10 - ' Greatest Money Saving Opportunity Ever! A CASH RAISING SALE 1m A Backward Season Left Us With Heavy Stocks and Makes It Jpw JjjLSALE STARTS FRIDAY, JAN. 16th, SIMSS MR) fall ItoTkoiMen's, Women's & Children's Clothing ISE[ Mm AT POSITIVELY LESS THAN J| Nothing Charged—These Prices For Cash Only—Come at Oncet! f ! ,: = f | fliß Wc arc Desperate to Raise Money and Therefore These Prices—Our Loss, Your Gain [lt =rl\ No alterations. No goods exchanged, as these prices are less than manufacturer's cost We lose monev bv even, «.l. -..1r. / !i • I 111 it must be done. Bills must be paid and WE NEED THE CASH. Come Friday and Saturday, as those are the best two days of the'sale. I jj |ij |\ 111111 SPECIAL FOR WOMEN Fvfra SlWl'flK SPECIAL FOR MEN 1 I !'! 11 !IM: Don't detay in coming for thoe. TJiey Me priM EIAU (1 jpCUill) Only limited quantities-so we wun you to come / i Ut) 111 i Wmt 1.97 Lingerie Waists, w/m\\\l f Skirts, zE'iB —f-JZ sak Waists, rsr.7.. 2.00 ®? en ' s sko«, sz"™. — l.97 HWAvWr skirts, to SIO.OO. «t «5.5/» Trousers $3.50 to $5.00 1 q** MlljM kmuß ■'ttWl Dresses, JSML- 2.49 Silk Petticoats, 1.97 Sweaters '197 B Dresses, ™T,.Z 3.97 Trimmed Hats, "T.,.. 2.98 Boys' Suits," 1 !97 Women's Suits Women's Coats e, •. n™ 32 WOMEN'S SUITS, c.i 922 WOMEN'S COATS, 0.75 ~ ■ j,, ., Men s ouits Men s Overcoats Sold from sls to $18.50 " Sold from $lO to $12.50 ** fc| _ 34 MEN'S SUITS, 7.49 MEN'S OVERCOATS, £l9 46 WOMEN'S SUITS, 7.49 60 WOMEN'S COATS, 4. 19 .g£||3ivfPßpra Worth $15.00 to $16.50 ' Worth $12.50 and sl4 O' Sold from $18.50 to S2O ' Sold from $13.50 to sls ll W ff| 48 MEN'S SUITS, Q. 49 MEN'S OVERCOATS n49 82 WOMEN'S SUITS, Q. 97 49 WOMEN'S COATS, g.19 I Worth SIB.OO to $20.00 Worth $15.00 and $16.50 ■ " I Sold » high ,S S3O 44WOMEN'VcOATS 049 63 MEN'S SUITS, 1 1.49 MEN'S OVERCOATS, Q. 49 Afewtgi:; to S» S 'B' 49 Worth $ 22 . 5 0 to $ 2 5.00 I 1 . Worth $.8.50 .nd $ 2 0.00 9"" I priced suits also, at practical?/ $25 TO $35 COATS, "fl 0.49 43 MEN'S SUITS, f 0.49 MEN'S OVERC'TS, 1Q 49 £ vour own price. I £ Worth $25.00 to $30.00 «*• O Worth $25.00 to $30.00 *0" r&mer^svs t The New Hat That You Cannot Afford By BEATRICE FAIRFAX i ml°j S .. s " • V,)U can rtallv iirford | It. Why don t you try and see? The colors are so very becoming! j Will they be as pretty as they are now j when you have worn it a time or so? | V ill they be all faded and drabby be- | fore you've half paid for it? And when I ere you groins: to wear it—to the pic ture shows and Sundays—or down town to work? Maybe you looked unusually pretty the day you tried it on, and "any old: hat would have looked just as sweet as that one. Wait a day or so. Honey. Wait a ; oay or so. The collector won't wait! I Once you have taken the hat home not once will he wait. Rain or shine, i fick or well, hot or cold, rent-day or f no rent-day, he'll lie there after his: dollar, and you'll have to have that dollar ready for him or have a scent —and no hat. Monday comes so fast when the col- I lector ie coming- with the day—haven't Sou ever noticed that? Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursdav—why you seem to skip right over the rest of the week, don't you? How about 1 AC|/ HIM Ask your doctor about Ayer's Pills. I 1 Ask him if he advises you to keep this family laxative in the house. He knows the action of these pills, and can wisely advise you. Take them or not, as he directs. Ayer's Pills have been sold for over 60 years. For constipation, biliousness, sick-headache, indigestion, dyspepsia. 12 AI UIICTCDfII CTAJ... . Thcy Y UI « lad| V tell you what relief UGI mUd I CIiULC 1002 V 11 gr,ves from Soro ' rhroat . Bronchitis. ——m # Croup, Stiff Neck. Asthma. Neuralgia !«■ I IINIA.JKI AV Congestion, Pleurisy, Rheumatism! ■Of LUmOd&O ■ Lumbago. Pains and Aches of the It san amazingly quick relief. And £ aC * or Sprains Sore Muscles, It's so seay to use. Ana Bruises. Chilblain*. Frosted Feet. You just rub MUSTEROLE in Inu" < liest (It prevents Pneu iaif'is gone -t' deli*. I ssst ,rjfsfuxr hospiuu MUSTEROLE is li'jllkllH'il 13 Accept no substitute. clean, white ointment 11 Jll ■]l HLL 111 H !,nn'iv r v <I ™ ÜBtß ' S i ,? NNOT ... 1U 11 I*ULSA\« J■ ■ upply you. send 25c or made with oil of mus IBLMagWJjIB n c to the MUSTER tard. Use it instead o tfflU ;LE Company, Cleve mustard plaster. Will land, Ohio, and we wil! not blister. mall you a jar, postage prepaid. Doctors and nurses use MUBTER- *? r " J - ,T - a well-known De- i OL* recommend „,o J? Dents. home."—Advertisement. Try Telegraph Want Ads. THURSDAY EVENING, I shoes for Fall, and a warm coat —you i wouldn't look sweet in even that lovt of a hat. with a purple nose and blu. ; cheeks, would you? Want to look pretty? Why, of coursi j you do. Why shouldn't you—who doesn't. A girl doesn't have to live in ltiver I side Drive to be human, does she? I'l j warrant you are the prettiest littl< thing in the store. j I can just see you—wide, laughing j eyes, blush rose cheeks, red lips ano ; such a slender little swaying waist why anything would look prettv on j that mass of ripples and curls. Beaux? ,of course you have beaux. What are ; such girls as you for but to have beaux —lots of 'em—a line from the Battery ;to the Bronx. • i If you want them and no harm done, j dress as prettily as you can, be as gay !as you know how, be good and be sens 'ible, too, and then you'll be really | happy. | Oh! No, all the smart girls aren't j sensible and all the smart girls are not I good either—don't imagine T think they are. Look at then, at the theatre some time, and you can tell that; some ol I them are as pretty as you are and some | are a little prettier; some are good and | some are bad—and some wear clothes that they can't afford, and some j would be pleased to have, half as many sincere friends as you have, little Miss ; Workaday—all kinds—the rich girls just like the poor girls—all kinds. You ; be the good kind, the wise kind, and the I kind who isn't trembling at the sound of every step for fear of the collector. : But still, is so awfully pretty? And do j you long for it so bitterly? Well, then » you work early and late, don't you? j Have just this one tiling that you really want so badly—if for nothing else than Ito And out how well you would have done without it —for oncc. ! Dear little wistful you. I wish I had a milliner's shop. I'd give you the hat jan<l be glad to do it: but maybe you'd better pay for it week by week—your self—and then, do write and tell us how ' it all turned out. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH £ •WMIItimtMItfHMMHVMHriMMHWieiIUaMHMtMMII** ♦ || Broadway || ill Jones pit f i i: 11 From the Play of \<! 1 1 George M. Cohan 11 $1 Bn If XI EDWARD MARSHALL || V | ffiti PWo'.«jr«?kc from Scene* ra A* PUjr | T Copyright, 1913, by C. V/. DUilngbam Company "With my firm, on my recommenda tion." "You'd lose your reputation." "I'll see the guvnor tomorrow. I can get you, probably, five thousand a year to start with." "Five thousand a year? How could I stay here in New York on that? I pay more for this apartment! I owe ten times that much, right now!" "I've fcot twenty thousand dollars of my own. ' I'll lend you that." "I'd never be able to pay it back." "That doesn't make any difference." "Yes, it does," said Broadway stub bornly. "Even though you loaned me enough to pay up all I owe, I'd owe you, wouldn't I? What's the odds whether I'm in debt to you or to the other fellow? I'd never get even with the world that way." "But you mustn't marry her; it Isn't right." "How do you mean?" "Would you do anything so low, and so contemptible, as to marry a woman deliberately for her money?" Broadway shrank a little, then rose In self-defense. "Who says I'm marry ing her for her money?" "You know you don't love her." Broadway answered hotly. Ho felt that he must answer hotly. It was the only thing remaining for him. "I don't know anything of the kind! Now, you see hero; suppose you were in trouble. Wouldn't you love any one who'd come along and help you out of it?" He sighed. "Besides, it's too late now. The engagement's been announced." Wallace was intensely stubborn. He would not have this thing. "Engage ments are broken every day in the week," he argued earnestly. Broadway made a gesture of dissent. "Now, you leave it all to mo." said Wallace soothingly. "I'll have a talk wLh Mrs. Oerard, and I'll guarantee to prove to her that it's all an utter impossibility. Ypu needn't enter into it at all. I'll take the whole thing on my shoulders, and—" Broadway shook his head emphatic ally, although regretfully. "No; there's no use, Bob. I told you I wouldn't lis ten to any argument against it. My mind is quite made up, and that's all there is to it." He pulled a yellow back out of his pocket. "See this? A hundred dollars. That's my bank roll." Wallace went to him with friendly warning. "You'll lose every friend you I ever had in all tbe world!" "No; I won't; people with money never lose their friends." "I know one you'll lose," said Wal lace gravely. "You?" "Yes; unless you tell me within the next 24 hours that you've reconsid ered all this rot, and that you're going to fight things out the way a real man should, I'll never speak to you again!" "Bob!" Broadway actually paled. "That goes; It it getting me any thing—this giving you advice? Will It put a dollar in or out of my pocket whether you marry that old woman or not? You're nothing to me except a friend and a pal; but I don't want to see you do something; you'll regret for all the balance of your life. I'm sorry you're in trouble, and there isn't any thing I won't do to help you. I'll go the limit in everything I've got. But, If you don't giv<; up all idea of that marriage, never expect the friendship of a man who has any decency or self respect. "That's all I've got to say. Now, I'll be going." CHAPTER VI. Broadway hurried to the angry and disgusted man and put his hand upon his arm. He was rather badly funked by this uncompromising attitude. "Walt a minute, Bob," he urged. "Don't go off like that. That was an awful thing you just said to me. I—l had a wild night. Give me a chance to think." "All right," said Wallace, not very graciously. "Go ahead—think! It's about time you began to think." He sank into a chair, his gloomy face regarding Broadway with small favor, his angry fingers tapping on a table top. Broadway was very nervous. Reali zation was becoming vivid of the fact that he had not been wholly admirable in his general course. "Don't you suppose I know It's a shabby thing to do?" he urged. "But, great Scott! look at the fix I'm in!" Wallace made a gesture of negation. It was clear that he refused to brant that anything could excuse his friend's course with the widow. "You're not sore at me, Bob, are you?" Broadway pleaded. "I've said my say. You've heard my opinion." "Do you think everyone will feel that way about It?" "Of course." Broadway was distressed beyond his feeble power of explanation. Pacing up and idown, he moaned: "If it wasn't for those debts! If it wasn't for the bills I owe!" "You don't know the exact amount?" "No." "Why haven't you added them up?" "I haven't had time. I've been—too busy." "Doing what?" "Now, don't give me the third de gree, please! Look here! I'm so nerv ous that I'm trembling like a leaf." "Where are those bills?" "In the little room, in my desk." "Would you mind If I looked them over?" "No; I wish you would. You will do that, Bob?" He was as eager as if examination of them by his business headed friend would mark each one receipted. "But, say. Bob, suppose I take your advice and call this thing off. What am I going to say to Mrs. 1 Gerard?" "You won't have to say anything. 1 I'll handle her." "Well, what would you say to her?" j "Will you please leave that to me? i Go over there and sit down. Do some more thinking. You've got many a think coming to you, young fellow! I'm going to see how much you owe the world." And Broadway did exactly as he or dered, looking after him almost as a child might after some one had as sumed full charge of tangled, juvenile affairs. Suddenly he realized that some out standing bills would not be among the mass which Wallace was examining. He would try to get them in. He wished to know the worst, now that he was at it. He went over to the telephone and called up a certain fa mous restaurant. After he had told the manager to make out his. bill for the previous evening' entertainment and let him knov the total, he sat waiting, with the receiver glued tight i to one ear, and, when Rankin entered, i called him to him. "You'd better look around for an other job, Rankin." The butler almost fainted. "Hasn't my service been satisfactory, sir?" "Oh, yes; everything has been all j | right; but. yot! see, Rankin, I'm going | to leave town. I—er—expect to do a | lot of traveling." ; He gazed at Rankin anxiously. He | hoped this would be easy. The worry on his face and the cramped position necessary to listening at the telephone and watching the butler closely gave him a pitiful expression. He looked as if In pain. When Rankin Baid, respectfully, that, If Mr. Jones was traveling he should like to travel with him, Jack son was annoyed. "I'd like to have you, Rankin," he said weakly, "but, you see, I expect to locate In—er—in Jap i, and I've got to have some one who understands the language." That was a poser He congratulated himself. That would settle Rankin and get rid of him with no hard feel ings. He was really rather fond of Rankin. But no! '1 speak Japanese very well, sir," and the extraordinary but ler, with a calm which vouched for his veracity. "I was in service with two Japanese for over five years, and if you think of China, sir, or Russia —" Fortunately for his master's diffi culty maintained composure, two things happened to distract attention. He got his messago on the telephone, and the ringing doorbell removed Ran kin. But the young ispendthrift's calm was brief. "What's that, again?" he asked the restaurant man anxiously. "Er—what? Twenty-threo hundred and twenty-three dollars? . . . The what? Oh, the . . . vintage! Is that so? . . . ISr . . not at all. Twenty-three hundred is all right. .It would be the same to me if you had said—er—twenty-three thousand." Having hung up the receiver, he. sagged down in his chair disconsolate 'y- 'Twenty-threft! Twenty-three!" he murmured. "And . . the butler j speaks Japanese! 7 can't win a bet; I I'll never forget thlo day!" L'Xo i>c Continued. | { JANUARY 15,1914. ORIENTAL BANDING BRIGHTENS I FROCK Draped Belt Is Found Becoming to Most of the Small Girls j 8096 Girl's Low Belted Dress, 8 to 14 years. WITH OR WITHOUT SHIELD, WITH LONd OR ELBOW SLEEVES. Serge always makes a smart as well at practical (rock and this one is made of that material with trimming of velvet and a little Oriental banding that gives a touch of bright color. The blouse and skirt are joined by a belt that is placed at the low wai?t line. When the draped belt is used, it is adjusted over the plain one. The 1 over each shoulder pro vides prett) lness and the skirt with the plait at both front and back is smart and graceful. In January, a great many mothers are buying washable materials and making up for the coming season. The frock would be quite as pretty made from piqu6 or linen as from .serge. There is a separate shield that can be worn at need but the low neck is pretty and fash , ionablc. For the 12 year size, the dress will require yds. of material 27, yds. 36, 2*/ i yds. 44 in. wide, with % yd. 27 and iH yds. of banding for trimming, I yd. of ribbon 10 in. wide for the draped belt. The pattern of the dress 8096 is cut in sizes for girls from 8 to 14 years of age. It will be mailed to any address by tna Fashion Department of this paper, oa i receipt of ten cents. Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. POSTPONE MEETING 1 Tlie meeting; scheduled for Tuesday nlrht to be held by the plumbers and Ktfainritters of this city at Maenner- I clior Hall, North street, was postponed | until Tuesday evening, January 20. The purpose of the meeting In to organise a Ineal branch of the united Association ft Journeymen Plumbers, Gas and Stcamfltters. Boy Will Lie When Punished Wrongfully] When we speak of overseverlty pro ducing sullenness or despair, it usually works through an injured feeling of justice. Injustice will drive even wiso men mad; and certainly the harshness of injustice rankles in the mind of the young. They have an innate senso of justice, and when that is outraged a great work is done. They may not be able to explain it, but instinctively they know it not to be right. That is why a system of favoritism does so much moral harm. Rousseau in his Confessions speaks of the effect a small injustice had upon his life when he was a boy. He was wrongly punished for something of which ho was innocent. The passion it raised in him was so great that fifty years after when writing about it he felt his pulse quicken. At the time the sense of injustice almost suffocated him, and to relieve his feelings ho kept screaming, "Carnifex! carnifex"!" "torturer!" "tormentor!" The senti ment of indignation left its scar on his heart; and that Incident was the end of his childhood. The effect of it, ho openly confesses, was that he was less ashamed of doing wrong, and only more afraid of being found out. Ha learned to dissemble, to rebel, to lie.— The Christian Herald. WOMAN IN BAD CONDITION Restored To Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound. Montpe'iier, Vt. — "We have great faith in your remedies. I was very ir "■ regular and was f'! t ' ruc ' ar) d sleepy all the time, would have n cold chills, and my : jl hands and feet would bloat. My stomach 'TfIR ltr —_ u\ '• bothered me, I had jflHk J, , pain in my side and i: a bad headache most °' t ' me - Lydia V \ Pinkham's Vege \ \ VS^\ \\ Compound has ' ' » ' —' i ' 'done me lots of good \nd I now feel fine. lam regular, my stomach is better and my pains have all left me. You can use my name if you like. I am proud of what your reme dies have done for me." —Mrs. MAKY Gauthiee, 21 Ridge St, Montpelier,Vt An Honest Dependable Medicine It must be admitted by every fair minded, intelligent person, that a medi cine could not live and grow in popularity for nearly forty years, and to-day hold a record for thousands upon thousands of actual cures, as has Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, without possessing great virtue and actual worth. Such medicines must be looked upon and termed both standard and dependabltt by every thinking person. If you have the slightest donbt that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound will help you,write to Lydia E.Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Massif or ad vice, Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, And held 1b strict confidence.
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