Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, June 26, 1914, Page 5, Image 5

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    A DU cTTTZTI l^ g Hj^ g Tff ga Tg*T MI Tl ga "FS^ !! SF a lBF a ■ ■ T*g| Girls' Wash Dresses Special For Saturday
Al Dig i jdlC Of /Wt?fl S Dn/riS
shirt .natches silk, stripes all silk French >7Q I ] one of 65 # Girls' Handsome Dresses, in white and colors,
cuffs, in all sizes, $1.25 value. Saturday, choice for .. »%J C made of all the newest materials, sizes 6to 14. All d» O Q C
v * { ' ie newest Styles, values to $5.00. Choice for ... «P<hi•*?%}
Another Big Saturday
Skirts In the Most Desirable Wash Fabrics All
Styles, All Sizes, Get The
ffifk/"lit $2.00 and $2.50 r*~*§\
f I \New White J
fly KI i Ratine Skirts Clf s,z l
WJffl $1.45
Tpr Splendid quality white ratine
and other very desirable wash
tt% •« *m* /ft i AF* materials. Newest stvles, includ- %L 7 A. m 1 A. £
q>1.45 %P i» 45 ing those pictured here. All reg- *P I * *pi**tO
«• ,»w. ular waist bands and lengths; Size. 30 to 38 Wairt
bizes 23 to 29 Waist also extra size waist bands.
$3 Wash Dress
Skirts $1.95
Over 25 styles in a variety of
wash fabrics, including Ratine,
Crepe, Bedford Cord and Linen.
Regular and extra size waist bands.
500 Men's and Young Men's jj
New Summer Suits AC Ajj
Values to $15.00.. | 'AA
All the New UP=to=date English and Conservative II
Models-All the Newest Weaves i Mfjj jj
■V* Black and White Checks "TBH I
SW* Gray Scotch Mixtures ibl 1
If Blue Serges, (Fast Colors)
Tan and Gray Wool Crashes "W I
Handsome Mixed Cassimeres |
All Sizes, 32 to 42 and Extra Sizes to 46. |
500 Pair of Mens Pants, Go on Sale !
To-morrow, Values to $3.50, at . ... h)A#OV/ g
Palmßeach Suits
For Men Tomorrow
$6.95
A SIO.OO Value
All Sizes
Men! Take Your Cho
$16.50, $lB, S2O & $22.50 $lO 50
Fine Hand-tailored Suits, all Sizes
Wonderful Values in Boys' Wash I JjJ
and Cloth Suits and Pants
Boys' Wash Suits, OQ Boys' Linen Crash Knickcr
50c value Oi/C PANTS, SI.OO value, £/\ —"Jv . fe?ls/
Boys' Wash Suits, Oliver for OUC AttKj
Twist models; gA fl
75c values OUC Boys' Straw Hats, gA feU
Boys' Oliver Twist Wash Vi " U " '° f ° r ' WR Tl
M fo^ lucs |°.... $ 1.00 100 Boys ' Blue Serge and [jHv^rM
Fancy Cassimere SUITS. \jf4 nt
Boys' Khaki Pants, E?f"| Values to $3,50, QC > A
75c values, for DUC for
These Advertised Goods on Sale at Kaufman's
Young IVMn Killed at
Crossing During Storm
Specml to The Telegraph
Liewlstownj Pa., June 26.—Tester
day was the hottest day of the sea
son here and! humanity suffered great
ly for the hflat, the humidity was ex
cessive and last night the hot wave
was followed by a heavy electrical
FRIDAY EVENING,
$4 Wash Dress
Skirts, $2.95
Hand tailored wash skirts in fine
Ratine, Crepe and other wash fab
rics; new Russian Cossack tunics
and many other styles in regular
and extra size waist bands.
Men's White Serge Pants,
All Worsted, D»Q AA
$5 Value at. .
200 Pair of Men's AU-wsol
BLUE SERGE SUITS, n rn
$4 Value
storm. In Center county over the
Seven Mountains from Mifflin county
a barn was destroyed by fire caused by
lightning. Orville Mayes, of ranvllle,
four miles west of here was in town In
a buggy selling cherries and he start
ed for home through the blinding
storm. At a crossing Just west of
town known ns the Spangler crossing,
he had to cross a number of railroad
tracks and here the horse and buggy
was struck by a. train. The young
$5 Wash Dress
Skirts, $3.95
Imported wash materials in many
styles, including Russian tunic and
tier models; all regular and. extra
size waist bands. J
> 1 11
Men's Straw Hats
Imported to Sell at
$2.50, Tomorrow
SI.OO
man was Instantly killed, as was also
the horse and the buggy was de
molished. Mayes was 19 years old.
Nothing Is so narrowing, con
tracting, hardening, as always to
be moving In the same groove,
with no thought beyond what we
Immediately see and hear close
around us.—Dean Stanley.
HARRISBURG <££oss TELEGRAPH
Sale of the "Marcelle" Dress Co.'s Stock Now at Its Best
Women's and Misses Cool Summer Washable Dresses
Now Selling at Prices That Would Be Cheap in August
$3 "Marcelle" Washable V HANDSOME npECCEC
Summer Dresses SUMMER i/fiCJijCiJ
sl*3s Fnr U/nntpn
Cool summer dresses for Women, Misses and Juniors. •r-" V*- ■ vll/11l ■■ vlll vli
No end of styles and materials. Neatly trimmed and lli|v ij\ .... _
$4&$S "Marcelle" Stout Women'sQF
Washable Summer Dresses
iiri ,TT t . x , • / I .I \V n BHL\ \ Sizes up to 51 bust measure. Beautiful wash
Women e. Misses and Juniors' sweet summer dresses. / I | I [/ U rcjNu\ \ , . , . , , <. , "
j of white embroidered Voiles, Linens, Lawns and Strip- I ' \ I 1/ " j materials in splendid styles which will make
ped Tissues; many lace trimmed. I J / Jj( /m\ y,/ you look s i en der. Neatly trimmed with fine
$6 and $7 "Marcelle'' Summer laCCS
At this price we show over 50 distinct styles for Women, f J /, i\ u f 1/0
$7.50 and $8.50 (P J ACT I
™nhS* J £s: : .s,r hl1 " vo,,„. yt\\yjf stout n rljj
$8 &$9 "Marcelle" Summer Dresses JZffl WOMEN S Uresse * • • ™ I,WW
$4.90
&br Stylish Summer Dresses for stout figures op I
J , dresses Pfl tosl bust measure.* Desirable materials
in maieriais or Katlne, Awning Stripe Voiles, also nlaln white*//V*«vvlfl I*7 o* • 1 tr m t-» «
and FJoral Crepes. Trimmed with dainty laces. All styles V Crepes, Striped Voiles, Ratines and Tissues,
eluding: the Russian tunics. ' Russian Tunics and Tier models, well tailored.
Women's Muslin Gown Sale For Saturday jjjj Va 3 |u B j. n Wome „' s B , ol)ses p of Sat „ rday |
\\ omen s Gowns, lace trimmed, cut CkCk l! 11/ f 01 r*> ; l
fnl , ma , r , ,11 P Women s Blouses For 73c
, c o gooc muslin, all sizes; 50c <j jj Hundreds of Women's Blouses, made of voiles, in plain j|
value. Sale price j| jl and embroidered; in white and colors; in every style |!
' " Jj |; and all sizes from 34 to 44. Value to $1.25. Choice for •OC j;
i|!! Women's Blouses For $1.79 jj
lace trimmed ; cut full: SI.OO value Sale i Jl ° ne table ? f Wonien ' s Handsome Blouses, made of China and ;!
p r J ce ' c e P e de Chine Silks, in black and all colors, all d» 7Q ''
Women's Gowns, made of Longcloth AA |i || Wnmpn'si Rlnn*e* Fnr $9 ?Q !
and Nainsook; best workmanship; lace
embroidery and Val. lace trimmed- cut llllf ! ! ri • fS?- of « Blm T'. made of J Cre P e de i
rll „i. 4. <m oe c , • c ' ulu IVflfli J ; Chine and China Silk, in all colors and sizes; <t»o OZ\ '
full; values to $1.25. Sale price VVV | these waists sold up to $4.00. Choice for ...... s£.o9 <i
L v.nv.^n^Mmi^viMiwuiwmnJl
Mrs. C. C. Groff Entertains !
Class at Outlook Cottage
Special to The Telegraph
Stoverdale, Pa., June 26.—Mrs. C.
C. Groft entertained her Sunday school
class at her cottage, Outlook, yester
day. Those present were: Missc" Eva
Shapley, Blanche Minnig, Esther j
Paul, Elva Lippi, Aline Bateman,!
I Anna Smith, Edith Koons, Marguerite
I Dobbs and Mrs. Shoop.
I Mrs. Emory Fisher has opefled her
I cottage, Emory Villa, for the summer.
) Miss M. Belle Orris was the guest
j of the Misses Ruth and Lorene Engle
jat Clyfrest cottage.
Mrs. Margaret Ellenberger enter
j tained the following guests at her
j cottage, Oak Glen: Mrs. B. P. Phen
| agar, 262 Herr street; Mrs E. J. Goho,
1 807 North Sixth 'street; Mrs. Harry
Stltes, Briggs and Sixth streets, and
Mrs. Cooper, Cumberland street.
Mrs. H. C. Weaver, of Harrisburg,
was the guests of her daughter, Mrs. j
Emory Wolf at the Acorn.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Knisely, of'
Harrisburg, spent two days at their:
cottage, Susse Ruhe.
Mr. and Mrs. John W. German Jr.,!
of Sunnyside, enjoyed a trip to Harris-!
burg and Hershey yesterday.
Miss Annie Levan, of Pleasant Hill,
spent several days at her cottage. I
Kramer Johnston arrived yesterday'
for a short stay at the Johnston cot-I
tage.
Mrs. W. S. Craig and Mary Craig I
returned to their Harrisburg home!
after two weeks' outing at Squirrel
Lodge.
Engle, of Palmyra, is the j
Miss Ruth V. Engle, at Cly
frest cottage.
Miss Hazel Johnston and Ben Gip
ple enjoyed a short trip to Harrisburg
yesterday.
News Items of Interest
in Central Pennsylvania
Special to The Telegraph
Hazleton. The Rev. F. T. Cart
wright, of Delaware, Ohio, associate
of the Rev. Henry W. Stough, evangel
i Ist, was here yesterday conferring with
j counsel regarding the four suits for I
| damages of $50,000 each against the I
j revivalist by Harry W. Jacobs, Maxj
! Friedlander, Alderman John Fierro I
and William T. Cullen. July 13 is the!
day set for the filing of answers to the j
writs on the part of Dr. Stough.
Mahanoy City.—Frank Marick, aged
40 years, was fatally burned in a gas 1
explosion in the Vulcan mine.
Allentown. —Mayor Rinn fined Rob
ert Wheeler, a councilman, SSO under
the ordinance prohibiting common
j nuisances and particularly for persist
, ing in holding a Socialist meetli.„ in
the most crowded street in Allentown
last Saturday night, when the city was
overcrowded with visitors who had
] come for the firemen's parade.
Easton. —Leffert Milliard, a Naza-
Ireth Hall student, went with a com
! panw of Boy Scouts to Frutchey's
woods near Bangor yesterday, and
i while a meal was being prepared
placed his hand on a block where one |
( of the boys was chopping wood. Not!
• noticing Milliard's hand, the latter
, brought down a hatchet and nearly
severed the hand.
Easton.—Jumping from a canoe
with the intention of swimming
ashore, Harold W. Kline, aged 19, a
student at the Easton Academy,
drowned in the Delaware river at Rox
burg Wednesday night. His compan
ion, Earl Illick, nearly drowned while,
trying to save him. •
Shamokln.—Walter Rhoa(}jsß, a well- 1
known nthlpte, while riding a motor-1
cycle through Johnson City yesterday
I was attacked by a dog believed to be
rabid. After Rhoades had fired five
! bullets at the dog, a man ran to the
scene with a shotgun, with which
Rhoades killed the animal.
Lock Haven.—The cornerstone of
the new SIOO,OOO local high school
building was laid yesterday with ap
l propriate ceremonies conducted by of-
I ficials of the grand lodge of Free and
! Accepted Masons of Pennsylvania and
I Lafayette Lodge, No. 199, Free and
Accepted Masons, this city.
NEW PASTOR INSTALLED
Special to The Telegraph
Columbia, Pa., June 26. —Last even
ing the Rev. Nathaniel Chestnut was f
A SALE OF SUMMER SHOES I
Presenting Wonde
j
Shoe factories are now turning their attention to the manufacture of winter shoes. So
i decks must be cleared of all remaining summer stock, regardless of price. We went into the
market early and secured from the Kreider Shoe Factories, at Annville, Elizabethtown and Pal
myra, their surplus stocks, obtaining a big price concession. We saved, and so may you, for
| we are going to place these shoes in a special sale, beginning to-morrow morning, at prices that
j will enable you to enjoy as big a saving as we did.
High and Low Shoes For Every Member of the Family, All Leathers, All Sizes, All Styles
LW Misses and Children j
f A big stock of oxfords and )'%•
\ -fl pumps in patent leather and w "fym
gun metal; worth $1.75 98c Nf
111 ne ' ot °' Children's TQr* 1
11 |\ \ r shoes and oxfords # I/C I
Boy. Scout Shoes /
They come in tan, black and
j I green; worth $2.50. <|»l "7Q
FOR LADIES 8 "" prl0 " * FOR MEN
1-——————————————— Men's $3 and $3.50 Shoes and
Ladies' Patent Colt and Gun P 1 xfo J' ds a , li l and JKI Qft
Metal Colonial pumps; $3.00 «• P vi aY.' ' j \.7
value Sale 100 Mens Working Shoes, double !
•• S l ' 9B Juliets in the Sale ~ 3' 0 0: ....51.98
Sale price $1.50 value. Sale Qftf Sale price
pri t ce .; •; •• • ■ • Men's $3 Scout Shoes, in
-fcy PU T:.":'°.sl.49 . ,98c S k i,;S and . s f" n '.. .$1.98
We call attention to our new Shoe Repairing Department which
I has lately been installed. Prompt and satisfactory work guaran
teed.
HOUCK SHOE COMPANY 43 Itrebt BT
AT THE Same Bargains May Be Had at Our Branch Family (OPEN
1 SUBWAY Shoe Store Front and Locust Streets Steelton Pa. EVENINGS
i
JUNE 26, 1914.
installed as pastor of the Presbyterian
church at Wrightsville. The Rev.
George Wells Ely, of Columbia, pre
sided at the services and the charge
to the pastor was given by the Rev.
W. J. Oliver, of York. The Rev. J. A.
L. Smith delivered the sermon. In
order to take part in the services all
the other pastors in the borough sus
pended service.
EXAMINATION FOR POSTMASTER
Special to The Telegraph
Elizabethtown, Pa., June 26. A
civil service examination will be held
at Elizabethtown July 11 for the of
fice of postmastership at Rheems, to
fill the vacancy caused by the resigna-
tion of P. N. Krayblll. The office
netted $776 the last fiscal year, and
the examination is open to all resi
dents within the linwt.
MANY ATTEND PICNIC
Special to The Telegraph
Mechanicsburg, Pa., June 26.—A
large number of people attended the
; union Sunday School picnic which
went out from this place to Boiling
Springs Park yesterday. The Trinity
Lutheran, Church of God, Presbyter
ian and Methodist Sunday Schools
were included in the outing. The
i young people enjoyed games, con
tests and boating.
5