WEDNESDAY EVENING HARRISBURQ TELEGRAPH JUNE 3, 1914 You are missing the opportunity of your life if you don't get one of these pianos during this co-operative safe W_ _ ~i Copyright. 1913, by Stone & McCarrlck. Inc. <9 h KNbW this sale would be a success. Ihe manufacturers, i. s , - rr (Bacon Piano Co.) who are co-operating with us in this sale, H knew it would be a success. We knew our prices were right and that our proposition Was right . But we were not expecting , such overwhelming success. We expected a shower, but we did not i ——i II expect a downpour. The plain facts are—we have taken orders for ' I Xjmsjß \ p. twice as many instruments as we had expected to sell up to this \ \ ||fl| time. And this is told lor bul one purpose, and one purpose only, / A \1 / and that is—to advise those who have already told us they would buy Asl / later during the sale— do not to put off too long. //lil ( The success of this sale has Y surpassed all expectations Let us be fair with each other. Let us get right down to the "meat" of this proposition, by \ ■ *^P^BHBIHEH^P£==== asking a few questions: (THI /* When, if ever, do you again expect to get a piano which is really worth 350 dollars FOR LESS _ \ / / | I I V 1 M than this co-operative price—24B dollars and 75 cents? 0 | \ / / J IHi \H\ '■ When, if ever, do you again expect to buy a piano of such known high grade upon SUCH === // ■ H\ \H/ I i EASY TERMS AS 5 dollars as an initial payment and the remainder at the rate of 1 dollar and 25 U w| Vj| I Do you ever again expect to have an opportunity to buy a piano WHICH IS SO STRONG- H ' »! LY GUARANTEED? ~ mii /'* I Do you ever expect, in buying a piano, TO GET MORE PRIVILEGES, such as getting your 1 r » ■■ ■ ■ money back or exchanging your piano after you have tried it for a WHOLE YEAR? And, do you Z7 T~T ~—" — ■ expect to get a more liberal agreement—taking everything into account—than THIS CO-OPERA- whole co-operative plan gone over so you will know it as wc know It TIVE agreement, which we have been describing from day to day. n pian ,° w !" ch i" w ? rth and s<!,ls re * u,ar iy at three hundred «. withm one year from the dav vou get your riano throun. thi. ™ We can answer these questions for you, with a decided NO. NEVER. A more fair, square, M £ c fi±A AN * ™ or liberal proposition WILL NEVER BE OFFERED on which to put a piano in your home. It i® w?"'^ 8 ° entS v, ®- All Payments remaining; unpaid are voluntarily cancelled in event of as we say at the top of this ad-«YOU ARE MISSING THE OPPORTUNITY OF YOUR LIFE *»«>>? "» '™ •' »"'■»— » IF YOU DON'T GET ONE OF THESE PIANOS DURING THIS CO-OPERATIVE SALE." 'SSrt'iPSaSJS 2,"™ S? J-V -r fm \ -mm- - "W -W FI^ ISH S : ? PATIWG. There are NO FURTHER PAYMENTS to be agreement of one hundred and ninety-five weeks U shortened' Through £ $ | \ m • T 1 made either on account of interest or for any other reason. this privilege it is possible for you to earn cash dividends amou™u£g ■ 1 I -mj+ -a ■■ 1% /I ~ 1 B «. Instead of paying twenty to twenty-five dollars as a first payment In all to TU'EXTY-XIXE DOLLARS AND TWENTV-FrVF OFIVTC | § p 1 IWtI 1 1 Csl I I 1 Of* and ten, twelve or fifteen dollars a month as you will in a regular way, C. You are given opportunity to secure others to co-operate in" this • JL 1 « i I t_l LA LJ IVIII wN IL . B II during this co-operative sale you pay but five dollars to join in this Plan. This still further reduces the cost of your instrument • -*■ ~ Jk aAaassociate movement and then BUT ONE DOLLAR AND TWENTY- m^vrumeni. ■ FIVE CENTS A WEEK. If> SOUTH MARKFT SOIJARF PA ®- You Be t the strongest guarantee ever put on a piano; a joint guar- ' 1J DUUIII IVIARIVILI OWUARL, IiniVRIDDURb, rA. antee signed by the manufacturers—Bacon Piano Co.—and ourselves, ~rr AII NR TH r > 15 North Hannvpr Street Parlisle Pa giving you protection for five years that is as safe as a government M\\ , „ , features of this co-operative plan are carried out allUVCl OUICCU, C. S. FEW DRUG STORE, 205 South Union street, Middletown, Pa. L^XiVnd 6 'SriuM YOTO t MON^°MCK no at tne end of a thirty jJ the terms on " layer - pianofi are two dollars a instead 0 « j————————— ————^————^——— —»— MWMPM— ZZH^_? n _ the piano — one d oll ar and twenty-five cents a week. wowen anTeß^s The Way to Win a Woman By BEATRICE FAIRFAX I "Is It possible for a young man who is not so very hand some but who holds a good position and has a splendid fu ture before him to be loved by a pretty young girl? I have a fine posi tion and am capable of providing a good home for wife and family, but I am not good looking and have no confidence in myself. I Jeel that girls do not care for me, and I have about abandoned hope of ever winning the love of a woman. Is there hope for a man who is not attractive? writes "Hackensack." What a splendid husband is going to waste in this remarkable modest young man! Is there hope that he can win the love of some charming young girl? Plenty of it in spite of what he con siders his handicap of not being a Phoebus Apollo in 1914 Fifth avenue tailored clothes. Plenty of it—even If he were blind or halt or maimed, or even a weakling who could not support a wife when once he had won her, instead of being a capable chap who is well able to support a wife and home. For any handicap may be overcome in the love race. There are various ways to win a woman. Let us consider a few of the accredited and successful methods. There is the world-old method of the caveman. He looked about for the lady who most pleased his fancy and, knocking her senseless with one well directed blow, dragged her off to his <-ave. On waking from her swoon the lady promptly became an adoring wife. So the story goes. I question whether adoration and subjection can go hand in hand. ROYAL BAKING POWDER ABSOLUTELY PURE Insures the most delicious and healthful food The Royal Baker and Pastry Cook,** containing five hundred practical receipts for all kinds of. baking and cookery, free. Address Royal JBaking Powder Co., New York. Now, in spite of all modern novelists P la y"' rl ßhts may say, methods akin to those of the caveman do not appeal to the woman of to-day. ghe 1S *1 '^ htly organized nervous system the lirst need of her nature is sym pathy and understanding', and the her both t0 Wln hCr interest ls t0 KH'C Sympathy and understanding! These are two qualities that cannot fail to make an impression on the heart of any woman. They will give her of , feellnK at llrst ot being of sufficient importance to a man to he worth his studying and attempting to please and then they will come to be too important to go without. Great Gifts Of all the gifts that a man can give a woman there are none that .! ;!_ wake interest and affection as will these qualities. There are numberless delicacies of attention that will arrest anv Wo man's fancy. It is not the man who sends a girl American Beauties be- Cau , se J l6 likes them who wins her real affection. The man who appeals to a girl's heart is the chap who brings her a bunch of lilacs because he re that she once expressed a delight in the delicate fragrance of those old-fashioned blooms The ruthless individual who en forces his own will and thinks that 110I 10 enjoys -a Blven pleasure the girl to whom he is supposed to be given a good time must be thrill ed by it too, is not the man to win her real love. The selfish man who takes a girl to the movies when she wants to tango and takes her a-tan going when her one longing is to see a good motion picture is not the man who really wins a lasting regard. ♦ T J^ e u Wa> !i wln a woman is to study her desires and preferences to put yourself in sympathy with her Ideas and ambitions and to have a tender regard for her feelings Be gentle and kind without being weaklv subservient to passing whims and fancies. 23 OF 58 SOCIETIES FAVOR CONVENTION C. E. Presidents Urged to Send Opinion of Each Branch to Harrisburg Secretary ■"V "Harrisburg, 1916," will be the slogan for the Endeavorers of this city and vicinity after an enthusiastic m .a meeting held in the • pavilion at Reservoir /• Ijßgj Park last eveningwith * '■!* a large representation .."lyWflK- from the various so -»• Ifrtl *f cieties present. Every KJHi faß*f" President in the city HFw-uVEMk is urged to bring the PflfetisalHM matter ot lhl ' Invita pHS*—tion of the state con- IB%»«. , /VyVwt vention before their " 1 , 1 r society and send a reply by card to the secretary, Alias, Emily Edward, 226 Herr street not later than June 15. The invitation for the convention will be determined on the majority of the societies in favor of supporting the convention finan cially. Twenty-three societies were represented and are in favor of the invitation and in all probability the remaining societies of the fifty-eight will help to make it unanimous when they report on the above date. , , Ihe following societies to date are in lavor: Market Square Presbyterian Immanuel Presbyterian, Park Street United Evangelical. Bethanv Presbv terian, Capital Street Presbyterian St. John s Reformed. Pcnbrook United Brethren, St. John's Lutheran, Steel ton; Zion Lutheran, Enola; Fourth Reformed. Olivet Presbyterian, Lu theran Church of the Redeemer, Christ Lutheran, Church of God, Penbrook' , of \s sof '' New Cumberland; Irinity Lutheran, Lomoyne; Harris Street United Evangelical, Market ftreet Baptist, Penbrook Lutheran, St. Matthew s Lutheran, Centenary Lnited Brethren, Steelton; Bethlehem Lutheran, Pine Street Presbyterian and Chamber of Commerce. Short addresses and reports were made by the following: President E J. Muggins, J. 1< rank Palmer E S Schilling, Benjamin Whitman. Miss Emily Edwards, John Harder, Paul A March, Charles R. Bartley, Charles W I lewis Frank S Montgomery and E. J. Huggins, president of the Har risburg Christian Endeavor Union, was then unanimously elected delegate to convey the invitation, at Uniontown July 7-9, providing the remaining so cieties not yet reporting are in favor or the invitation. On June 25 the Harrisburg Chris tian Endeavor Union will hold a dis trict rally in the Church of God Pen brook. ' A large delegation from the city union will leave on the chartered cars at v. 9 ' 20 .u "i'. Ju . ne 11 for Hershey, wheie the big four-county (Berks, Perry, Dauphin) convention will be nela. Talks on Social Problems.— The Rev. Francis H. Laird, pastor of Olivet Presbyterian Church, spoke on the social problems of to-day before the Presbyterian Ministerial Association at the Y. M. C. A. yesterday after noon. Considered in its entirety, he said, the problem resolves Itself 'into the art of living together. The speaker considered at length the causes that | have (fiven rise to the social unrest of I the day, asserting that in as far as i 1 they were industrial and economic I causes, they were the inevitable re sults of the revolution created in the social order by the introduction of ma chinery out of which came the tre mendous forces that lead to the de velopment of the modern industrial city. The brutality of wealth increases the difficulty of the social problems. The speaker reviewed the various movements and theories that look to a solution of these great questions. The application of the teachings of Christ is the only adequate answer, the speaker said. Lecture at St. Jahn'n. An illus trated lecture will be given at the St. John's Reformed Church, Fourth and Maclay street, to-morrow evening, at 8 o'clock. Norman Rink, of this city, will speak on "The American Rose Garden." Fnrewell to MiNNlonnrlen. Fare well services to four missionaries, who will soon leave for their foreign fields of work, will take place at Messiah Lu theran Church, Friday evening. The Rev. and Mrs. Frank M. Taub, of Bloomsburg; Dennis Swaney and the Rev. Mr. Rothe are the four soon to leave to resume their activities. I Amusing Contests Arranged For Hogestown's Big Show Special to The Telegraph Hogestown, Pa„ Ji ne 3.—Complete arrangements for the Hogestown Horse and Cattle Show, which is to be held June IT and 18 at the Big Head Woods, near Mechanicsburg, were made yesterday afternoon when the executive committee -met on the grounds. Friday, June 12, will be the | day for erecting the tents for the vari ous classes of exhibits. Chautauqua to Be Held at Mechanicsburg June 16 Special to Tile Telegraph Mechanicsburg, Pa., June 3. Ar rangements are being made for the Chautauqua which will be held in this place the week beginning July 16. The following officers of the commit tee will have charge: President, the Rev. George Fulton; vice-president, Dr. J. Nelson Clark; secretary, Professor Ralph Jacoby; treasurer, A. E. Selber. CONVENTION UN OCTOBER Special to The Telegraph Dillsburg, Pa., June 3. —At the close of the convention of the Upper District Union Sunday School Association of York county, held in Red Run Church in Washington township, it was de cided to hold the next convention in the Dillsburg Methodist Church in October. ANNOUNCEMENT OF BIRTHS Special to The Telegraph Dillsburg, Pa., June 3.—The Rev. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Long, of South Baltimore street, announce the birth of a son, on Tuesday, June 2. Mr. and Mrs. William Gembe, of South Baltimore street, announce the birth of a daughter, Ruth Elizabeth Gembe, on Monday, June 1. TO HAVE'SANE FOURTH Special to The Telegraph Lewistown, Pa., June 3.—Upon the request of Chief Burgess Leopold, council has passed an ordinance for bidding merchants to sell firecrackers and other explosives before July 3, and the policemen have been directed to enforce the ordinance governing the use of explosives during the Fourth. HEMSTITCHING a great success at the Singer Store, 13 S. Market Square. i "Trusty" Convict Walks Off and Then Returns to Jail Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., June 3.—Wallace W. Barr, warden of the Northumberland county jail, yesterday sent R. D. How ells, Mt. Carmel; John Houghton, Coal township, Northumberland county, ; and Charles Henry, Milton, with nine other trusted prisoners, to the North umberland county Courthouse to help move the office furniture of John 1. Carr, Register and Recorder, to the SIOO,OOO addition. When supper time came the men were marched to the jail and noses counted. It then developed that the three were missing. At midnight the warden was called from his bed by persistent rinsings of his telephone. He found Ilowells at the other end. Ho wells said he was sorry, and want ed to know if he should give himself up or come back. Barr told him to come back, think ing he was speaking for the whole three. True to his word, Howells turned up at the jail at daybreak. IJe declared that he did not know where the others had gone. POSLAM HEALS ~ PIMPLES, RASH SCALP-SCALE For the eradication of Eczema, Acne, Tetter, Psoriasis, Barbers' Itch and all other skin troubles Poslam is the safest and most dependable remedy known. When treating Pimples, Red Noses, Complexion Blemishes, Rashes. Scalp Troubles, etc., results are brought about overnight, only a small quantity being required. All itching stops at once. All druggists sell Poslam. For free sample, write to Emergency Labora tories, 32 West 25th Street, New York. Poslam Soap, medicated with Poslam, Improves and beautifies skin and hair. Large size, 26 cents; Toilet size, 15 cents. Advertisement. T— T1 ■ # I AMMTI—M— THE HEALTH TEACHER - QUAKER Two Names Which Harrisburg People Will Forever Cherish The above two names are certainly oft repeated these days, because hun dreds of people are now saying, "I am going to call to talk about 'Quaker* at Kennedy's drug store.' The name Is often thought of, because It brings to mind the "Quaker Health Teacher" who was In Harrisburg purposely to tell all who called on him about hU wonderful remedies. The name "Quaker" reminds people of the wonderful Quaker Extract and OH of Balm, which remedies have made so many hundreds of cures of rheumatism, catarrh, kidney, liver, stomach <>r blood troubles during the past seven weeks. t I Heikes Family Injured in Serious Runaway Accident Special to The Telegraph Dillsburg, Pa., June 3.—On Sunday evening William Heikes and family, of Monaghan township, had a narrow escape from serious injury in a run away accident. Mr. Heikes and fam ily, with two horses hitched to a sur . Summer Novelties in JJ|L Pictorial Review Patterns "^ USS ' an * un * c " /^'4Mj and the new vflp'i "P ac l u^n " Skirt / m\ or foulard and Em- LjJ I •lift I'll / W \ broidery Dresses are the rVIj * • \l\\\ I I jj£' \ latest word from Paris. L/ II- r. \ iTI I—_ These novel tie# can- » ' \KI not be , obtained in \ # i #ny ot ] lcr pattern I 1 ? Li . , A replete collection of . s.' j' j correct Summer styles ' -• - f I * Wtj.JSiijfc.' is presented in II * 1 f J | L The FASHION BOOK L" * M :k «5, for SUMMER J- \ J i of the Celebrated ill 'JL Wgm PICTORIAL REVIEW II *} "JR PATTERNS An/* Only !0c when purchased Vj with one 15c pattern. sHS "ft" SUS At IW Patten Cwrto aEiti wtll 2J Dives, Pomeroy fSL Stewart The name, because It reminds peo- ( pie »f the drug store whore the 1 Health Teacher was making his head- I quarters and where the famous Qua- < ker remedies can always be had. i More wonderful results are still t coming to light. Mr. Carroll Loomls, t connected with the Heading Railroad, i Called and said: "Some few weeks i Ago I read about the remarkable cure i of Mrs. Johnson, of North Third i street. I could hardly believe it true, i so I sent my wife to investigate. She i reported that the cure was even more remarkable thun had been published, t I therefore decided to try a treatment t of Quaker remedies, as 1 suffered from t chronic constipation, stomach troubles > and kidney troubles. 1 did not ever e 5 rey, were descending a steep hill near their home when the yoke-strap broke, ■ letting the tongue fall to the ground, causing the horses to start to run; the tongue of the surrey caught in the ground, turning the carriage upside down, pinning all the occupants be neath it. Fortunately the horses broke loose from the carriage, thus saving the family from being dragged along beneath the carriage. Mrs. Heikes was injured about her shoul ders. call, but merely sent to the drug stor« for a $2.50 treatment of Quaker Ex tract as advertised. Well, to-day I can only say the results obtained were simply aqjonishing, because, al though I have used only part of th© treatment, I am well, my constipation is a thing of the past. My stomach is now strong and I have no more kidney and back pains. I certainly shail recommend these wonderful Quaker remedies to all who might be suffer ing." If you suffer with rheumatism, ca tarrh. kidney, liver, stomach or blood troubles, you should try Quaker Ex tract and Oil of Balm at once from W. H. Kennedy's, 30 South Third street.—Advertisement,
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