2,49 Bamboo Taborette Special Saturday and Monday for 29c A unique and attractive piece of furniture for the "Den" or living room. This Taborette is designed on true lines.

It is substantially built. The illustration shows it exactly. Worth all of 50c. Special Saturday and Monday for 29 A new and attractively designed Bedroom Suite; well built of solid oak, highly polished; ha3 5 inch rolls on footboard, and is nicely carved; dresser has large French plate mirror; deep drawers and brass handles; washstand to match; $35 value. Underselling price, $24.50 A substantially built solid oak Sideboard; highly polished and nioely carved; has large plate mirror, top shelf, side brackets, deep drawers and large cupboard.

A standard $22.00 value. Underselling price, $14.75 a I OfiMAnvt Or ml P. R. OFFICERS Continued from First Page. ways had an annual pass, and we wanted to keep their good will.

Besides, their friendship was worth a good bit." "Captain Hicks, you have testified that you divided up the profits, but not as dividends. How did you tell what to give Mr. Thayer and others." Sent What He Pleased. "I would just figure up and send my checks, $50 or $100 a month, sometimes not oftener than three months if business was bad." "Who else got such payments?" demanded Mr. Glasgow.

"I used to give something to Mr. Clark, a car distributor, but I stopped several years ago." "Why was that? Was he not a stockholder?" "I did not think it necessary to continue. He left his position and never had one dollar invested." "Is Robert Pitcairn, assistant to the president of the Pennsylvania Railroad, a stockholder in any of these companies?" "He has stock in the Leithburg A NOTRE DAME LADY I will send free, with full instructions, some of this simple preparation for the cure of Leucorrhoea, Ulceration, Displacements, Falling of the Womb, Scanty or Painful Periods, Tumors or Growths, Hot Flashes, Desire to Cry, Creeping feeling up tne Spine, Pain in the Back, and all Female Troubles, to all sending address. To mothers of suffering daughters I will explain a Successful Home Treatment. If you decide to continue it will only cost about 12 cents week to guarantee a cure.

Tell other sufferers of It, that Is all I ask. If you are interested write now and tell your suffering friends of it. Address Mrs. 1L Summers, Box 420 Notre Dame, Ind. i You've never seen a better collection of Refrigerators anywhere.

The best high grade makes are here in all the latest and most improved models Refrigerators we can fully guarantee, because our guarantee is backed up by that of the manufacturers. General underselling prices prevail. A high grade Newport Refrigerator; substantially built; best sanitary lining; dry air cooled. Regular $9.00 value. Special underselling price, $5.75 Genuine Redaction Sale of New Mattings Just the chance you are looking for to buy all the Matting you'll need at generously reduced prices.

All of our 1906 importations of fine China and Japanese Mattings best qualities and choicest patterns are offered at these reductions: Regular 13c China Mattings reduced to Regular 30c Chiua Mattings reduoed to ..220 Regular 43c China Mattings reduced to Regular 2oc Jap Mattings reduced to Regular 35c Jap Mattipgs reduced to 25c Regular 43c Jap Mattings reduced to mahoganv frames, highly spring construction; upholstered tapestry; genuino $55 1 'T rt excellent spring seats; upholstered in Underselling price, Substantial Solid Oak Chair, with hand caned seat not slat seat suitable for dining room or bedroom; nicely finished and thoroughly braced; $1.00 value. Underselling Price. 59c iegant piece ranor suite, crotch polished and nicely carved; beat French cut verona or gobelin value. Underselling prioe, TTArrv nift PofUr Lanrest Complete Hnm Coal and Coke Company, which has a capital of $2 0,000. "How much stock, and has he received dividends out of the fund you collect?" "Mr.

Pitcairn has sixty six shares, and either April 26 or 27 I sent him $198." "Did Mr. Pitcairn pay for this stock?" "I don't kno.w whether he or Mr. Prevost did pay. Frank Sheppard, general superintendent of the United Railways of New Jersey division, has sixty six shares, also." "When did Mr. Thayer sell His Avonmore stock, and how much had he?" "Mr.

Thayer owned one hundred shares, par value $5,000. He sold it recently two to six months ago." "Not because of this investigation?" suggested Mr. Glasgow. "No, because he got a good price, I would not sell mine at the same figure. The company is paying 25 per cent, dividends.

In Their Wives' Names. Captain Hicks explained that payments had been made to F. D. Casenave, formerly general superintendent of motive power of the Pennsylvania Railroad, and to some others not stockholders, and that in some cases officers held stock in their wives' names. Joseph Wood held his interest that way, the witness testified.

Hicks added: "There's not a very elaborate system of bookkeeping and that everything was cleared up each month." Commissioner Clements remarked that the usual methods of dividing profits of a company is on a basis of stock held, but that these coal companies did quite differently. "They trusted me implicitly," said Captain Hicks. "In other words," said Commissioner Prouty, "you gave each man 'f I ill PS fine tapestry; $25 value Glf 7 3l Attractive Quartered Oak Dresser; large French plate mirror, shaped top, carved standards, swelled top drawers, brass handles. Regular $20.00 value. Underselling price, SI 3.95 Pay a Little at a Time what you thought he was worth to the company." "Yes, sir," replied the witness.

Replying to other questions, Captain Hicks said that the prices paid by the Pennsylvania Railroad for fuel coal bought "were fixed by the general manager," and out of the production of the several mines was forty to fifty cars per day. Chickering Pianos Put a Chickering in your home and you have reached the limit of piano perfection. Pay by the month if you prefer. Troup Piano House, 15 South Market Square. aprl2 3t WOULDN'T SPOIL HIM "Your majesty, the new missionary wishes to teach up to play football." "All right, we are going to use him for hash, anyhow." Houston Post.

Mother Gray's Appeal to Women If yon will send your name and address we will mail you FREE a package of Mother Gray's AUSTRALIAN LEAF, a certain, pleasant herb care for Women's Ills. It Is a safe monthly regulator and never falling. If yon have pains in the back, Urinary, Bladder or Kl4 My trouble, use this pleasant union of Australian herbs, roots and leaves. All Druggists sell it, 30 cents, or address. The Mother Gray Le Roy, N.

Y. GORGAS' HEADACHE SALTS. Teaspoonf ul in water will save a lot of suffering. 25 c. 18 X.

3d St. WATRES MAKIXG ACTIVE CANVASS FOR THE PLACE Murphy Announces His Candidacy; Acheson Strong With the Western Party Men The Republican State convention for the nomination of candidates for Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Auditor General and Secretary of Internal Affairs, will be held in Harrisburg, Wednesday, June 6 only seven and a half weeks from to day. Yet there is little indication of a getting together on candidates. Not within the memory of the active politician of to day has there been such another condition of uncertainty as this. Of course, the Governorship overshadows the other places.

There will be no decision as to the remainder of the ticket until something definite shall have been worked out with regard to No. 1. No "Slates" This Time. It would not be surprising if the uncertainty were to continue right up to the convention. In fact, in the absence of the old time machinery for the lining up of delegates, and with the great number of favorite sons in the "mentioned" class, it is difficult to see how anything like a positive concentration on a winning candidate will be possible prior to the assembling in Harrisburg.

Although not an avowed aspirant for the nomination, the name of Justice John Stewart, of Chambersburg, undoubtedly has been the most conspicuously mentioned among the "availables." This has been due largely to the fact that his election to the Supreme bench by the unanimous Republican, Democratic and Lincoln party vote last November has led to the assumption that no combination of men or circumstances could defeat him at the polls. Justice Stewart has given his friends to understand that they need not expect him to stand as a candidate for the nomination if there is to be a fight over it. Watres Is Strong. Colonel Louis A. Watres, of Scran ton, who was elected Lieutenant Governor when the head of the Republican ticket, George Wallace Delamater, went down to defeat under the second Pattison landslide, is actively in the field.

He will be strongly supported by Lackawanna and other northeast counties, and his workers promise a lot of surprises from other parts of the State when convention time arrives. Justice John P. Elkin has effectively put a stop to the well meant efforts of some of his enthusiastic admirers to force him into the running. Not much has been heard of Mayor Weaver of late as a candidate for the Governorship. His failure to push the prosecution of the filtration contractors has taken the edge off the popular enthusiasm for him as a reformer.

His friends, however, will have to be reckoned with in the convention. Congressmen Mentioned. Congressmen Olmsted, of Dauphin; Lafean, of York; Mahon, of Franklin; Lilley, of Bradford, and Deemer, of Lycoming, have been frequently mentioned in connection with the Governorship, but they are not candidates in the sense of making any active personal effort in behalf of the nomination. There is a considerable boom for Adjutant General Thomas J. Stewart, of Montgomery county.

Almost everybody in Pennsylvania knows "Tom" Stewart, and a lot of people would wish to see him nominated simply for the treat of hearing his silver tongued oratory in the whirlwind campaigning tour of the State that wouldlnevitably follow his selection. There is a growing conviction that Western Pennsylvania will make a strong demand for the Governor, by right of rotation. This would eliminate all the candidates mentioned above. Conspicuous in the Western contingent is Robert S. Murphy, of Cambria.

His endorsement this week by the Republicans of Bedford county, following similar action on the part of the Cambria county organization, is supplemented by his formal announcement, issued yesterday, that he is a candidate for the nomination. Another Western man prominently mentioned is former Secretary of the Commonwealth Charles W. Stone, of Warren. His name appeals especially to the independent element of the party, which is likely to have a great deal to say as to the action of this year's State convention. Acheson Looms Up.

Among the Congressional possibilities of the West, undoubtedly Ernest F. Acheson, of Washington county, takes the lead. A considerable amount of quiet but effective work has been done for him already, and it is anticipated that he will come to the convention with a formidable array of delegates. Acheson has this advantage, that while always having preserved a marked degree of Independence, and while one of the earliest and most oronounced advocates of the reforms for which everybody now stands, lie always managed to keep out of the conspicuously "irregular" class. Therefore he will not be opposed by the old "organization" element that is taking exception to Justice Stewart.

Congressman George F. Huff, of Westmoreland, appears in all the lists of possibilities, but he is not an Like the Ships of Uncle Sam's Navy. Most soaps dissolve quickly if placed in hot water. Ivory Soap does not. Left in bath tub or wash basin, it retains its firmness for hours.

Like the ships of Uncle Sam's Navy, it floats forever and a day. Bath; toilet; fine laundry. There is no "free" funcombined) sllcill in Ivory Sop. That li why it will not injure the finest fabric or the most delicate akin. Ivory Soap 9945oo Per Cent.

Pure avowed candidate. His connection with the Pennsylvania Railroad is regarded as rendering him ineligible in these days of two cent fare and trolley freight agitation. State Chairman Wesley R. Andrews has been endorsed for Governor by his home county of Crawford. Some Talk of Robbins.

Despite the apparent disposition of the "country" counties to claim the Governorship as against Allegheny and Philadelphia, which have produced the last two executives, there is a disposition to regard the mention of Francis L. Robbins, president of the Pittsburg Coal Company, as highly significant. Mr. Robbins as a candidate undoubtedly would appeal strongly to the business men of the State. At the same time he would excite the widespread support of the organized labor element by reason of the stand he took in favor of the Get What You Ask For! fHERE is a Reason Why the Good People of America buy Cascarets as Fast as the Clock Ticks.

Every second some one, somewhere, is Buying a little Ten Cent Box of Cascarets. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 660 times to the Minute, 60 Minutes to the Hour, 3600 Boxes an Hour, 36,000 Boxes a Day of Ten Hours, 1,080,000 Boxes a Month, and then some. Think of it 220,000 People take a Cascaret tablet each day. Millions use Cascarets when necessary. The Judgment of Millions of Bright Americans is Infallible.

They have been Buying and Taking Cascarets at that rate for over Six years It is not an Experiment, not an Acci dent or Incident, but a sound, Honest Business, based on Time Tried and Tested Merit, never found wanting. There is a Reason. Cascarets are the implacable foe of All Disease Germs; the incomparable cleanser, purifier and strengthener of the entire Digestive Canal. They Act like Exercise on the Bowel Muscles, make i.iem strong and active able to Help Themselves do their work keep themselves clean. Cascarets are the safe guard of Innocent Childhood against the Dreadful Death dealing Dangers that threaten the Lives of the Little Ones.

They are Purely Vegetable, absolutely Harmless, always Reliable and Efficient, I A I miners in the recent controversy in the soft coal field. Ex Representative George M. Ho sack, of Pittsburg, who sat in the House of Representatives from 1897 to 1902, is being spoken of as a possibility for Lieutenant Governor in event of the Governorship being apportioned to some county other than Allegheny. There will be no light on the Lieutenant Governorship until after the selection of a candidate for Governor. For Auditor General, ex Representative Robert K.

Young, counsel for the State Capitol Building Commission, has the field to himself thus far, and probably will be nominated. For Secretary of Internal Affairs, the avowed candidates are Major Isaac B. Brown, the incumbent, and Editor James H. Craig, of the Al toona Gazette. a true, faithful, loyal servant of Mankind.

Over Five Millions of Dollars hava been Spent to make the merits of Cascarets known, and every cent of it would be lost, did not sound merit claim and hold the constant, continued friendship. Patronage and Endorsement of well pleased people year after year. There is also a Reason Why there are Parasites who attach themselves to the Healthy Bodv of Cascaret 's success Imitators, Counterfeiters, Substitutors. They are Trade Thieves who would rob Cascarets of the "Good Will" of the people, and sneak unearned profits, earned and paid for by Cascarets. A Dishonest Purpose means a Dishonest Product and a Disregard of the Purchasers' Health or Welfare.

Beware of the Slick Salesman and his ancient "Just as Good" story that common sense refutes. Cascarets are made only by the Sterling Remedy Company, and the famous little Ten Cent "Vest Pocket" box is here shown. They are never sold in bulk. Every tablet marked Be sure you get the genuine. IS FREE TO OUR.

FRIENDS! We want to send to our friends a beautiful French designed. GOLD PLATED B0NB0H BOX, hard enameled in colors. It Is a beauty for the dressing table. Ten cents in stamps is asked as a measureof good faith and to cover eostof Cascarets, with which this oalnty trinket Is loaded. 726 Send to day, mentioning this paper.

Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York. I 1 I I 91 LUDWIG TONE A TRIUMPH Of Genius, Science and Skill The most artistic piano and greatest value ever offered for $300. Its rich, melodious tone, light responsive action captivates the artist and makes practice for the amateur a pleasure. No matter where you live, our three year special payment plan makes it practicable for you to own a Ludwig Piano and save $100 to $150. to day.

LUDWIG PIANO CO. 1007 9 North Third Street D. A. BURNS, Mgr. Factory: New York LUDWIG PRICE.

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About Harrisburg Telegraph Archive

Pages Available:
325,889
Years Available:
1866-1948