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The Gazette and Daily du lieu suivant : York, Pennsylvania • Page 6

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York, Pennsylvania
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6
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1 of THE GAZETTE AND DAILY, YORK, FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 25, 1934. The Gazette and Daily Published daily except Sunday at 31-35 East Allen C. Wiest, President; S. A. King Street, York, a by the York Gazette man, Secretary: J.

W. Gitt, Editor and arer: Bernard Elsewer, Managing Editor. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for Lu republication of any news dispatches credited "and not otherwise credited to this paper, also the local published herein. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By City and Suburban Carriers Per Week 10c One Year, in Six Months, in $2.50 By Mail One Year, In advance .84.00 Three Months. in advance $1.00 Outside of Verk City Six One Year, Months.

in dad $2.50 York Office Howland Howland, Park Avenue Chicago Office Hewland Howland, $60 N. Michigan Ave. Entered at Postoffice at York an class Mail Matter. The Gazette and Daily does not accept advertising the honesty or reliability of which it has any reason to doubt. Readers of The Gazette and Daily will confer a favor if will promptly report to this office any failure on the part of an advertiser to make good 3 any tion contained in an advertisement which appeared in The Gazette and Daily.

FINLAND'S GOOD CREDIT The people of Finland -which we Americans are too prone to regard as frozen up three-quarters of the time -are a hard -headed, keen -minded, purposeful race. Ever since the World war they have known what they wanted to do, and have done it in first -class style. This determination fits exactly with their payment to the United States of their war debt, on the dot and dollar for dollar. And now Finland is reaping her reward. She is certainly in the "most favored nation" class with the United States.

An official at Washington who has lived for some time in the country that believes in meeting her debts, and knows more about her than other man at the capital, had this to say the other day: "There are three good reasons, all hard business reasons, why Finland has not allowed her war debt to the United States to go into default even though all other foreign debtors have defaulted or made only partial payments. The defaulting countries, or those making only partial payments, now face exclusion from the American money market and other retribu- tions, while Finland enjoys a favored place. "Reason number one for Finland's debt policy is that she has done most of her external borrowing in the United States and wants to keep this channel of funds open. Reason number two is that she sells more tol America than she buys from America, thus accumulating dollars with which to make her payments. Reason number three is she wants a good credit standing so that she can convert some of her present bonds into new bonds bearing a lower rate of interest." Of course, if we want to call this self- interest, we may do so; but why have not the larger nations shown a little of that sort of thing? That her debt is small in comparison with those of the other nations is true; but comparing the wealth of Finland with that of England or France, she is doing as well as England and a great deal better than France-which isn't doing anything.

Finland is a land where the arts and science and music flourish. It is a great little country, and we believe that its scrupulous regard for its obligations will make countless friends and better acquaintance in this country. -Boston Post. COVERT MODERATOR OF PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Cleveland, 0., May 24, William Chalmers Covert of Philadelphia, general secretary of the Presbyterian Board of Christian Education, today was elected moderator of the Presbyterian church at the general assembly here. Two ballots were required reach the decision.

Rev. Herbert Booth Smith of Los Angeles and Rev. James C. McConnell of Upper Darby, were the other candidates for the office. HAY MOST VALUABLE CROP, IN STATE IN 1933 to The Gazette and Daily) Harrisburg, May was the most valuable field crop grown in Pennsylvania last year, with corn taking second place, according to the state Department of Agriculture.

The total value of the hay crop was estimated at $32,600,000, or about one -fourth of the value of all farm crops grown in the commonwealth. Since most of the hay is fed to livestock on farms where produced, direct cash income from hay is less than that from many other farm enterprises. Pennsylvania is one of the seven greatest hay producing states, the crop last year amounting to 3,107,000 tons. In value of hay, Pennsylvania outranks all but two other states. A significant fact is that southeastern Pennsylvania was the birthplace of the American hay industry, since farmers in that area were the first to cultivate timothy.

York county ranked sixth in hay production in the state in 1933. The twenty leading hay growing counties were: Bradford, Lancaster, Tioga, Susquehanna, Crawford, York, Erie, Chester, Westmoreland, Wayne, Berks, Washington, Mercer, Butler, Somerset, Franklin, Bucks, Indiana, Potter and Lycoming. For saving a boy from a fire, 69- year -old Mrs. E. Sherringham has been honored and rewarded in Shoreditch, England.

DEATHS AND BURIALS Mre. Mary Peeling Gallatin The funeral of Mrs. Mary Peeling Gallatin, widow of Samuel E. Gallatin, who died Monday at her residence, 102 East King street, was held at 9:30 o'clock yesterday morning at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Edward Smith, 309 East Cottage place.

G. Neely, pastor of Christ church, officiated. The pallbearers were Maurice Gallatin, Paul Smith, Earl Smith, Clarence Smith, John G. Enders and 'Walter Snyder. Interment was made in Proepect Hill cemetery, Mrs.

Ida Hoffman 'The funeral of Mrs. Ida Hoffman. who died Monday, was held at o'clock yesterday afternoon at her residence, 552 Salem avenue. Rev. Clarence J.

Yoder, pastor of St. Paul's' United Evangelical church, officiated. The pallbearers were George, Ahrens Schaale, William Shanabrook. and Carlton Kagen. Interment was made in Greenmount cemetery.

Mrs. Russell E. Long The funeral of Mre. Bernice M. Long.

wife of Russell E. Long, who died at her home, 660 West Market street, on Monday afternoon. was held at o'clock yesterday afternoon in the C. A. Strack Memorial chapel, George and Princess streets.

Rev. Dr. J. B. Baker, pastor Matthew'e Lutheran church, officiated.

The pallbearers were, George Kindig, Charles C. White, Merrill C. Briggs, Clarence I. Strickler, Spangler W. Graby and James Barnes.

Interment was made in Greenmount cemetery. Dr. Charles W. Eisenhower The funeral of Dr. Charles W.

Eisenhower, who died on Monday a morning. wae held at 3 o'clock yesterday afternoon from his home, 211 South George street. The service was in charge of Rev. 'J. Kern McKee.

The active pallbearers were Dr. L. S. Weaver, Dr. E.

H. Smyser, Dr. John F. Bacon, Dr. Francis R.

Wise, Dr. S. Ira McDowell and Dr. Charles May, representing the York County Medical society of which he wae a past- -president, and Oscar and Curtis Mehring, representing Zion Reformed congregation, of which the deceased was a member. The honorary pallbearers were the following: Dr.

George Holtzapple, J. H. Comrce, Dr. J. F.

Wood. Dr. W. H. Treible, Dr.

J. Frank Small, Dr. J. F. Klinedinst, Dr.

H. H. Lecrone, of the York County Medical Society and Harry W. Dietz and D. W.

Gerber representing Zion congregation. The ritual of the Masonic fraternity was conducted at the graveside. The body was taken by the W. J. Boll company, funeral directors.

to Shilch cemetery where interment was made. H. Spencer Seigman H. Spencer Seigman, n. fifty -five years old.

died at 11:40 o'clock terday morning at his residence, 512 West Philadelphia street. The deceased is survived by his wife, Nettie Seigman: two children, Mrs. Eli S. Keeney, Bedford Valley, and William H. Seigman, Chicago, five brothers one sister, John H.

Seigman, Glen Rock; Stephen F. Seigman, Yorkshire; Clinton S. Seigman, York R. D. 1: Clarence E.

Seigman, and Charles D. Seigman. York, and Mrs. George W. Dietz.

York. Mr. Seigman was a member of the First Church of the Brethren, and a deacon of that congregation. The funeral will be held on Monday, with brief services at his residence at 1:30 p. and further services at the First Church of the Brethren.

Interment will be made in Greenmount cemetery. GASOLINE RATES IN VARIOUS STATES Washington, D. May federal gasoline tax of one gallon expired January 1, 1934, per but the federal tax of one cent remains, and there are seven different state tax rate this year. Here's a table showing gasoline tax rates in each state. Add one cent for the federal tax.

Tax rates are given in cents per gallon: 2c-Connecticut, District of Columbia, Missouri, Rhode Island 3c-California, Delaware, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Jersey, York, North Dakota, Pennsylvania. 4c-Indiana, Maine, Maryland, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, Vermont, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Wyoming. 5c Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Kentucky, Louisiana, Montana, Oregon. New Mexico, Virginia, Washington. 6c-Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, 7c-Florida, Tennessee.

ESKIMO DEAD GIVEN ARTIFICIAL EYES (By Science Service) Philadelphia, May artificial eyes of bone and false faces of clay were fashioned by prehistoric Eskimos of southwestern Alaska for the dead. These trappings of death have been discovered at Kachemak Bay by Dr. Frederica de Laguna the University of Pennsylvania museum. The death masks were unearthed in the grave of a man and a young child about five years old, Dr. de Laguna reported.

There were also two extra skulls, mysteriously enough, in the grave. These were probably war trophies. The facial bones of the man and of the trophy skulls were covered with two, clay, which originally was dubtless shaped in the natural outline of forehead, cheeks, nose and chin. The bone eyes were fitted in place. These are the first clay death masks discovered in Eskimo country.

The belong to an era before the coming of the Russians to Alaska, in 1741. ADMIRAL KALBFUS HEADS NAVAL COLLEGE Washington, May 23 appointment of Rear Admiral Edward C. Kalbfus, commander of destroyers of the battle force of the United States fleet, as president of the Naval War college, at Newport, R. was announced today by Secretary Swanson. Wild horses, thousands of which room Australia's bush, are being captured and tamed, and are proving good workers.

Around The TOWN Good morning! Don't forget the Community Safety Meeting at the William Penn Senior High school auditorium this evenig, starting at o'clock. Addison Goodfellow will take the leading part in a play to be presented. No admission charge. Everybody welcome. Come one, come all.

The Gazette and Daily extends congratulations to Miss Rosana Ebaugh, city hall stenographer, on the occasion of her birthday anniversary, which occurred yesterday. The appreciation of coffee as beverage in Europe dates from the 17th century, "Coffee houses" were soon instituted, the Arst being opened in Constantinople and Venice. In London coffee houses date from 1652 when Pasqua Rosee, a Greek, opened one in St. Michael's Alley, Cornhill. He was the first to teach the method of roasting coffee, His coffee house was burned down in the Great Fire of London in 1666.

Coffee houses soon became popular and the role played by them in the social and literary life of the 17th and 18th centuries is well known. Charles II endeavored to suppress them on the ground that they were centres of political agitation. The Skyline Drive in the Shenandoah National park will not be open to the public this year, although about 35 miles of ite 70 miles of roadway are completed. The finish. to Run.

The failure to ed stretch, runs from Thornton Gap open the read for travel is caused by delay in turning over the property rights of the Park to the Federal government. If Dr. Arthur Conan Doyle were still with u6, he would be celebrating only his 75th birthday anniver. sary. The famous novelist passed away in 1930, following his controversy with Houdini as to the realities of spiritualism.

But Sherlock Holmes, whom Dr. Doyle created out of his own brain (with some ideas of his college structors), continues on. Dr. Doyle left Sherlock Holmes raising bees in an English villageand there Holmes must continue so long as detective stories are readunless some later novelist takes it upon himself to kill him off. You may recall that at least one other novelist did borrow Sherlock Holmes for one of hie own stories.

See Mark Twain's "Double- Barrelled Detective Story." Sherlock Holmes is now about 70 years old. He first appeare print in 1887. in "A Study in Sca it." and was then supposed to be between 20 and 30 years old. You've heard of the old Yankee custom of planting many of the more hardy variety of seeds during the week of bright moonlight which precedes the "full" of the Planter's Moon. This is the week referred to.

In more modern times, the wise younger generation has laughed at the notion of of moon" having any influence on the thrifty germination of seeds. Now it's the turn of the old Yankee farmer to laugh. Some of after long and careful experimentation, are admitting that perhaps there's something to it, after all. (By The Old Grad.) When round, compact masses of ice fall from the clouds to the earth, usually accompanied by rain, that's hail. A reader wanted to know all about hail several days ago SO we consulted the pages of Funk and Wagnalls new standard encyclopedia, and here's what we found: "When the compact masses of ice are large as one-quarter of an inch in diameter, or larger, they are often spoken of as hailstones; when they are quite small and perhaps accompained by rain, they are known as sleet.

Hailstones occur of all sizes from one-quarter of an inch in diameter up to three inches in diameter; usually comparatively few hailstones fall at one place, but cases are recorded in which the ground (has been covered to a depth of several inches and all vegetable life destroyed. "Frequently the larger stones are irregular aggregations of masses of ice: of course, however, such masses may have their shapes greatly altered when they strike the ground. The largest stones whose records are trustworthy have not exceeded two pounds in weight. Stones of two and three inches in diameter, weighing twelve to sixteen ounces, occur annually in Europe, India, and America, A hailetorm is usually characterized by the formation of very heavy cumulus clouds. strong surface winds, considerable lightning and thunder, and heavy rain.

It appears possible that hail may be formed either in the front of an advancing cool wave or in connection with a local thunderstorm or tornado. The former gives us the smaller hail and sleet; the latter, the larger and destructive hailstones. The method of formation of hail, however, is as yet but little understood. It eeems to be demonstrated that when a rising mass of air cools to the dew point, and below, it begins to form a cloud: as it continues to ascend, it cools to a temperature where hail is formed or rather hail and rain simultaneously. Higher than this it cools to a temperature where snow is formed.

"The ordinary hail may be formed in the second region, but the large hailstones of complex structure must have been carried up and down many times from the rain region to the snow region forward and backward until they become too large and heavy to be held up any longer. In accordance with these ideas it is found that a very large proportion of the destructive hail occurs tween 10 a.m. and 4 p.m., and a very small proportion between 6 p. m. and 8 a.m." Rents in Shanghai, China, are soaring.

NIGHT CLUB Morning Suery She scanned the tables eagerly. "Can't you point out one bootleg. ger, Bob?" "Or gang boss in a boiled shirt and the guileless face of philanthropiet?" The man's voice deepened. 'Don't forget our pact. It 1 show you this, you know the rest." Their Angers touched.

Flame flowed between them. "My last fling," she jeered softly, "before my man begins to assert himeelf." He jerked her chair in swiftly as.a figure lurched past. "Gosh!" said Ellen. "He was sut. Aciently stewed.

I bet they shelled all his silver dollars." The orchestra wove its slumbrous spell so that she forgot her food. "See that gray- -haired man back to us, Bob? Look at the woman he's with. What a gown!" "He's old enough to be her father." The young fellow's jaw tightened. "No fool like an old fool." Ellen laughed with worldly wisdom. "She's digging for all she's worth.

She's got just the baby-doll face." "Time, young lady, if I'm not to outrage your esteemed parente." They left reluctantly, pausing in the doorway for a last glance. The elderly man of their discussion, hair disordered above his flushed face, regarded them absently. With sly significance his hand slid across the table to the bare white arm of the "baby- -doll." Ellen uttered a strangled cry. Bob caught her quickly as 'she swayed. Speeding over the dark road in the little roadster he stared ahead silently till the muffled sob sounded near his shoulder.

"Darling!" His arm tightened around her. "He didn't know ue?" "No." She said good night swiftly and slipped up to her room. Mary Helton, opening the door softly, tensed she saw her daughter's stony face. "Ellen." "Please, mother, I'm all in." The woman took one of her cold hands, then caught the girl to her breast as the elender form was racked with sobs. "What did he do?" "It wasn't Bob?" Ellen sat up, indignation mastering her grief.

At the accusation in her eyes. the mother's dilated. "You don't mean-" Ellen poured out story in a rush of revulsion. "That's all. didn't want you to know.

I suppose some men are like that, but not my father." Her eyes shaded with horror. -You knew!" "Yes." "And you let him stay here!" "You don't understand." "If Bob did that to me, I'd kill him." The mother gripped the newel of the bed. "Why did we have to 80 there so we'd see him? If he could be like that, my own daddy, don't you It spoils everything! I think life's rotten!" Mary Helton's words came low and hurried. "You're wrong, Ellen. You muen't feel that can't judge by a single incident.

Your father wasn't himself. He'll come back-" "And you'll take him?" Mary's eyes gleamed. 'I love him. This is different. Perhaps he can't help it.

Why, your father and I have lived together 20 years, Ellen; you can't' destroy that in one a night." "Oh, God," she prayed, "make her I believe." Ellen's eyes bored her. "I always thought you loved each other 60. How could he?" "Vile. "This is All different. Men Even are-." of them.

said, 'He doesn't know what he's As if there were some excuse!" She plucked the slender band from her Anger. "That's all that it means! I'm glad I found out in time. "It's no use," she interrupted 1 her mother, "I never knew any man I admired ae much as father. I'll never trust another." Her tired mouth lifted. "Poor mother! You tried to hide it all this time." Mary turned away.

'I don't want your pity, Ellen. You must know. though, that this will pass. He will come back to me. Love is stronger her voice died.

In the early morning stillness girl saw her mother's eyes in the mirror, dark and unfathomable. "Oh, mother!" ehe cried, brokenly, "Bob and I were so happy. It woe like a dream. Tell me this isn't true!" It's not the whole truth, Ellen. It's only tawdry corner you've pulled out to the sun." Suddenly she enclosed Ellen's face in two tender hands.

"Go to bed now, dear. Every. thing will seem different tomorrow. This has nothing to do you you and Bob. If two people love each other enough they can make a true marriage." Ellen clung to her.

"If I could only be eure. I want to believe." She searched Mary's face. "You didn't fail me." Her voice lifted. "You kept your love in spite of everything. That means something!" "You'll And it's real." Mary slipped the little gold symbol back to its right place and kissed Ellen goodnight.

In the act of bolting her own door she sagged with overwhelming wearinese, On the dreseing table the precisely portrait of her and stared baldly. band, balancing, the line of bottles Mary sat before it and unlocked tiny drawer. The candle flame showed her face leaning above the trait of the other man in a long stillness. Then she burned it in an empty powder tin, adding pile of letters one by Post. BEAUTY CHATS By EDNA KENT FORBES Miss Forbes writes from England of the latest in thick, carefully chosen tinted cosmake netics to make one look delicately und beautifully enamelled.

THE NEW ENAMELLED LOVELINESS The Arst of the London beauty shops that I visited, told me that the new complexion finish for spring and summer, 1934, is the dull enamel Anish. This means that the skin is given a lot of treatments, with special lotions and powders, and emerges with a dull surface, as though one had applied lustreless enamel. The result is artificial looking, but certainly most attractive, and of course, it is reserved for evenings and the rather exotic evening gowns one wears now. The first thing is a skin so clean and so refreshed that it glows deliciously-and looks so well it seems shame to change its natural beauty. Except that natural beauty goes with tweeds these days, rather than evening crepes and silks! I watched 1 mannequin from a famous fashion house being made up--a lovely girl.

with a titled father and no money, who earned an excellent salary rather pleasantly this way. First the skin was cleansed with oil, hot wet packs, and quick rubbing. Then cold wet packs, ice, slapping with a patter. Then a foundation cream, rather thick, and ivory in color. In fact, as the girl had acquired a touch of windburn over the weekend, her skin was toned down to evening shades with a second thin layer of palest green foundation cream.

Then ivory powder, blending to peach powder over the cheeks, but the pale green evening powder over the rest TIMELY WARNING TO HAY FEVERITES (By Science Service) Chicago, May feverites owe their suffering to the ragweed pollens should keep away from insecticides made from pryethrum, warns Dr. Samuel M. Feinberg of Chicago. Among the common household insecticides of this kind he mentioned Black Flag and Flit. Out of 225 persons who start sneezing when the late summer breezes blow ragweed pollen about, 104 were sensitive to commercial pyrethrum, akin tests showed.

Insect powders and sprays containing pyrethrum may bring on attacks of hay fever in these persons outside the ragweed season, Dr. Feinberg reported to the American association. Pyrethrum flowers are distantly related to the ragweeds. Commercial pyrethrum seems to be capable of making trouble for the unwary in three different ways, Dr. Feinberg pointed out.

One part of it, which is the agent that kills insects, is poisonous when taken by mouth. Another part may cause skin irritation in persons handling it, gardeners or those working in the factories where the insect powders and sprays are made. The third part is what scientist call an allergen and this is HEALTH mittee (Furnished of the by Board the Educational ComMedical Boelety of the of State Trustees of of the sylvania, of waled the York County Why did that middle-aged man jump off the bridge?" Post mortem examination showed he had an advanced cancer of the stomach, and obviously suffered intolerable pain. Did the man in the gas-Alled room die by Post examination showed he had internal hemorrhages and injuries, suggesting foul play. woman, past middle -age, who That was found imprisoned inside her wrecked car in the river, had no WAter in her lungs.

Port mortem examination showed a blood clot in one of the coronary arteries of her heart muscle, and this fonn of sudden death caused her cart to go into the river. There are many deaths for which there is no exact proof of cause without an autopsy. Many people dislike the idea post mortem examination on one of their own family. Objections to autopsies are usually purely sentimental and are often based on ignorance of the true character of the examination or of its motives. forth a and public, pictures, through ie becoming press, plat- more and more instructed on medical matters.

Medical science is no longer shrouded in For that reason, families of the deceased are more willing to have post mortem examinations perfonned. They derive a certain amount of comfort from the knowledge gained by the physicians as to the immediate cause of death. And it is also of great importance to know just what diseases are present in a family to threaten other members, so that preventive measures may be taken. Honest, efficient physicians desire poet mortem examinations in as many as possible of the deaths occuring in patients under their care. The greatest medical men of all time have been those who have followed their unsuccessful cases through to the thorough investigation after death of the various dicease conditions present, and who have profted by failures that they have learned how to avoid the same pitfalls again.

With each such case they grow in knowledge, experience and efficiency, and can return to other members of the family as well as to other patients, with more and more intelligent care. By the favorable consideration of this most important, but usually shunned subject, much can be contributed to physicians' knowledge and to the building of medical science beneficial to those who will live after us. Do You Know The Chester county hospital, West Chester, reports autopsies on 34 per cent of its total deathe in the past ten months, a high percentage of autopsies, suggesting an alert local medical profession. The largest private clinic in this country obtains from -eight to ninety per cent of autopsies in ite deaths and this is one of the factors that have contributed to its phenomenal growth and popularity, its reputation for honest, conscientious treatment, and modern medical progress. MILK KEEPS BETTER AFTER EXPOSURE TO ULTRAVIOLET RAYS (By Science Service) Madison, May that has been irradiated by exposure to ultraviolet light keeps longer, has a slightly lower bacterial count and lower acidity than has ordinary whole milk.

This added keeping quality of irradiated milk has been proved through research work done during the past year by K. G. Weckel and C. Jackson of the University of Wisconsin. Hey They found that at refrigerator temperatures irradiated milk will keep several hours longer than whole milk not so treated.

This added keeping quality is partly due, the experiments show, to a very slight reduction in the development of acidity of the milk after irradiation. Irradiation also causes a slight reduction in the bacterial count in milk, but the process has no specific effect cn some of the most important milk bacteria, namely the lactic acid, gasforming and coagulating types. This seeming contradiction is explained by the fact that exposure of the milk to the ultra- -violet light is for such a short period, and that the opaqueness of the milk furnishes a protective Alm against the light rays. In high quality milk of low bacterial count the percentage of bacterial reduction by irradiation was found to be very low. But in poorer quality milk, high in bacteria, the reduction was somewhat higher.

In neither case was the bacterial reduction great enough to indicate that the reduced acidity in irradiated milk was laused by the smaller number of bacteria. Many large and small milk planta have during the past year installed machinery to produce irradilated whole milk. MUCH POLLE. CARRIED BY LUST STORM (By Science Service) North Chicago, May pollen made up a really respectable percentage of the dust that fell in the Chicago area during the recent record breaking dust stonn, 0. C.

Durham, chief botanist of the Abbott laboratories here, discovered when he examined collecting slides exposed during the disturbance. Mr. Durham's calculations indicate a fall of some 34.7 pounds of dirt per square mile, and during the came time a fall of about 3.4 tons of oak pollen per square mile. PEOPLE WHO ARE ILL Mrs. Herman Lauber, 746 Edison street, is confined to bed as a result of a stroke, suffered on Wednesday.

One Hundred Years Ago HENRY pointed to STROMAN, be constable was ep- and clerk of the market of the Borough of York for the ensuing year. Delegates were chosen by the citizens of Pennsylvania to attend a convention composed of persons opposed to executive usurpation and abuse, to be held at the Harrieburg court house on Thursday, May 27, 1834. The men chosen to represent York county were Dr. William Mellvain, John Gardner, Col. Eichelberger, H.

Y. Slaymaker, Matthias Forney, Moses Rankin, Philip Smyser, Dr. Robert Nebbinger. Delegates from Lancaster county were George Louis Mayer, William Wright, John Hertzler, Thomas G. Henderson, John F.

Long, Alexander Patterson, James Hopkins, James Porter, Henry Longenecker, Anthony Roberts, James Whitehill, S. O. Jacobe, Jacob Kirk. Codorus' Navigation 6 THAT unmeasurable benefitwhat new scenes of business, may not the 'Inhabitant of the Borough of York anticipate from this new source of revenue AIready have they commenced, and the time which hes elapsed since its compietion does not amount to months," states an article in the Pennsylvania Republican under date of May 28, 1534. The article further etates, "The business 12 Adams and Franklin counties in Pennsylvania, and Frederick, Washington and Baltimore counties in Maryland must ultimately pass through the Codorus Navigation system.

The time is not far taut when the Borough York must, in the natural course of events, become the center of business for all of those counties. Nearly, or quite all the lumber and coal used in these counties now is carried thorugh this pace. The cost of carriage by land from the river York is from two and one -halt to three dollars per ic.ad, whilst through the Codorus system it is but thirty cents per ton and will soon be lower than that. With such a proposition in view, what pleasurable anticipations of increasing prosperity and importance may we not indulge? If the Baltimoreans could understand this, they would suffer no time to be lost in completing the railrond from Baltimore to York, for by it they would profit more than any other people. They would connect themselves through the medium of the Codorus system with the Susquehanna and commercial points of Fennsylvania and thus command quite as much, if not more, of the internal trade of Pennsylvania than the city of Philadelphia.

CHURCH AID MARKS SILVER ANNIVERSARY The twenty-fifth birthday anniversary of the Church Aid society of St. Paul's Lutheran church was celebrated with a program and luncheon last evening in the parish house. The president of the society, Mrs. Spayd, was chairman of the business meeting. The program was in charge of group Mrs.

George W. Sample, chairman. Games and contests were enjoyed. Mrs. C.

E. Walter gave an interesting review of minutes of the society's past meetirgs. Mrs. Louise Spahr Dean entertained with vocal solos. oranges and lilies of the valley formed the floral decorations.

Those present were: Mrs. Charles Spayd, Mrs. Eugene F. Weiser, Galen Ulsh, Mrs. Henry Kindig, Mrs.

John Lafean, Mrs. J. C. Eisenhart, Mrs. C.

Elmer Trostel, Mrs. Joseph Wayne, Mrs. Clarence Eisenhart, Mrs. P. B.

Spahr, Mrs. George W. Sample, Mrs. Clark Rife, Mrs. Charles Linthurst, Mrs.

C. E. Walters, Mrs. Felix S. Bentzel, Mrs.

Charles Anstadt, Mrs. Reah Stough, Mrs. John Senft, Mrs. Earl Gardner, Mrs. Edward Hennessey, Mrs.

John Burgard, Mrs. Edward S. Frey, Mrs. Mary Erwin, Mrs. Philip Dean, Mrs.

Herman Sauppee, Misses Anna Rodenhouse, Bertha Small, Ella Deininger, Margie Straber, Catherine De Rouse, Martha Spayd and Charles D. Spayd. FAITHFUL FOLLOWERS MISS ECKER'S GUESTS The Faithful Followers class of St. Matthew's Lutheran church was entertained last night at the home of Miss Mildred Ecker, 124 North Beaver street. The class recently sponsored an attendance campaign and it was divided into two groups.

The losing team was the host to the winning team. A hike was scheduled to take place, but owing to the rainy weather, a party was held instead. Those attending were: Miss Ecker, Ruth Bear, Ruth Bare, Alice Rosenzweig, Elma Rosenzweig, Florence Bietsch, Catherine Mackle and Dorothy Spangler. MEMORIAL SERVICE AT GRACE LUTHERAN A service in memory of departed members of Grace Lutheran church will be held at 9:45 o'clock on Sunday morning. The program is being arranged by members of Sunday school class No.

3, William Daywalt, teacher. George Froeber will offer selections on the arion harp zither. The newly organized male chorus of the Sunday school will sing. SERVICES TONIGHT AT GOOD SHEPHERD Preparatory services will be conducted at 7:45 o'clock tonight in Good Shepherd Lutheran church, Rev. C.

J. Goette, pastor. Holy communion will be observed at the 10 o'clock English service, Sunday morning. Vesper services for the summer will be concluded with an evening of song program this Sunday evening at 7 o'clock. The program will include hymns identified with events on the church calendar.

190 APPLICATIONS FOR BEER LICENSE One hundred and ninety applications for licenses to sell beer during the next fiscal year beginning on June 1 have been fled with County Treasurer Henry Rebert. These included applications for wholesalers, retailers and clubs. Those the treasurer decides to grant will he ready by next Thursday afternoon. What a picture have we here outg'retched before us! What treasures are lost every day because of the supineness of the people." Arks of boards and shingles were continuing to arrive daily. THE 11th inst.

by Rev. H. Doll, Lloyd Low to Elizabeth Mason, both of Shrewsbury. On the 15th by Rev. Park, John Payne, of York county, to Ellen Bosley, Hartford county, Maryland.

The following article is reprinted from the May 28th, 1834 issue of the Pennsylvania Republican: Leisure Hours WHAT way can your leisure hours be filled up so as to turn to greater account, than in profitable reading? Young men, do you know how much is depending on the manner in which you spend your leisure hours? Ask the confirmed inebriate where he first turned aside from the path of sobriety, and if his memory he not gone with his reason, he will dwell with painful recollection upon the hours of leisure he once enjoyed. Ask the victim of crime when he took the first step in his reckless career, and he will remind you of the leisure hours ho spent in his youth. On the other hand, do you see a man who once in the humble walks of life, now moving in a sphere of external usefulness? He husbanded his leisure hours. Multitudes whose names look tright in the constellation of worthiness, owe their elevation to the assiduity with which they improved the interval of leisure they enjoyed from pursuit of the plough, the awl or the anvil. They substituted the study of useful books for those trifling amusements which insidiously led the unwary into the paths of, profligacy and vice.

G. BRADFORD announced that E. he was about to re -commence practice of law. He chose York county as his place of residence because of the unequivocal evidence of public favor and confidence which was bestowed on him when president judge of the district court of York county, which office he held for five years. President Jackson nominated Mahlon Dickerson of New Jersey as minister tc Russia anad Andrew Stevenson, speaker of the House of Representatives, as minister to England.

The Senate had not yet acted on the nominations. The Gettysburg Guards, under Captain Clarkson, were to stage a parade in York on May 30, 1834. The York troops planned to meet them on their way to this place and escort them to the borough. INSTITUTE NAMES TETER PRESIDENT Pastor Of St. Paul's Head Of Evangelical Christian Education Group TWO GUEST SPEAKERS BEAUTY TYPE of the face--this for the second powdering.

It makes the spin transparent, but not unhealthy looking. A rather brilliant red on the lips, and the nails were done the exact shade of the lips-these things must match these days, or one looks dowdy! The girl's blue eyes were made up with pale violet color shadow and the same violet tinted her lashes. Under artificial light, she looked ravishing. Mrs. H.

red streak in your hair must have been the result of some chemical action that took place after you applied the tonic to your scalp. Your hair had been bleached and had changed its character, which is the reason for the tonic affecting the color. The fault was not in the tonic at all, nor even in the bleach, but they should not have been combined. If you can spare the hair in the streaked portion, have it out out, or down to the smallest length posand brush it into the rest of sible. the hair to make it less noticeable.

Later when the color returns, you could make use of this shortened portion and form it into ringlets. Try plain sweet almond on your skin instead of cream, as it may the whiteheads and clear penetrate them out of the pores. Tomorrew-Some Good Work All requests for beauty information desired by Edna Kent Forbes' column followers must be accompanied by a fully self -addressed. stamped lope (s.a.s.e.) and two cents in stamps to cover cost of printing and handline. For the Illustrated pamphlet.

"Beauty," ten cents in stamps with fully s.a.s.e. must be enclosed. Ad. dress Miss Forbes in care of this paper. the part that can produce an attack of hay fever in a sensitive person who is unlucky enough to get some of it up his nose.

THERE'S RADIUM IN RAIN, BUT NOT MUCH (By Science Service) Washington, May brings down radium, washing it out of the air, G. R. Wait and A. G. McNish, of the Carnegie Institution of Washington.

told members of the American Physical society meeting here. But you need not go out with a bucket tr.e next time it rains, for the is exceedingly minute--to be measured only with delicate ments that tell of the electrified or lonised state of the air. With such an instrument in the open near their laboratory, the two physicists found that as the rain began the ionization of the air increased rapidly, to fall off again when it stopped. The decrease with time was of such a character, they said, "as to be explainable by assuming that decay of radium, principally radium and radium in equilibrium with it, are carried to the earth's surface by the rain. Belgium will simplity its tax lawe.

Rev. M. A. Teter, pastor of St. Paul's Evangelical church, was elected president of the Christian Education institute at the annual meeting held yesterday in St.

Paul's church. Other officers elected are: Vice president, Rev. A. C. Ruth, Hanover; secretary, Marie Keeports, Hed Lion; assistant, Lillian Cooper, Bethany church, this city, and treasurer, William Shewitt, Grace church, this city, Election took place at the closing session last night.

A rising vote of thanks was given the retiring officers: President, Rev. J. W. Krecker, Christ church, this city; secretary, Mildred Keeney; assistant, Elesta Kreidier, and treasurer, Robert Harbaugh. Rev.

Mr. Teter, the new president, was formerly vice president. The officers will serve for two years, About four hundred persons attendea the closing service. The speaker was Rev. Dr.

E. E. Stauffer, of Lebanon, a district superintendent of the East Pennsylvania conference. He spoke on the subject, "Modern Youth and the Church." Rev. Dr.

W. E. Peffley, Harrisburg, president of the Central Pennsylvania conference board of religious education, conducted devotions. He also led a round table conference during the afternoon on the theme, "Christian Eucation Problems of the Local Church." Rev. C.

W. Guinter, Wrightsville, conducted the afternoon devotional service. A dinner preceded the evening session. The attendance banner was awarded Zion church, West York, for having the largest percentage of its enrollment present. Fourteen congregations in the city and county were represented.

The choir of the host church sang "Make a Joyful Noise Unto the Lord" (Hershey). Selections were sung by a trio from Red Lion composed of Miss Helen Gabriel, Mrs. Pius Olewiler and Mrs. Henry Herman. The accompanist was Miss Esther Holtzinger.

GRACE EVANGELICAL WILL HONOR 60 DEAD Grace Evangelical church, Broad street, Rev. H. D. Hill, pastor, will hold a combined memorial service on Sunday morning memory of sixty members of the congregation who died since the church was organized in 1894. The secvice will be conducted by class No.

18, D. O. Myers, teacher, and will start at 9:30 o'clock. American and Christian silk flags will be unveiled and dedicated. They are the gifts of the Sunday school.

Dr. J. D. Shortess, Lemoyne, will speak at the service, BIBLE STUDY CLASS WILL MEET TONIGHT William Davidson, of Harrisburg, and Rev. O.

M. Kraybill, pastor of the West Poplar Street Church of Cod, will have charge of the weekly meeting of the School of the Bible at 7:30 o'clock tonight. The session will be held in rooms 217 and 218 of the M. C. A..

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