One-third °f these 5 248Z2 pianos have been sold C#pyrlrht, l»lt, by Stone & McCarrlck, Inc. TWO WEEKS ago to-day we announced this co-operative sale. BFld paragraphs To-day—one third of these pianos (in i;ound figures) have been wflictl tell Whole sold. We told you then that co-operation was power. This frf CO-Opcratl"V€ plan has been fully proved by the instantaneous success ot this sale. V*** T*l C 1 • 1 'l J t , , . F J-vHHH •91 sells regularly at three hundrra and fifty dol- Ihe success ot this sale was assured, however, lrom the hour it < /i(vw\ Epjjj W | lars, for two hundred and forty-eight dollars I opened—its success lying in the one fact —that the pianos are being v Bffllll "™° cneent » undred a " d °" e d °" ars and twenty " sold through it are worth a lot more money than they are selling for / / f M|K| P ia ß n E o C T l l-o^h? n i i rt l, he fln^ h u a r^a n y f %V°m —that they are being offered on the easiest sort of terms and that / \ L £l[ : ""til Bit Hal interest. tW Thro"ug h this 1 co3opkhati'v" i -j . . * j / \\ -.I Mk • i'W. jgpfllj | PL/AN, when you have paid your two hundred the co-operative purchasers are given innumerable privileges and L \\ advantages whice absolutely safeguard their investment. jr\ , /|_HI I either on account of interest or for any other j The advantages you obtain through buying ' e^ftSiSwl « • mw m a * .« / // M TiSißjfWH P ay bllt " ve dollars to join in this associate a player-piano ,on this .co-operative plan / j fKA fiSMIpSESPi ,ND We want to make these so plain to you that there cannot be the least chance for a misunder- The first and most Important advantage is, these player-pianos sell REGULARLY at an f vou"Ti"no It'th^md 6 oTa I tturtv'd^""^ AVERAGE price of five hundred and fifty dollars each. This CO-OPERATIVE PRICE is ajV y I and getting YOUR MONEY BACK. 5 I UNIFORM price of THREE HUNDRED AND NINETY-FIVE DOLLARS EACH. V__ ' Next—player-pianos such as these are usually sold upon pay- our co-operative terms are, five dollars /\uSSSEi~ L ~~ NBEM as ' ll pe n S nia ments of thirty-five to fifty dollars cash and fifteen to twenty payment ' then only two do 1" '~„. F .. T „ <n J ' 7 lars a week. M&3 SEVENTH. All payments remaining unpaid dollars a month. >. Under this co-operative plan, there i. no jESS „ SStl^^iLv'CnS 1 p£»rSi."«^ i t j .l it r iii -a. a. i u j e a.L interest to be added to the price—three imKSBSKHr v x \\ IRstifl cumbrance to your family. Under the usual plan of selling, interest is charged for the hundred and ninety-flve dollars. 69, X N %, ■■KkMIRh EIGHTH T °" "" th " time taken, when a player-piano is sold on payments. Our co-operative plan not only includes 1 \\ fo? n ea C n h °a P n P d or lver/ week^timT h the iV Hfl n of - I , - - 11, - - a player-bench and nine rolls Of music— \\ v @ mH| co-operative agreement of one hundred IN ext tne regular metnod OI selling player—pismos does not in— your own selection but A\ MB and ninety-five weeks is shortened. Through i-i , , , ~ . . . . AH , I iiWT' V BhHB this privilege it Is possible for you to earn elude any special privileges—other than giving the customer a A five-year guarantee—the same as on JmW \ BBI ll 3M f»sh dividends, amounting in au to TWENTY. player-bench and probably a few rolls of music. y th Pr'vllege of t th ' t t \ / DOI/I ' ars axd TWKNTY-FTVE within" thirty if \ ,/, . BlMttlilllli n V This Your piano or player piano will be delivered imme- YOUR MONEY BACK." BP S l '// >■ |ment further reduces the coat of your lnstru diately upon receipt of the 5 dollar initial payment. J / / V fl—3B|g| Make your selection at once, 'Tnd the voluntary cancellation ot all "~X . lf.S/£FHr,£„*£€ 4 T. , € h ! I ————————^unpaid payments in the event of death. liltlik v hundred and forty-eight dollars and severUy- W(|H| • five cents. J H TROUP MI NIC HOUSE 15 Son " 1 Market Square ' Harrisb . ur 9- Pa - 1 26 South Hanover Str€Bt, Carlisle. Pa. jnT All of the features of the co-operative plan are carried out In This co-operative plan thus becomes a broad and liberal plan of Ce ETUI/ HDVir CTADI7 <IAC IT„; nn r» n Offering the player-pianos, with the SINGIaE EXCEPTION that merchandising. Its key-note is economy—its main theme liberal • |J» rLlf lllvlju 91UKL. OOUill UIIIOII sllC€ll. IVUfIfIICIOWD. l 3 the terms on the player-piano are two dollars a week instead of JJ ities, privileges and protection to those who put pianos or player " * —as on the piano—one dollar and twenty-flve cents a week. pianos in their homes through it. Knights Templar Hear Ascension Day Sermon More than eighty uniformed mem bers of Pilgrim Commandery, No. 11, Knights Templar, marched from the Masonic Temple last night to the Sec« ond Reformed Church, where the Rev. M. D. Lichliter, eminent commander, spoke on "Templarism." The service commemorated Ascension Day. After the services the Templars pa raded back to the temple. Zembo band led. playing "Onward, Christian •Sodiers." The strains of the inspiring hymn were heard all over the central part of the city and hundreds of ca noeists disporting in the Susquehanna off Herr street also heard the music coming across the water. Tech "Open House" Is x Attended by Thousands "The largest and most enthusiastic audience we have had in years," to use the words of Dr. Charles B. Fager, Jr., principal of Tech high school, in speaking of the "open ses sion" at the school last night, crowded Technical high school. Between 3,500 and 4,00 persons were admitted. Spectators passed from workshop to laboratory while the school orchestra played. Classes did wonders with ma chines while the interested friends looked on. Students acted as guides to the visitors. AH! HOW "TIZ" HELPS TIRED, ACHING FEE! Nothing like "TIZ" for sore, sweaty, calloused feet and corns. Ah! what relief. No more tired feet; no more burning feet; no more swol len, bad smelling, sweaty feet. No more soreness in corns, callouses, bunions. No matter what ails your feet or what under the sun you've tried with out getting relief, just use "TIZ." "TIZ" is the only remedy that dra,vs out all the poisonous exudations which puft up the feet. "TIZ" cures your foot trouble so you'll never limp or draw up your face in pain. Your shoes won't seem tight and your feet will never, never hurt or get sore and swollen. Think of it, no more foot misery, no more agony from corns, callouses or bunions. Oet a 25-cent box at any drug store or department store and get instant re lief. Wear smaller shoes. Just once try "TIZ." Get n whole year's foot comfort for only 25 cents. Think of it. —Advertisement, FRIDAY EVENING, . HARRISBURG SjSKb TELEGRAPH MAY 22, 1914. ABOUT 14S WILL i BE GRADUATED Central High Girls Outnumber Boys in More Than 2-to-l Ratio One hundred and forty-five students —the figure is approximate, as the exact number cannot be determined until the conclusion of examinations — will be graduated from Central High 1 School Thursday, June 11. Prepara- ! tions for this crowning event in the life ' of the students is already going on. ' In accordance with the precedent ' set a couple of years ago, when class ' day was eliminated, there will be none this year. Seniors will have a picnic 1 at Hershey as a substitute for a last informal gettlng-together time. On Sunday, June 7, the Rev. Ritchie Smith will preach the baccalaureate sermon in the Market Square Presby terian Church. Examinations are now in progress at the school and will be concluded next week. Of the 145 students 9 4 are girls. The girls outnumber the boys twQ to one, and next year will outnumber the boys three to one. Each year finds this ratio increased. The reason is that many boys are taking courses In Technical High School. The propor tion doing so is growing each year. SHOCKING ACT AT COLONIAL There is a shocking act at the Co lonial the latter half of this week.. But there is no danger of the police interfering, for It is not shocking in '' that sense. It Is shocking because it is I Aill of electricity. Dr. MueDonuld is CENTRAL SENIORS WHO WILL GET DIPLOMAS SOON AFTER EXAMS NOW ON ARE OVER presenting his wonderful electrical spectacle, in which lilgh-voltage elec tricity is sent through the bodies of persons on the stage. The antics that this makes the subjects go through gets roars of laughter from the house. To-night will bring on the weekly country store event, which will add enough laughs to those caused by the electrical doctor to cure all the blues in Harrisburg. Next week Bris tol's Ponies will be at the Colonial. This is an aggregation of fourteen ex cellently trained equines. They will be there all the week. —Advertisement. NATURALISTS PLAN OUTING With an invitation to all interested persons to go along, Natural History Society members to-morrow will leave on a Reading train at 6.50 for Cold Springs, in Stony Creek Valley, seven teen miles beyond Dauphin. A gen eration ago this was a noted summer resort. It is a wildly picturesque section. PHOTOPLAY THEATER At this theater to-day a four-reel feature entitled. "War Is Hell." This feature is hand colored all through anil with the many war scenes makes an interesting picture. The one great scene is the shooting of an aeroplane and destroying It. "The Antique Wed ding Ring" is a Vltagraph two-reel pic ture which has a deep love story to It "End of the Umbrella" is guaranteed to give a laugh a minute. "Dollv of Dallies." seventh series, winds up the program.—Advertisement. WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENT Special to The Telegraph Lebanon, Pa., May 22. —Roy Wents, a prominent member of the Liberty Fire Company of this city, to-day an nounced that he had been married to Miss Florence Sell, of Seudburg, Schuylkill county, six months ago. iThey kept the marriage a secret to see | how long they could deceive their friends. CURTIN HEIGHTS TO • CELEBRATE SUM West End Church Is 24 Years Old; Berwich Man Special Speaker On Sunday Curtln Heights Methodist Episcopal Church will celebrate the twenty fourth anniversary of /"I . the founding of the !> tffPß church. The Rev. Dr. * BM- Richard H. Gilbert, of ■ ..'iyJWK Berwick, will be the principal speaker of folui the day. Special serv ices will be held in "BIwBI the morning and even- FTTOI ing and at the regular KSTjtV/Cwi Sunday school session * 1 r ■ . ' j n the afternoon. The j program will be as follows: . | Morning—Organ prelude, Andantino, iLemare; Doxology, congregation stand | ing; Hymn 9; prayer; contralto solo, j | "Repentance" ("O Redeemer Divine"), ; Gounod, Sarah Estelle Butler; respon • sive reading; Glori Patri, choir and congregation; organ offertory, Offer tory in G, Land; Hymn 210, congre gation standing; sermon by the Rev. Richard H. Gilbert, D. D., Berwick, Pa.; anthem, "Lift Up Your Heads,' . Ashford, choir; Hymn 415, congre ' gation standing: henedictlon; organ ■ postlude, "Marche Saleunellc." > Sunday School —Singing by school; . reading responsivelythe lesson; prayer; • singing by school: five-minute address • by pastor on lesson; class enrollment • und Sunday school regular offering; singing; addicts, Dr. K. 11. Gilbert; announcement of class contributions; singing by school; benediction. livening—Evening prelude, Nocturne, Chopin; Hymn 416, congregation standing; prayer; solo, "As Pants the Heart" ("Crucifixion"), L. Spahr, Miss Blanche Ennis; offertory, Berceuse, Delbruok; Hymn 325, congregation standing; sermon, the Rev. Richard H. Gilbert, D. D.; anthem, "Hail, Glad dening Light," George C. Martin, choir; Hymn 564, congregation stand ing; benediction; organ postlude, "Foufore," Dubois. Harrisburgers On Committee. —At the Philadelphia and Baltimore con ference of the African Methodist Epis copal Church, in eighty-seventh ses sion, at York, Dr. J. Harvey Anderson, presiding elder of tho Harrisburg dis trict, and the Rev. J. P. Lee, of this city, were appointed members of a committee on publicity. Excellent re ports of all the churches in the Har rif-burg district were returned. To Hold Snle The Mission Band, of Salem Reformed Church, will hold a home-made cake and candy sale to morrow afternoon,. at No. 27 South Third street. Academy Exams Will Start Friday, May 29 Final examinations at 'Harrisburg Academy will start Friday, May 29. The annual commencement exercises will be held June 4, in the afterncon and in the evening the annual dance will take place. On Saturday the Academy nine wi\l go to Lancaster for a game with the Franklin and Marshall Academy team. BIBLE CLASS SOCIAL Mechanicsburg, Pa., May 22.—Last evening the Men's Bible class of St. Mark's Evangelical Lutheran Church held a social at the homo of Mr. and Mrs. Harry ifertzler, East. Locust street. About forty members and guests were present and refreshments were served after a social time. ' - \ How to Eradicate All Superfluous Hair Advise by a Sldn Specialist v As soon as women of to-day learn that permanent removal of ugly, repul sive hair growths can only be gained by reaching the hatr root and not by using common, worthless depilatories such as burning pastes, powders, evil smelling liquids, etc., the better it will be for their happiness and safety. Nor can the electric nee<Ue be depended up on to give absolutely perfect results without danger of horlble scars or facial paralysis. The bett means I have ever found that never fails to remove all signs of disfiguring growths of hair on the face, neck, arms or hands, is a simple, inexpensive preparation called Mrs. Osgood's Wonder. It is absolutely harmless, cannot injure the skin or complexion and in a surprisingly large number of cases has succeeded in kill ing the hair down to the very roots source of all growth. When the roots are killed no more hair can grow. You can get Mrs. Osgood's Wonder from Kennedy's Medicine tore or any up-to date druggist or department store on the guarantee of your monev hack If it falls, srgned guarantee with every package. There is no longer need for any woman to suffer the embarrass ment of this humiliating blemish. Let me caution you, however, not to apply this treatment except where total de struction of hair is desired.—Advertise ment. The Reliable House For Pianos YOHN BROS. v - J Try Telegraph Want Ads. Business Locals BRING YOUR FEET to the 20tli Century Shoe Company, 7 South Market Square. Our men's working shoes will stand the hardest kind of hard wear, and give money's worth in every pair. Prices $1.98, $2.48 and $2.98. Good honest "shoes that wear," 7 S. Market Square. LESTER PIANOS are built in an enormous plant cover ing 20 acres, where every economy of manufacture is practiced by highly trained artists and skilled mechanics. Buy the famous Lester pianos on the easy payment plan. H. G. Day, 1319 Derry street. PROGRESS TREADS C T TOES Especially on the toes of antiquity. Nc more forcible illustration of this may be had than seeing the staff of electrical experts at the Dauphin Elec trical Supplies Co. displace obsolete methods with modern electrical ap pliances. Everything electrical for home, offices or factory may be iiad at this store, and wiring of houses a specialty, 434 Market treet. "AYS WELL TO KEEP WELL If you do not take time to take care of your health you may have to take the time to be sick and ailing. We are in business for your health and maintain the most approved facilities for scientific baths and massage. Com petent lady and gentlemen attendants. Health Studio, John 11. Peters, 11. D., 207 Walnut street. THE CRITICAL EYE will approve the clothes designed by Simms. To be effective the designer must have originality, a proper con ception of his customers' requirements an' 1 able to interpret style. All of ; these qualities are In evidence on Simms' custom tailored garments, worn by men of discririilnating taste, fc. J. Simms, 22 North Fourth street. GRANDFATHER'S SHOES were repaired by the village cobbler with wooden pegs or brads, and when they would be finished, was an indefi nite question. The modern way means sewing the soles on by Goodyear Welt Machinery, same as used in best shoe factories. Makes them look like new.« A'jiile you wait, if desired. City Shoe) Repairing Co., 317 Strawberry street. BEST BOYS' BOOT Is the Buster Brown, the shoe with out a bust. Somehow this shoe wears longer than others and are made of better leather than you will usually find in boy's snoes. The last is foot form, comfortable and of good style as well. Prices, $2.00 to $2.75. Sold only by Edward F. Deichler, Thirteenth and Market streets. CHANGING THE COLOR of a usod but serviceable garment gives it the appearance of new i nd puts you on the road to economy by making the discarded garment do for another season, thus saving you the price of the proposed new outfit. Compton's works wonders with worn wearing apparel. Dyeing and Clean ing, 1006 North Third street. MONEY INVESTED In a piano at Yohn Bros.' is a good Investment. A few dollars a month, which eveh the moderate wage-earner would not feel, makes you the ow.ner of a permanent pleasure in a few months. We place the piano in vour home on the first payment!" 8 North Market Square. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers