14 ' 'Heather' 'Table Linens Come Direct Late Fiction ■ ■ _ _ ' f ■ • T T • 4 -i Thc P " ce Love, by Ar- To Us From Their Home in Scotland "&■ $ ton $1.25 At no other Harrisbttrg store will you find the same luxurious quality of linens What Will People Say? bv as is represented in "Heather" qualities. We buy Heather linens and napkins direct Green Van"bv from one of the finest and largest linen mills in thc world. Leona Dalrymple $1.35 ~,, . _ . .. p,,. . . The Fortunate Youth, by the air of Dumtermline. bcotland, is still 111 these new arrivals Win. ]. Locke $1.35 Hemstitched pattern table cloths in many different sizes and qualities, "Heather Brand"' Jones* 1 " •>"; made in Dumtermline. Scotland by one of thc world's largest linen manufacturers known for ' The Devii's Garden" by W their soft mellow and finish. p,_ Maxwell $1.35 Quality. si«>. Price. Quality. size. Price. The Congress Woman, by *°- " j m ' ,,es •;• •• 2!*2- >'o. 2»o 70.\70 inches ss.no Isabel G. Curtis $1.35 - " :::::::::::: BS B . JsaSKSr** Ma,e ; 18xl8-lncli napkins to mutch, dozen. $3.00 Quality. Size. Price. tl. d_„* tv/t „ i /- r Quality. Size. Price. Xo. :uo 72x72 inches Best Man, by Grace L. ><>.«7 ««x6H inches $2.50 72x»0 inches SI 00 sl.J2«> No- 77 ««.\8« inches ss.oo 72x108 inches $5.00 The Red Emerald bv lolm 3S, kEo.' SS *«* s«H« • • ••• x " SS iforr ; t V n°<*h 23x23 napkins to match, dozen, $5.50 Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart—Street Floor. 1' « S ,'Street Floor, Rear. Gloves For Every Dress Occasion steel \\r jo In This Complete Showing Screen Frames np „ c , • . . f «b Any person can I)., P. &S. kid gloves in two- Centemeri two-clasp kid clasp styles and shown now in gloves in black, white and col- m RR rm ma perfect fitting* black, white, tan and grey. ors ; Pair .. $1.»5 to $3.00 B window screens fair SI.OO Navarre twordasp kid ll Bra 111 ti l(3 -,;, i rr„,. Cavalier one-clasp kid gloves gloves in black, white and tan. I m III • . with P. K. seam; in black. Pair $1.50 -i. [Keg II M ry s steel frames. white and tan. Pair .. "<1.25 Centemeri, Fownes and Kay- :l| [pi |p| B|| Each set includes all Centemeri. Fownes, Kavser, ser two-clasp silk gloves; iff* ' I JlSa I|V - ir,-button silk gloves; with l.lack, white and colors, double f !l '' ||! P arts . for ,nakin S double finger ends; black, finger ends. Pair. Ij| „ N 1 'ffl anv size screen. The ■ i 1 11 '"tely square, and SCREEN F RAMES I are Stronger than Colored Ratines in Lovelv Grades . ordinar y sorccn ° ,u ' - r Moderately priced. $1.25 colored ratine; 42 inches wide; in neat checks of Good grass seed— brown, black, blue, wistaria, on white grounds. Reduced to kvcrgreen Lawn (jiass Seed, quart 1()^ vard Tsp l-lue Crass Seed, quart Ifl< . . •; Shady Spot Grass Seed—guaranteed to grow grass in shady ratine, 4- inches wide; 111 solid shades with sell color places, quart 5506 and two-tone checks. Reduced to yard «)5p Kalamazoo Pafricloth Ice Blankets saves ice from melt sl.so nub crepe in solid shades with a neat figure. Reduced " lg qU,Ckl> ' *' to yard 956 SI.OO plain ratine; 40 inches wide. Reduced to vard, 75<- Onfinrf J D 89c ratine: 36 ,o 40 inches wide: mixed shades'and ,wl C »P S h ° f Me " flnd BoyS tone checks. Reduced to vard <;<)e , ,\ eu ch< ; ck * and plaid cloths caps, in golf and tango shapes; - . for hot weather service for men and boys .^OCr $-•00 nub crepe; 3S inches wide; in tango, helio, rose, blue Men s and boys' silk polo caps in plain and stripe patterns and pink with a raised nub. Reduced to yard $1 2.1 10c Lives. Pomeroy * Stewart. Street Floor. ' ' ' sioVe! Business locals ! VITALS BEX LATH YEX'EEK When you buy a motor car look be- ! neath the beautiful paint, varnish and J nickel trimmings. Examine the mo tor, transmission, universal joints and ' bearings. The Abbott-Detroit has Continental motor, Warner transmis sion, Spicer universal joints, Timken bearings and the Auto-Lite electric system. Other strong features and refinements may be seen at factory branch. 106-108 South Second street. DO XOT TRIPLE with your eyesight. Many people j who really need glasses never take the I trouble to find out for certain, and go | on ruining their eyes. Don't be one of these. If vou're in doubt, call at j my office at your leisure and I will tell you whether glasses will be of j any help to you. Ralph L. Pratt, eye-1 sight specialist, 807 Xorth Third I street. SMART LUGGAGE When traveling among strangers j you are usually judged by your per sonal appearance and your luggage is most noticeable. Our sale of dress suit cases and Fnglish bags made of genuine cowhide in tan, brown and ■black, with full leather lining and sewed corners are exceptional values at $5.98. Sizes 16, 17 and 18. Regal Umbrella Co., Second and Walnut streets. MADAM ATTEXTIOX Here is a great opportunity to pur chase handsome vogish millinery at greatly reduced prices—every one this season's models, and a large selection i for your choosing. We have also re- | duced the prices of our Panamas. A! Btyle that will be very popular this season for outing wear. Mary C.I Glass, Fashion's Milliner, 1306 Jlarketl street. Harrisburg Carpet Co. 32 North Second Street AUCTION SALE The Entire Stock of Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry, Silverware, Clocks, Suit Cases, Musical Instruments, Guns, Etc., of /C n RQFNNFR Pawnbroker and Jeweler U ' UlXLllll til Will be sold to the highest bidder at public auction sale. Sale Starts Thursday Evening, May 21, at 7 O'clock Souvenirs to Ladies on Opening of Sale. WEDNESDAY EVENING • OUCH: I "We don't have any grass growing! |in our streets," sneered the New I Yorker. "Xo, 1 dare say not," replied the j I I'hiladelphian. "1 suppose your street, | car horses nibble it off as they browse along."—Lippincott's. Business .Locals THE MAX WITH $25 to spend on a suit of clothes will get! one here that looks like fifty dollars I Some men get an idea that Lack cus tom tailored suits cost big money be- I .cause they look high-priced. That's I la mistake. Step in and see the splon-1 | did materials you get for a modest I price. Fred S. Lack, 28-30 Dewberry | street. THE PICTURE PLAY I has groiVn to be an influential factor, jin the molding of minds, more so i than the average text-book. Without! leaving your home city you enjoy the educational advantages of travel, and I have the sports, ceremonials and in dustrial processes presented to you in actual motion as caught bv tlie eye of the camera. First films onlv at the Victoria. POTTS' COLD CREAM The greaseless kind that imparts health, cleanliness and beauty to the tenderest skin. Violet or lilac scented. Put up in only one size and retailed at 25 cents the jar. Always fresh and sweet. Sold at Bowman's toilet ar ticle counter and Potts' drug store Third and Herr streets. ALWAYS IXVITIXG I That noon-hour luncheon that 1 specially prepared for the busy men of! I Harrisburg at the Columbus Cafe isj j surely a delicious luncheon for 401 cents. The food is nicely cooked and i faultlessly served. Try one of these i luncheons to-morrow noon. Hotel Co-i lumbus, Third and Walnut streets. ' IT WAS FOItC'ED UPOX HIM At a wedding feast recently the bridegroom was called upon, as usual, to respond to the, given toast. In spite of the l'act that he had previously pleaded to be excused. Blushing to the roots of his hair, he rose to his feet. He intended to imply that he was unprepared for speechmaking, but he unfortunately placed his hand upon his bride's shoulder, and looked down at her as ho stammered out Ills opening and concluding words: "This —er—tiling has been forced upon me." —ln National Monthly. iPomTANi I iOTEL OF AMERICAN IDEAISI , : Pennsylvania Avenue, - 18th And H Streets. E ' ; Beit Located Hotel in Washington. 3 Overlooks the White House, - within easy access of public I - buildings, shops, theaters and Z z points ol general and historical r I interest, - When visiting the nation's - capital, you should make your r ; : home at the Powhatan, the Ho- = I - tci of American Ideals. = Rooms with detached bath. E ; * $1.50, $2.00 and up. ; Rooms with private bath, - ; $2.50, $3.00 and up. ~ Write for booklet with map. I - CLIFFORD M LEWIS, Manager. - 'tiinmniiin iiiiiiiiiiniimli HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH SHE GIGGLED X went out to walk With Miss Nellie one day, And as we two strolled through the park I noticed she seemed quite contented and gay, More happy by far than a lark; And whenever I made a remark even plain She would always a giggle outpour; And then when I asked her to kindly explain. She giggled—then giggled some more. Then in the evening we went to the play, And although 'twas a tragedy deep oho did not the slightest emotion dis play, But giggled while others would weep. She giggled a bit when the hero was killed, And as the bride came through the door To marry the villian whose conduct had thrilled She giggled—then giggled some more. So I asked the young lady to tell me just why Her system contained so much mirth, And how she could giggle wnen others would cry, And when happiness seemed at a dearth. So she said her new hat had the latest-shaped frame, The only one like it in store, And that no other lady could get one the same, Then she giggled—and giggled some more. —John L. Hobble, in Puck. HOW TO PREVENT PEOPLE I'HOM LOOKING UNTO WINDOWS In the "Exchange" department of the Woman's Home Companion—a de partment given over to practical household suggestions—a North Caro lina woman makes the following screen suggestion: "As my kitchen and pantry win dows are so placed that the chance passer-by can get good view or the interior of the rooms, I resorted to the following expedient: T had heard that fly screens painted white added to the privacy of a room without ob structing the view from the inside, but as white is too glaring for the color scheme of our house, I used paint of the same color as the weather boarding, which is a soft yellow I thinned the paint slightly and applied sparing with a small brush, and now, even at a very short distance, the In terior of the rooms is not visible to those passing." HE WAS HOPING A countryman named Street owned a runaway cow. As the season ad vanced Street was compelled to make several long pilgrimages into the country for the reprehensible animal. On one occasion tho trail led on and on until Street had entered the en virons of a town where a new trolley car system was Installed. Just as the cow-hunter turned a corner In the outskirts the car lumbered up and the conductor called out: »Vedar Street!" The owner of the cow stopped In his tracks and bawled back at the man in bine and gold: "No, darn her, I ain't seed her; an" when I do it won't be good t'er h*r blamed old hide either!"—ln National Monthly, , THE REASON WHYI —By Heath. DO£S H£ WEANING OUT TfjE SIGM ?" TRS fijtMP HA3 (MO TiME To Uft3T£« The Latest Pantalettes Not Like Grandma's In the June Woman's Homo Com panion Grace Margaret Goul, fashion editor of that periodical, writes an ar ticle entitled "Skirts Flare Out —Be- hold the Pantalette;" in which she comments on the pantalette of to-day and yesterday and other new French fashion frivolities. Following is an extract: "Yes, Grandmamma did wear pan talettes and now Granddaughter has her modern critical eyes upon them. "Premet of Paris, who has so quickly forged ahead into fashionable favor, says, 'Pantalettes are not only to lie worn hut shown.' "But let mo tell you that the new French pantalettes in this uppest-to date age are fur removed from the pantalettes of the remote and roman tic days of long ago as champagne from cambric tea. "Grandmamma certainly in her gid diest. days would never have recog nized these illmy, etherealissed crea tions. "Hers were of the prudent and suo stantial sort, fulfilling to the letter the now lost mission of clothes to be a covering, and they were only to be exposed on the most secluded of clothes-lines. "To describe the pantalettes that Premet shows —those which belong to the glaring Now —is to tell quite a dif ferent story. "The Paris dress openings in their display of Spring and summer gowns showed many novelties, but Premet's costumes brought forth the most gasps and 'Ohs!' Such tlimy, frilly, perky pantalettes, and peeping out with no suggestion of timidity from actual hoop skirts! "Then there were other pantalettes, direct descendants of the modern tan go garter, created Just for the dance. 11l fact, the return of the pantalette to Paris is not so much the revival of an old quaint fashion as it is a dress outcome of the dance craze. From the tango garter it is only a light and airy step to the tango pantalette and the next step after —and this is a stride—is the mannish trouser to be worn with the tailored suit. "And right here let me say that the new tailored skirt, slit at the sides, and worn with trousers of pie same fabric, is a strong swing toward de cency." EVERYOXE WORKS BUT FATHER Two men, who had formerly lived in the same town, met after a number of years and entered into conversa tion. "Did all your boys turn out well, Jim?" asked one of them. "Yes, indeed they did." "What's Albert doing?" "He's tryin' to discover a new germ," replied the father. "And Bob?" "Oh, Bob is/ tryin' his hand at a newspaper an' bein' editor," was the old gentleman's reply. "And Charlie —what's he at?" "He's an actor. All the time talkin' about elevatin' the stage." "And what are you doing, Jim, now that all your boys are away?" asked the old friend. "Well," answer the old man, "I'm a-supportin' of Albert an' Bob an' Charlie." —In National Monthly. AN ACCOMPLICE i "Xo," said a physician, "Dr. Henry is not a partner of mine. We often consult together, and attend to eiieli other's business in case of absence, but we are in no sense partners." "I see," was the reply, "he is what you might call simply an accomplice." —ln National Monthly. A STOMACH TONIC There is u form of indigestion called "atonic" dyspepsia. Atonic means "lack of tone." It is probably the most common form of indigestion, but not much Is heard about it because people are inclined to group all forms of dyspepsia as "stomach trouble" and the doctors let it go at that. Lack of tone in the digestive organs I means that, the stomach is no longer I able to do its work as nature intended. ' The nerves that control it are weak, : the glands that supply the digestive 1 lluids are not working properly. Gas |on the stomach, sour risings in the throat and constipation result. The cause of the trouble is thin blood. Stomach, nerves and glands are all de pendent on the blood and when it gets thin and watery they are at once weakened. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills act directly on the blood and the first response from the stomach is a better appetite, freedom from distress after eating and an increuse in ambition and energy generally. Try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills as a stomach tonic and see how your general health improves. A diet book. "What to Eat and How to Eat." will be sent free on request by the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. Every druggist sells Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.—Adver tisement. Resorts r 1 \ ltrnt a Cottage at Delightful WILDWOOD I Many attractions, music, splendid boardwalk, theater piers, good bath ing, Mailing and boating. For beau tiful booklet write .1. Whltrncll, Illy « Irrk. WlldMooil. X. .1. v ' MAY 20,1914. HAVE Voir A MTTLE 'MIMMTE PROBLEM" IX VOl'lt HOME? Mary 11 cat on Vorse, writing a story entitled "Jinimie Embarks in the Poultry Business" in the June Wo man's Home Companion, says: "i know that in tho natural course of thins-: there are hundreds and thousands, not to say tens of thou sands, of women all over tho country who have the same problems that t have. I know that In thousands of these homes what I may call the '.Timmie Problem' is more satisfactor ily worked out than 1 have worked It out. The problem Roes something like this: 'How is one to get a boy of 1- or 13 to do practical work?'— which is only another way of saylnn: 'How is one to get a boy of 12 or 13 actually to take his part of work an<) his share of responsibility in the life of his family?" How can a mother in culcate in her boys those virtues which it will be necessary for them to have if they are to remain outside the poor house and penitentiary?" CHANGES IX BABIES' CLOTHES In the fashion department of the June Woman's Home Companion ap pears an article entitled "Clothes for the Tiny Girl and Boy," in the course of whicli the author writes in part, as follows, about the changes in ba bies' clothes within the past llfty years: | "Times have changed since the days | when the regulation baby dress was the Mother Hubbard model, gathered straight widths on a square or round yoke. The styles for the litt.e children [of to-day change with each succeeding season with as much versatility as for tire grown-ups. Back in the early six ties, babies wore clothes almost coun terparts of their parents'. The infant s frock was cut panel front with insets I of lace putting or embroidery. The' tiny shoulders, neck and arms were j often left bare, the shoulder straps | with small puff sleeves falling off tiie shoulders. Quantities of petticoats suggested the hoop skirts then in i vogue. I "That the first consideration for the I baby should be his comfort we all agree, so the simply made garments are the most successful. The mate rials should bo as fine as can be af forded." A GOOD EXCUSE A hunter over in the mountains once had a dinner with a querulous old tellow who was complaining about hard times. "Why, man." said the Nimrod, "you ouKht to be able to make lots of money growing and shipping! potatoes to market." "Yes, J orter." was the sullen reply. ; "Volt have the land, I suppose, and tan i get the seed." "Yes, I guess so." I "Then why don't you go into the 1 business?" "No use, stranger," sadly replied old lazy-bones, "trie old wo man is too pokey to do the plowin' and plantin'."—ln National Monthly. 1 DECIDE RIGH |jS: Our Watch Club J ON OUR NEW CLUB PLAN sl7;soffisoc-We,kjj w»itk»» ? p c !° | Hamilton iJir Month We only have a limited number of these 17-Jewel Elgin, i Waltham and Hamilton Watches at this bar- d» 1 ' gain price of *P 1 / •OvJ i I hink of being able to buy a genuine accurate time piece in j a 20-y.ear guaranteed double strata gold-filled case—adjusted to I temperature and positions with movements guaranteed for ; only ; $1 <.,>() i , •J B ® offpr on mnme plan nil tlie latOMt NtylfM of moIIiI irold and ! Kol«l-fllle<——3 Sixth and Kelker Streais Largest establishment. Best facilities. Near to you as your phone. Will go anywhere at your call. Motor service. No funeral too small. None too expensive. Chapels, rooms, vault, etc., used with* out charfia