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Harrisburg Telegraph from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania • Page 10

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

PORGIES WHITINGS FRESH CANADIAN SLICED STEAK 7c Eels iblOc FISH 2 25c Croakers Oft Sea Trout, OYSTERS For Stewing, 2 23c For Frying 15c Philadelphia, Feb. 1, W. Apples, Staymans, bushel, $1.25 to $1.65 Other varieties, 65c to $1.40. White potatoes, 100 pound sack, United States No. Is, 60c to 85c; United States No.

2s, 35c to 40c Sweet potatoes, New Jersey, bushel, $155; basket, 75c to 85c; white yams, bushel, 85c to $1 Mushrooms, 3 pound basket, 25c to 65c. Celery, Pennsylvania, bunch, to 17c. Carrots, bushel, 60c to 85c. Parsnips, bushel, 50c to 85c. Turnips, white, 35c to 50c.

Rutabagas, 100 pound sack, to $1.25. Constant Supply Extensive Variety I Morrett's Poultry Shopped Capons Turkeys Ducks Guineas Rabbits Squabs Fowl Roasters 265 REILY ST. Est. im PHONE 2 2047 QtACITY POOd PftlC'CUTTn ADDED EXTRA SUPER SPECIALS FRIDAY and SATURDAY UNUSUAL FOODS AT UNUSUAL SAVINGS! "Grand Champion" BABY BEEF On Sale This Weekend at the GIANT. Pennsylvania's Finest Beef! SELF SERVICE GROCERY DEPT.

CRACKERS SMACKS Loon Wiles New, CORNED REEF CRISPY 2 lb SALTED box SODAS SUNSHINE lb BUTTER box ArirE'ie Crispy, Better Flavored Butter Wafer Kellogg's CORN FLAKES 2 boxes 13c LUX or LIFEBUOY SOAP 5 hm 26c FELS or OCTAGON SOAP 5 ban 22c OXOL or CL0R0X 2 23c MBBY READY TO SERVE 15c 14c CHEF BOIARDI Soaehetti SAUCE. Price war down below cost to Introduce this treat sparhettl sauce, sane that fives your spacneill tne zesuui naTor you tb aiwsya wnicu. I DaIIQaaII Danor TawaIcJ Both For I Roller Towel HOLDER Ejjjc PAR'T'JEL PEACHES GELATINE DESSERT HALVES or SLICES boxes No.2K can SHOEPEG WHOLE CORN 10c MOUNTAIN BRAND PEAS 4 23c GREEN SPLIT PEAS 2 lbs 15c CHASE SANBORN COFFEE lb 31c SEA FOOD DEPT. 14c FRUITS PRODUCE Thin Skin Juicy A 4Ca Celery 5 Lemons CALIF. ICEBERG LETTUCE.

BEST NO 1 AA. POTATOES "29c MEAT AND DELICATESSEN DEPT. CHUCK ROAST BEST CENTER lb CUTS 1412C FRESH PORK STEAKS lb 25c RUMP AND LEGS OF VEAL lb 19c SMOKED SAUSAGE lb 15c FRESH GROUND HAMBURG 2 23c FRESH HAM WHOLE OR HALF SHANK 1714c WISCONSIN CREAM CHEESE Ib 2 1 LEBANON lb I4'2C SLICED BOILED HAM Ib 35c CHEESE LOAF WILSON'S CERTIFIED IO.J WH'UiMrdrttti Curl 3c 90c ALIBI WITNESSES (Continued From Page 1) Stockton, Anthony M. Hauck, Jr. and others of the prosecution staff appeared in court shortly before 10 o'clock.

Mrs. Anna Hauptmann came Into court and took her accustomed seat near the defendant. She soon started her usual morning chat with Hauptmann. Scores For Defense Court was delayed in opening by a conference in the judge's chambers. There was also a slight delay in the beginning of Trendley's testimony because the state wanted to get Into the record a hospital record regarding the testimony of Louis Kiss, one of Hauptmann's alibi witnesses.

Edward J. Reilly, chief defense attorney, asked Trendley: "As a result of your study and examination of the ransom notes and the Hauptmann request writings, are you in a position to render an opinion as to whether or not Hauptmann, this defendant, wrote the ransom notes "In my opinion," said Trendley, "he did not." Important Point The ransom notes represent a' cardinal point in the state's case against Hauptmann. The first note was left on the window sill of the Lindbergh nursery the night the baby was stolen, March 1, 1932. The state contends that the man who wrote that first note also climbed a ladder at the window of the nursery, stole the baby and dashed it to death as the ladder broke on the way down. Eight experts qualified by the state gave their positive opinion that Hauptmann wrote that note as well as the thirteen others which were received by Colonel Charles A.

Lindbergh through divers means. One of the state experts, Albert S. Osborn, declared the evidence that Hauptmann wrote the notes was "Irresistible, unanswerable and overwhelming." Omissions Studied Reilly used Osborn's chart on the nursery note ana had Trendley point out words and letters which he said the state expert had The chart was a photographic enlargement of certain words in the note. "Now Mr. Trendley," Reilly asked, it possible to.

change the pat tern of any handwriting by the use of the retouching pencil or the etching knife on the negative?" "No, it isn't," Trendley said. "Is it possible that the lines can be shortened or made longer by the use of the camera?" "Well, yes, they can distort it." "It is possible to distort the hand' writing in photography, is it?" Oh, yes; you can do a lot of that stuff with photography. Fisch's Handwriting Trendley said he had examined the handwriting of the dead Isador Fisch, from whom Hauptmann claimed he received the ransom money that was found In his garage. The defense has intimated before that it might try to show that Fisch was the actual writer of the notes, and that he imitated the hand of Hauptmann. The connection was a Knot immediately brought out through Giving an instance of why he believed Hauptmann did not write the notes, Trendley referred to the formation of the letter "And that 'y' ends in a straight downward stroke, correct?" Reilly asked of a in the first ransom note.

"Yes, it does," Trendley said. "And then we find another one along side of it with a downward stroke and a hook on the right?" "Yes." "And then we find In the Hauptmann request writings a 'y' on the same chart, downward stroke, hooked to the left?" "We do." Sharp Criticism The defense was sharply critical of Osborn's chart, bringing out through Trendley that Osborn had omitted many words from the first ransom note, the nursery note. Then Trendley testified that Os born's chart showed only three words from the nursery note. All three words were "the," he said, and he added that the "the's" in the ransom note were different than the "the's" in Hauptmann's specimen writings. Defense counsel, introducing the first of their expert testimony to counteract the state's evidence that Bruno Richard Hauptmann slew the Lindbergh baby, charged intimidation of the prisoner's alibi backers.

Edward J. Reilly, burly chief of the defense staff, said: (1) "Seven of my witnesses have been intimidated by men plug uglies who came to their homes and claimed they were representing the state of New Jersey." (2) He expected to call several additional alibi witnesses, but "if I should give you their names, you can be sure they never would get here." (3) Because of the prosecution's tactics against his witnesses putting police on their trail while still keeping them under relentless HARRISBURG TELEGRXPIf 10 FRIDAY EVENING. FEBRUARY 1, 1935 1 DRESS IGNITED i BY STOVE CAUSE OF FATAL BURNS Mrs. Margaret Hippensteel, Aged West Fairview Widow, Is Victim Burns suffered January 25 when her dress caught fire as she reached over a stove in the kitchen of her home, caused the death late yesterday aftrnoon at the Harrisburg Hospital of Mrs. Margaret Hippensteel, 75, Pines Comer, West Fair View." Hippensteel, a widow, was alone in the house when the accident occurred.

She was found with her clothing afire by a son, Edward, and a daughter, Mrs. Virgie Caldwell, who live nearby. J. Another son, William, with whom the resided, was working in the City at the time of the accident. Survivors are two sons, Edward and William, both of Enola; four daughters, Mrs.

Arthur Gross, Philadelphia; Mrs. Virgie Cadwell, Enola; Mrs. Charles Russell, Ship pensburg; Mrs. Edward Blosser, Harrisburg; eleven grandchildren and a sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Seldel, West Fairview.

Funeral services will be conducted Monday morning at 10 o'clock at the Musselman funeral parlors, 326 Hummel avenue, Lemoyne. Burial, Enola cemetery. Thejwdy may be viewed Sunday evening at the parlors. 3 STATE MARKET BUREAU REPORT THREATENS TO CALL cross examination he might call fifty more persons to testify. This would prolong the trial "two or three weeks." Reilly said the "plug uglies" snowed no credentials.

"They warned our witnesses to stay out of New Jersey if they knew what was good for them," he asserted, i "111 say this much: I know they did not come from Attorney General Wilentz or the prosecution staff, but I have a pretty good idea where they came from." The seven witnesses were under stood to live in New York, where Hauptmann's alibis place him on March 1, 1932, when Charles Lindbergh, was stolen from his crib at Hopewell, and on April 2, 1932, when $50,000 ransom was paid in vain. Trendley's qualifications were vigorously denied by the state. which drew from him admissions that he had contradicted himself and given "curbstone" opinions in other cases. Second to One Reilly contended that Trendley merely proved his honesty by bis admission "he might have been mistaken in three or four cases" out of "387 or more" in forty years. Justice Trenchard ruled that the 87 year old witness' qualified him.

Discussing his ability to imitate signatures, Trendley said he wasJ friends said today that a 23 year' "second only to one forger, and he went to jail." Reilly Pleased Reilly expressed satisfaction with the alibi and surprise witnesses who took the stand yesterday. Three of them testified they saw Hauptmann in a Bronx bakery about the hour of the kidnaping and the fourth said two men, neither' of them Hauptmann, drove an automobile with a ladder through Princeton the same day and stopped to ask him the way to the Lindbergh estate. "They had the courage of their own convictions to get up there and tel. the truth," Reilly said. "The defense now has about a dozen witnesses on the alibi phase of the case and we are going to prove Hauptmann innocent in an orderly, routine The prosecution, however, found satisfaction in having made one admit a reformatory and jail rec ord, another tell of peddling home' made rum, a third concede that his restaurant had been the target of liquor raids, and the fourth refuse to say what he did one night because he might "incriminate or degrade" him.

ROOSEVELT NEAR BREAKWITH GREEN (Continued From Page 1) William Green of the American Federation of Labor declared bitterly that the code was "imposed on labor" without a hearing; while an NEA official, explaining why A. F. of L. leaders were not consulted, pointed to recent Government pervised elections in Detroit. Figures Differ It was said at Blue Eagle head quarters that over 90 per cent, of employes eligible in nine plants participated in these elections.

The National Automobile Labor Board, headed by Dr. Leo Wolman announced last week that nearly 90 per cent, of these recorded themselves as not affiliated with any labor organization. The A. F. of L.

seeking to have the board abolished as biased, had announced it was requesting its members not to vote in the election. It said the results showed "Dr. Wol man's scheme was impractical and impossible." After a conference with Donald Richberg, NRA officials and leaders of the industry, President Roosevelt acted last night just a short time before the auto code was due to expire at midnight. He extended it to June 16, with two changes. One provided for the introduction of new car models in the fall, instead of January.

The other calls for time and half pay for overtime worked in excess of 48 hours a week. Both are devices to spread employment. By helping iron out peaks of production, officials said the earlier introduction of models alms to give workers three months additional employment a year. When Informed that the code had been renewed without the changes desired by the A. P.

of L. Green said that "abandonment of hearings is highly objectionable to labor." BORAH AND JOHNSON AGREE TO PATCH UP LONG DISAGREEMENT By Associated Press Washington, Feb. 1. Mutual old split between Senators Borah (R Idaho) and Johnson (R has been completely closed by their victorious leadership of the fight against the World Court. since "Bill" Borah and "Hi" Johnson split, back in 1912 when Theodore Roosevelt was launching his "Bull Moose" campaign, there has been rivalry and feeling between the two famous Republicans.

vandyihakes up personnel (Continued From Page 1) Greene counties, is being retired. His salary is $6000. Salaries Revised VanDyke said these county superintendents are being dismissed: Susquehanna Anthony A. Plosky, $3000. Fayette J.

Cameron Burchinal, $2400.. Tioga M. L. Erlenmeyer, $2500. Cumberland Howard Bollinger, $2700.

Armstrong Roy A. Beck, $2400. VanDyke said downward' revision of salaries for virtually all employes in the engineering and field force will be effected. Division engineers will receive from $5000 to $6000, rather than salaries up to $6600 as in the past. Many Changes All changes are effective next Monday.

VanDyke said a detailed announcement of the reorganization will be made later. The six division engineering positions are being abolished and the five division engineers retained are transferred to other work. They are: T. C. Frame, J.

S. Ritchie, J. C. McCarrell, B. F.

Forbes and S. W. Jackson. In the Pinchot administration these twelve men were district engineers: Edward J. Kinney, of Franklin; William J.

Carroll, of Clearfield; W. A. Warrick, of Wil liamsport; S. P. Longstreet, of Scranton; N.

A. Staples, of Upper Darby; H. R. Moffitt, of Harrisburg; H. Ray Wertz, of Harrisburg; S.

C. Funk, of Hollidaysburg; E. J. Finn, of Indiana; H. E.

Kloss, of Pittsburgh, and C. A. Hchelberger, of Uniontown. Demoted The district engineers retained are demoted to positions of maintenance and construction engineers. Burchinal, of Fayette county, is a brother of William J.

Burchinal, dismissed by Governor George H. Earle as a member of the workmen's compensation board. Plosky was named at the behest of Mrs. Cornelia Bryce Pinchot, wife of the former Governor. The two engineers discharged have been in the State service for many years.

Stackpole entered the service in 1912. Buckius began work in 1907 as a chainman for a survey crew. 4 Waynesboro. Charged with break ing into and enterine the grill room of the Eagles Club here, James Haley and Gerald Sanders waived a hearing and gave bail for court. SINGING SLAYER DEATH (Continued From Page 1) some evidence of the happy, carefree temperament that prompted him, until recently, to mock in song his fate.

Prepares for Death Neu retired at midnight and arose at 8 a. two hours earlier than his usual rising time. This, he said, was done because he had to prepare himself "extra well" for the hanging. "I like to have everything just right," he said, "even a hanging." After grooming himself immaculately he attended mass in the tiny prison chapel where he received Holy Communion. Chief Deputy Michael McKay then read, for the second and last time, the governor's death warrant and the condemned youth was returned to his cell to spend the final minutes before he started the forty foot march to the death chamber.

Henry Meyer, professional hangman adjusted the noose around Neu's neck and pulled the trap that plunged him to death. Late yesterday Meyer was sworn in as a special deputy by Judge Alexander C. O'Donnell for the fortieth time. Meyer has sprung the trap at the executions of thirty eight men and one woman. Attitude Changes Since Neu's fate was definitely sealed his general attitude under went a vast change.

He ceased to compose songs about his trial and execution that he sang to guards from his cell. His braggadocio air also vanished. Religion took its place. From the time he left his Sayan nan, home until he was ar rested in New Jersey, Neu served in the army, worked on a ship and en tertained in night clubs. Killed Two Men In September, 1933, he killed Lawrence Shead, a theatrical man ager in the latter's fashionable Pat' terson, N.

apartment. He took a few dollars from Shead and the suit he was wearing and journeyed to New Orleans. Here he met a waitress and they planned a trip. They needed money and a car, so Neu set out to obtain them. He struck up a casual acquaintance with Clark in a hotel lobby and went to his (Clark's) room for a drink.

It was there that he beat his host to death with a blackjack, robbed him of $50, his shoes and his automobile. He readily confessed the two slay ings. SENATE SLOWS DOWN Washington, Feb 1, man Harrison, of the Senate Fi nance Committee, said today "there is not a chance in the world" for Congress to pass the Administra tion's social security bill by mid February, as Secretary Perkins has urged. MINE WORKERS SKIRMISH Wilkes Barre, Feb. 1, P) For the third consecutive day, miners of rival unions today engaged in a skirmish at the entrances of two shafts of the South Wilkes Barre colliery of the Glen Alden Coal Company.

TO HEAR CASE OF CLARENCE HURLEY Carlisle, Feb. 1. The trial of Clarence Hurley, Carlisle, R. D. 7.

charged with involuntary man slaughter, will be the first to be called Monday at the opening of the Cumberland countv criminal court. Hurley was the onerator nf f.twi automobile which collided uritti on other at the intersection of the Old York road and the Mt. Holly pike nut memorial way. Mrs. Mar PhillipsV IN PHILADELPHIA SAID COLONEL PAUL JONES: eviic garet Pannebaker, Lemoyne, a pas' senger in the other auto was killed, rnvaw w.

v. Boston, oi tne state Highway Patrol, is the Other cases listed Monday arei Marlln E. Heckman, Newville, burglary, felonious entry and and Hyman Savlov, Harrisburg, false pretense. Cases listed for Tuesday are H. Hum Diller, Car lisle, false pretense growing out of the sale of an automobile; Jack Palmer, Carlisle, receiving stolen goods, and Elmer Crum, Shermans dale, failure to stop and render as sistance.

IF YOU EAT STARCHES MEATS, SWEETS AW thi They're All Necessary Foods But All Acid Forming. Hence Most of Us Have "Acid Stomach" at Times. Easy Now to Relieve. Medical authorities now tell us that much of the so called "indigestion" from which so many of us suffer is really acid indigestion. A condition brought on by the acid forming part of our diet.

Starches, meats, sweets, too much of such necessary foods form excess acids felt in annoying pain, "gas" after eating. But there is now a simple way to relieve this, as your doctor will tell you often in minutes! All you do is take a little Phillips Milk of Magnesia after meals. This acts almost at once to neutralize the stomach acidity that brings on the trouble. You have fewer headaches, upsets, and pain. You "forget you have a stomach 1" Try this just oncel Take eithef the familiar liquid "Phillips' of the convenient new Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Tablets.

But be sure you get the Genuine PHILLIPS' Milk of Magnesia. Also in Tablet Form: Phillips' Milk of Magnesia Tablets are now on sale at all drug stores everywhere. Each tiny tablet isthe equivalent of a teaspoonful of Genuine Phillips' Milk of Magnesia. 7 HE traditional hoi pitality of the Bellevue is a subject foi reminiscence what vex men gather. Recant com plot modernisation in decoration and appointments have added even a fresher note to thie famous hotel.

tes art Reasonable CLAUDS H. BENNETT. Genl. Mgr. cSttatjjotd "A fire, a book, and thou beside me TO COLONEL PAUL JONES, no evening was happier than one spent with these three old friends: a crackling fire, a well loved book, and a drink made with the mellow whiskey that bore his name Paul Jones Whiskey! Tonight, as you draw your own easy chair before the fire, let this namesake and comrade of the old Colonel join the circle.

One sip of its full flavored richness will tell you that here is a real old fashioned American whiskey. And it is! The Paul Jones of today is made by the direct descendants of the old ColoneL And it's made the way he made it by the slow, costly old fashioned method. An All American Whiskey Paul Jones Rye is a blend of straight rye whiskies. Every drop has the richness that comes from Maryland limestone water. Yet Paul Jones is reasonably priced.

In your club, restaurant or hotel, ask that your drinks be mixed with Paul Jones Whiskey. Instantly you'll notice the difference in bouquet, in flavor and smoothness. Or get a bottle at your liquor store. You'll know it's real Rye because the label says so! Frankfort Distilleries of Kentucky and Maryland America's Largest Independent Distillers PAUL JONES Pints Code No. 86 $1.40 Quarts.Code No.

85 $2.75 "IRVlIt S. COBB'S own KECIPK BOOK," the lut word from the great good drink fancier himself $100 worth of humor for a dime. Send lOi in stamps for your copy to Frankfort Diitiller ies. Dept. Mijo Louiirilla, Ky.

91 Paul Jones Rye. mm TN I lam ar I hlif Safity to Ike TrmmkhH Fact JBLENDOFJLL STRJIGHT KY WHISKIES FAMOUS SINCE 1865 TWO OTHER FINE FRANKFORT WHISKIES FOUR ROSES LUCKY 'STAR 'I.

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About Harrisburg Telegraph Archive

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