6 See List of Goods Specially! | News of Friday Specials on) Priced for Friday on Page 8| —G>WWVU V Page 8 Men's Cool Clothes for Warm Weathers And a New Summer Suit Will Add to the % iy|P v *j Pleasure of that Memorial Day Trip Or Outing aqmftjftt g». Jw All Broken Sizes Reduced for To-morrow's Sale d• Most men need Summer clothes—cool suits for work and play—so why not tjf '!%m a<^vanta 2 e of these two big bargain offerings to-morrow and enjoy that sat isfaction that comes from knowing you will be well groomed for any occasion 'jljr JkmhjllmJ.l |£-. Jja'|H on the Memorial Day holiday. /8m| "II|I!' JJMm If your preference runs 4 'Blue"-you will find blue serges of best quality iff imS' t handsomely tailored-the suit that is always in good taste. ' IfW * If "Grey" is your taste you will find neat greys in worsted and cassimeres. flfjji - ? And special mention is made of a new line of cool silk mohair suits--"vest less" suits that contribute to the comfort of the wearer in hot weather. These Substantial Savings Should Prompt You to Buy That Summer Suit To-morrow S2O and $25 Suits From $15.00 Suits From Regular Stock Regular Stock Reduced to 1 A A A djn rn (WM- \pIU.UU 1 M W <£i \ Blue and green stripe worsteds and cassimeres. , i yi ßlue and white stripe worsteds and cassimeres. English and conservative sack coats, full or skeleton lined with silk Grev stri« ctllmerT "* CaSSimereS ' or mohair; two and three-piece suits; patch pockets-all hand-tailored. F Plain cashmeres! These good shades and patterrts:— / | 1 Tan S re y homespuns and worsteds. Grey diagonal worsteds. Ij'l Fancy shadow stripe worsteds and cassimeres. Pin and chalk stripe cassimeres and worsteds. |j \IK Jj|| ' \ Hair stripe grey and blue worsteds. Tan and light grey flannels. ' f|j j \\ s|| f|j§pjj'/' Conservative and English sacks" with plain and patch pockets. Brown Scotch mixtures. if \«M v# 1 $15.00 Two-Piece AA Brown herringbone weaves. jl W Silk Mohair Suits worsteds and cassimeres. Mir lw :.. °" e of coolest stiits made and ideal for hot weather wear. Espe- Diagonal Scotch weaves. it ' 1 "allv desirable for outings and trips. Fine quality blue serges. " W Grey hair stripe silk mohair suits. b Grey check stripe silk mohair suits. , Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Second Floor, Rear--Three Elevators v = 1 n f \ There Is Nothing Like a Trip to I "Yellowstone Park" ——i i / I know of no other vacation spot in I all the world that is in any way simi- 1 lar to Yellowstone. It is entirely dif-I ferent and offers t« the vacation seek-! ers, weary of the sameness—ln ocean or land travel, or the monotony of the j seashore or mountains—a distinctive outing that is unrivaled. Imagine the] fascination of a six day stage tour of this great National Park stopping! daily at picturesque and well kept hos- 1 teleries. Think of geysers, throwing out boiling water, waterfalls of im mense heights—deep chasms with beautifully colored sides. Then to make the trip doubly en joyable, my road—The Burlington (C. B. & Q. R. R.) provides a special con ductor every week who acts as guide and points out everything of interest and who looks after the comfort .of our traveling guests. Let me send you a copy of our booklet showing maps, pictures and descriptions of Yellowstone Park, and the Mississippi Valley that you pass through en route. I will also gladly help you plan your trip and take care of the details —no obligation on your part because it's my duty. lam paid for it. W'm. Austin, general agent passenger Depts., C. B. & Q. R. R. Co., 836 Chestnut street, Philadelphia. —Advertisement. Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect May 24, 1914. TRAINS leave Harrisburg— For Winchester and Martlnsburg at 5:30, *7:50 a. m., *3:40 p. m. For Hagerstown, Chambercburg, Car lisle. Mechanicsburg and intermediate »*tatiom at 5:03, *7:60, *11:53 a. m.. •3:40, 5:32, *7:40, *11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanicsburg at 9:48 a. m., 2:18, 3:27, 6:30, 9:30 a. m. For Dillsburg at 5:03, *7:50 and •11:53 a. m., 2:18, *3:40, 5:32 and 6:30 p. m. •Dally. All other trains daily ■except Sunday. H. A RIDDLE, J. H. TONGE. G. P. A Supt. EDUCATION Ali PREPARE FOR OFFICE WORK DAY AND NIGHT SESSIONS Enroll Next Mondnv SCHOOL OF COMMERCE 15 E. MARKET SQ.. HARRISBURG. Harrisburg Business College Day and Night. Business, Shorthand and Civil Service. In dividual Instruction. 28th year. 829 Market St Harrisburg. Pa. The Reliable House For Pianos YOHN BROS. j THURSDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MAY 28, 1914. High School Class Will 1 Present "A Pair of Gloves" Special to The Telegraph j Sunbury, Pa., May 29. —The Dra | matic Club, composed of members of i the class of 1914, of the Sunbury High School, will give the annual class play, j i "A Pair of Gloves," in the Chestnut i | Street Opera House Friday night. The J ]cast of characters is as follows: Wal ■ ter Dillingham, a real estate dealer, Hiram Bloom; Jefferson Ruggles, his ! father-in-law, Joseph Reddy; Robert j Slocum, a friend of the family, Ralph j j Spotts; Charles Brooks, a neighbor, Bruce Reichard; James Ryan, a theat-! I rical manager, Robert Oberdorf; Mrs. i 1 Ruggles, wife of Jefferson, Catherine j ! Bucher; Blanche Dillingham, wife of I j Walter, H. Helen O'Boyle; Dora Rug-! gles, in love with Slocum, Rachel iMoeschlin: Elizabeth Brooks, wife of! Charley, Pearl Wolfe; and Valeska Bijou, a leading lady. Miss Miriam I • Clush. POSTMASTER MARRIED Gettysburg, Pa., May 28. —L. M. Al . leman, postmaster at Littlestown, for merly manager of the Gettysburg De partment Store, and Miss Bessie Cox, daughter of Mrs. Fannie Cox, of I Hampstead, Md., were married at the I home of the groom in Littlestown, on! Tuesday afternoon by the Rev. J. J. ! o Hill, pastor of the Lutheran Church. They left on a wedding tour to New [York and other Eastern cities. Planning for the Stork's Arrival Among those things which all women should know of, and many of them do. Is a splendid external application sold in most drug stores under the name of "Mother's Friend." It is a penetrating liquid and many and many a mother tells how it so wonderfully aided them through the period of expectancy. Its chief pur pose Is to render the tendons, ligaments and muscles so pliant that nature's ex pansion may be accomplished without the Intense strain so often characteristic of the period of expectancy. ] "Mother's Friend" may therefore be » considered as Indirectly having a splendid , influence upon the early disposition of ■, the future generation. Whatever induces to the ease and com- t fort of the mother should leave Its Impress \ upon the nervous system of the baby. At any rate It is reasonable to believe 1 that since "Mother's Friend" has been a companion to motherhood for more than 1 half a century It must be a remedy that women have learned the great value of. Ask at any drug store for "Mother's Friend," a penetrating, external liquid s of great help and value. And write to s ] Bradfleld Regulator Co- 402 Lamar Bide., c I Atlanta, Ga., for their book of useful r I I and timely Information. t TWO NEW ACTS; POMES HOLD OVER There nre two new acts on the bill lit the Colonial to-day, but the ponies ] that have had the town talking will j, remain for the balance of the week, i j The Colonial never before has had an j , act that has been so well received as j this one, in which fourteen ponies . show their clever training and go I through a marvelous series of tricks | \ at the behest of their master. "Bunny i' Buys a Harem" is the title of a scream- ' ingly funny moving picture at the Co- 1 lonial to-day, in which John Bunny, the well-known Vitagraph comedian, finds himself in possession of a house ful of alluring females, and his dis comfort may be easily imagined, for l Bunny never was very polished around i the ladies, and when confronted by an j array of beauties like one would nat- I urally encounter in a harem would be | enough to frighten anyone let alone | the bashful Mr. Bunny, who is always | doing things wrong. The first three | days of next week Victor Hugo's story j ol "Les Miserables" will be shown in a | wonderful photoplay in nine reels at I the Colonial.—Advertisement. MISICALE AT PENH ROOK Special to The Telegraph Penbrook, p a „ May 28.—Members of the Zion Lutheran Church will hold a muslcale to-night for the benefit of | the church. The program will include Piano solo, Mrs. S. R. Ream; duet, Misse Ludwig and Shive; quintet. Miss: Irma Wilson. Charles Smyser, Art Aungst, Roy Collins, Ira Ho'cker; vio- | lin duet, Miss Richards and Wayne j Heckert; bass solo, Robert Collings; quartet. Misses Richards and Shive,! James Smyser and George Wilson; ad-i dress, the Rev. Mennon Sharp, of! Enola; trio. Miss Irma Wilson, Miss Helen Speas and Robert Collinge; vio lin solo, A. Wayne Heckert; contralto solo. Mrs. H, R. Wetterroth; ladies' quartet, "Praise Ye the Lord." NEW* LOCAL FREIGHT TRAINS Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, p ft .. May 2".—L. W. Alli bone, of Sunbury, superintendent of the Lewistown division of the Penn s> lvania Railroad Company, announces that additional local freight trains will be put on this division, one coming from Lewistown to Sunbury one day ant} going back the next. This is the crew: J. D. Arnold, engineer; Frank Smith, fireman; E. A. Smith, conduc tor and C. P. Wray, flagman. All live in Lewistown. NEW TEACHER AT ANNVTLLE Special to The Telegraph Annville, Pa., May 28.—Miss Louise ' Kreider has been elected a teacher in the local High School to fill the va cancy caused by the resignation of Miss Florence, Cllpplnger, who will teach in the Shambersburg Hlgli School. Miss Kreider is a graduate of Wells, College, New York city, and conducts a studio in Harrisburg. HIGH SCHOOL TEACHER ELECTED Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, p a . ( May 27. Sunburv school board has elected M. L. Lahr, a teacher in the high school, to suc ceed Major Wallace W. Fetzer, who resigned to become superintendent of the* Milton schools. MAX STRUCK BY ENGINE RUNAWAY HOY DIES Harry Wilson, aged 15 years, of Special to The Telegraph Reading, who was fatally injured late Lewistown, Pa., May 28.—Obadlah Monday night, while he fell beneath Umbarger. about 85 years old. was the wheels of a moving freight train . T . . , - , .. . . in the local yards, died last night at struck by Lewlstown local freight in the Harrisburg Hospital. the east end of town. Mr. Umbarger, an old veteran of Civil War, is RECEPTION TO NURSES deaf and was making his way across , than thirty members and . friends were present last evening when the track. The pilot struck him, the six members of the graduating hurling him quite a distance from class at the Harrisburg hospital were the track, where he was picked up by entertained in the Nurses' Home by the crew. His injuries consist of a the Alumni Association of the training broken right arm, numerous bruises, school. A musical program was ren- I to the hip and body. idered. ■ ■tmm ■hbubbbm P Keeping the Body In Repair Nature intended that the body should do it's own repairing—and it would do so were it not for the fact that most of us live other than a natural life. Nature didn't intend that we should wear coraets, tight collars or shoes, nor live in badly ventilated and draughty houses, nor eat and drink some of the things that wo do, nor ride in street cars when we should walk. The consequence is that the body when it gets out of order must look for out side help to make the necessary repairs. For weak stomachs and the indigestion or dyspepsia resulting, and the multitude of diseases following therefrom, no medicine can be more adaptable as a curative agent than DR. PIERCE'S GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY. S This famous Doctor's prescription has been recommended for over 40 years, and is today just as big a success. Restores a healthy appetite. Cleanses the blood. Strengthens the nerves. Regulates stomach and liver. Demand the original. Br. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery Sold in Liquid or Tablet form by Dealers In Medicines Send 31 one-cent stamps to pay cost of mailing only on a free copy of Dr. Pierce's Com mon tjense Medical Adviser, 1008 pages, clothbound. Address Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. ai—i. .' 11 .IF.i I", i.'uuu— ||'||| I | DO YOUR OWN SHOPPING | I "Onyx"||| j I Gives the BEST VALUE for Your Money Every Kind from Cottoa to Silk, For Men, Women and Children Any Color and Style From 25c to $5.00 per pair Look for the Trade Mark! Sold by All Good Dealer*. N J-! Wholesale Lord & Taylor NEW YORK S IL. Coal 1$ Cheapest and Best Now To buy coal now Is to buy It at the cheapest price for which It can be obtained during the year. And then you gain in quality, too, for the coal sent from the mines at this time of the year may be thoroughly screened before delivery, a difficult matter in cold weather when frost will cause the dirt to cling to the coal. So to buy Montgomery coal now Is to buy the best quality cf the best coal at the lowest prices. Place your order. J. B. MONTGOMERY Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets ' ! I Market Hours i 4 to 10 p. m. i Saturday Evening Market Broad Street Market Starting June 6th , Application for stalls received by 1 J. N. KIVNARD, StJPT. 1116-18 N. Third Street, HarrUburg, Pa. The West Harrisburg Market House Co. ■■■■■ OcHIII A 10c cigar wins patronage on merit alone. A man who spends his dime for a smoke wants to know what he's getting for his money. He makes sure by asking for MO J A all-Havana 10c cigars. The brarjd that's winning fame on fancy quality—the fancy band is only a decoration Made by John C. Herman & Co. ■nnnocunin ELECTRIC FANS I OTIS and MOTORSCom£ REPAIRED J I 28S. 3rd St J '"lllBlTrHnil