SECOND SECTION Mr \T U pages 9to is H ARRISBCJRG IgSftlSil TELEGRAPH ',u»Z" Business Locals IF IT'S A . HEADACHE it may be due to defective vision. T-e lis examine your eyes to see If ey« strain is the cause of your's. We art experts In examining eyes and fltlins glasses and can permanently relieve headaches and other distress causer by eye strain. We grind our owr lenses, and duplicate by measuring old lense. Ralph L> Pratt, eyesight spe cialist, SOT North Third street. WORRY IS EXPENSIVE to your health. Keep your jewels deeds and other valuables in one ol our safe deposit boxes beyond the reach of fire and burglars. One dol lar per year is a small amount but it may prevent a great loss and save you a lot of worry. Open Saturday evenings, 6 to 8 and market morn ings at eight. East End Bank, Thir teenth and Howard streets. TO BE A WEI «I<-DRESSED MAX be a Simms man. It is the fine atten tion to detail that makes the Simms custom-tailored garments stand out among all the rest. It is the personal time, attention and supervision that Simms gives to the building of a gar ment from the choice of a fabric to the finished product that win favor with "men who care." 22 North Fourth street. FRUIT STAINS In the good old summer time when the luscious fruit is within easy reach whichever way you turn, one is apt. to b-> ca.reless and get some attached to the outside as well as to the inside. Those who know Oompton say "I should worry." Our dry steam pro cess removes fruit or any other stains from your clothes. Send for Oompton, i the old reliable cleaners and dyers, i 1006 North Third street, 121 Market street. SEXD VOIR "BIjOW-orTS" to us for repairs. We guarantee a "Blow-out" repaired by us to hold and to wear properly, and we further guarantee the casing against another j "Blow-out" in the same spot. Our "Sterling" mark is on the side of all i our "blow-out" repairs, underlaid with red rubber. Sterling Auto Tire Co., 1451 Zarker street. •'IT'S INSURANCE" ACTOMOBIIF, These always go together: Big car— Big lights— Big noise— Big head — Big mortgage— Big smash— The car <-an't. help it, but—gee, j don't you pity it? It's a shame to do it., but I'll insure | you even against the like of that— Aetna—Esslck. THE PORES OF THE SKIN Must be kept open so the impurities of the body may be eliminated. An j ordinary bath with soap and water will j only cleanse the external part of the J body. We are equipped to give all ( kinds of baths Including sulphur, steam, hot air, sifz. percussion, shower arid tuh baths. Health Studio, John H. Peters, H. D., 207 Walnut street. THE WE TO "TIE" TO The one thing that a urn is per mitted to indulge his fancy tor beauti ful colorings so long as it is within the bounds of good taste is in the selec tion of his neckwear. There is noth ing prettier than our wide open-end tie at 50 cents, in crepes, foulards: ■with striped and figured patterns. Kin nard, 1116-1118 North Third street. TIITS IS PICTURE TIME The Fourth is coming and vacation days are here. To avoid disappoint- 1 ment be sure to select your photo j supplies and cameras in time. After ! the first of July we will close everv ! Saturday at 12.30 noon. This, of I course, does not apply to the Fourth, j Photo developing and printing. Cot terei, 105 North Second street. FOR THE FOURTH Parasols, suitcases and traveling 1 bags. Three requisites that will be i very much in demand by those who expect to be out enjoying the day's; sport or by those who must travel "to get where the Fourth will be most ! appreciated. Our assortment is unex- j celled at prices unmatchable. Regal ] Umbrella Co., Second and Walnut streets. A SILVER KEY Can open an iron lock. If you are in need of silver or gold to unlock the door of opportunity that is closed to you because lacking a little ready change we can loan you the key. Small sums of money loaned at lowest rates and even lower than t'.e law permits us to charge. Pennsvlvania ! Investment Co. 132 Walnut street. OVERSTUFFED Yes they are overstuffed davenports 1 soft and luxurious; no wood showing j except the feet. Upholstered in plain ' velour and rich-toned tapestries. First ' covering in figured denim. These are excellent examples of the upholsterer's nrt in keeping with the quality for which this store is known—ss 5 and up in denim. Harris, 221 North Sec ond street. SILK SMIRTJTM UVK CLEAN The washing of silk shirts requires special care so as to remove those grimy stripes that eventually become indelibly fixed in the fabric unless given a thorough cleansing. Our proc ess and careful attention to all silk 1 and woolen shirts is an assurance that the work will please you and preserve the original beauty of the garment Arcade Eaundry. Moth phones. D ' E. Glazier, proprietor. YOU'LL LIKE IT x If it's Hershe.v's ice cream that vou !' order for your Fourth of July safe I 1 and sane picnic, you will like It ' Made 1 from the purest cream direct from our ( own creameries and patcurlzed in our 1 1 own plant and frozen according to the ' formula of Uncle Sam's expert who ' spent six weeks in our plant making i ! tests. It sso good." Irfiok for Her shey's sign. COME UNBIDDEN Sits unserved. This proverb does not apply to the Busy Tiee Restaurant. We < serve them all with equal consid eration. Our latch-string Is always . out to those who are looking for a 1 gcod place to eat. Lunch bar and i tables. Opposite the D.. P. g, s. store ' two doors north and Market streets. HOT RESULTS .Can he obtained if you use an Ashton or Turner gasoline fire pot or blow torch. They are. winners. Best for i nil purposes. E. Mather Co., 204 Wal- • nut street. Plumhing. automobile and mill supplies. Try Telegraph Want Ads. i WANAMAKERSEAPLANE; CURTISS, CONSTRUCTOR, AND AVIATORS WHO HOPE TO CROSS ATLANTIC _ j »■'»"""• f'r r n^ B< *• F r ,:""i„v;;^.*:: •.; 1 r.*?.';,,: v."r^ .*o W „.,*«, ~.„ | sary to drop to the water. Is 32 feet iin length. The spread of the upper I plane is 72 feet and of the lower 46 I feet. The wing surface is 798 square I feet. The total weight is 5,000 pounds. These measurements show the aero j plane to be nearly twice as large as any other ever built. The boat in whieli there is a caj>in for the aviators is built, of white I cedar and the hull is very thin. With j the planes and engine above it looks much like a whale with wings. The curves of the boat were worked out scientifically to permit speed in both water and air. The hull weighs 550 pounds, but It is said to have a carry ing capacity of more than four times a launch the same size. The ma chinery, tanks and planes weigh about 4,500 pounds. In the cabin there will be sleeping quartets, but there will not be much time for sleep. Lieutenant Porte does not know whether or not he will try to sTeep. But if everything goes well he will probably take turns with his assistant In dozing off—after they have been up long enough to be worn by their work. MARTM LIW IS PROCLAIMED [Continued From First Page] The Croatian students here to-day made several attempt to punish the i Serbs, but troops were called in and i maintained order. Gabrinovics, it was ! learned to-day, had been expelled from Sarajevo two years ago, but had I been recently permitted to return | through the intervention of a Socialist member of the Bosnian Diet. Some ! Servian students here when they heard the news of the assassination shouted: "Thank God we need not do it our selves." They were arrested as ac complices of the assassins. Archduke and Dutchess Were Shot While on an Errand of Mercy By Associated Press Sarajevo, Bosnia, June 29.—Arch duke I 1 rancis Ferdinand, nephew of i Emperor Francis Joseph I and heir to the Autro-Hungarian throne, and the Duchess of Hohenberg, his mor gantic wife, were assassinated yester day while driving In the main street of the capital of Bosnia by a student. A short time before they had es caped death from a bomb hurled at the royal automobile while passing through the city on their annual visit to the annexed province of Bosnia, and Herzegovina. The archduke was struck in the face and the duchess was shot through the abdomen and throat. They died a few minutes after reaching the pal ace to which they were hurried with all speed. Those responsible for the assassina tion took care that it should prove ef fective, as there were two assaults, the first armed with a bomb and the second with a revolver. The bomb was thrown at the royal automobile as it was pro ceeding to the Town Hall, where a reception was to be held. The arch duke saw the deadly missile hurling through the air and warded it off with his arm. It fell outside the car and exploded, slightly wounding two aides- Business Jjocals TOO MUCH STARCH If your negligee shirts have too much starch In them they will be un comfortable on hot summer days. This is one of the things wo try to give especial attention to; just enough starch to give the shirt a proper ap pearance consistent with cool and com fortable wearing qualities. For good laundry work try the Troy. Either phone brings our wagon. Hoffman &- Schooley. SPOT-MAKING DAYS Summer vacations and picnic parties are days when clothing gets spotted worse than any other time of year. You have a Jolly good time and are care free about everything but the social feature of the occasion. When you come home you find that, your suit or dress has been receiving pretty rough service. Phone for Flnkclstlne, and It will soon be like new. i s de-camp in a second car and a dozen t spectators. ' It was on the return of the proces- I sion that the tragedy was added to the ■ long list of those that have darkened i the pages of the recent history of t,he . Hapsburgs. As the royal automobile : reached a prominent point in the route to the palace, an eighth grade - student, Gravlo Prlnzlp, sprang out , of the crowd and poured a deadly , fusillade of bullets from an automatic I pistol at the archduke and the , duchess. Prinzip and a fellow conspirator, a . compositor from Trebinje named i Gabrinovics, barely escaped lynching ' by the infuriated spectators. They finally were seized by the police, who afforded them protection. Both -are natives of the annexed province of Herzegovina. On Errand of Mercy On leaving the hall the archduke and his wife announced their Intention of visiting, the wounded members of their suite at the hospital on their way back to the palace. They were actually bound on their mission of mercy when, at f-.e corner of Rudolf strasse and Franz Josel strasse, Prin zip opened fire. The archduke apparently saw the glint of the heavy revolver'and faced the youth, partly shlldlng the duchess. Before he could do more the student fired, the first bullet hitting the arch duke in the face. Francis Ferdinand managed to remain upright a moment and then, as the second shot hit him, he fell back against the cushions of ti.e carriage. So close now that he could almost touch the duchess, the youth continued shooting, the bullets taking effect in the abdomen. Each bullet he flred had hit a vital spot. Those nearest the assassin in the throng who had started to flee stood paralyzed for a moment, and then, with shouts for vengeance and of exe cration, flung themselves on the young student, who was seeking to mingle with the crowd and make good his es cape. He was thrown down and men and women were fighting to get at him when the police and military charged. His clothes were nearly stripped off, and ue was bruised anil cut by sturdy Bosnian peasant hands. The assassins were interrogated by the police and both seemed to glory In their exploit. Prinzip said he had studied for a time at Belgrade. He declared he had long intended to kill some emi nent person from Nationalist motives. When news of the assassination reached the Emperor he exclaimed: "Horrible! Horrible! I am sorry they spared me!" There Is much concern over the possible effect of the tragedy on the health of the Emperor, who has been 111 since early Spring. The murders add another to the list of tragedies which have marked the life of Francis Joseph. The emperor's own wife, Empress Elizabeth, was killed by an assassin in 1898. His brother Maximllien, for a short time Emperor of Mexico, was executed in that country. Ills only son died un der mysterious and scandalous cir cumstances at Meyerling in 1 889, and is generally believed to have been ; murdered. The heir to the throne Is now Arch- ; duke Charles Francis Joseph, eldest son or Archduke Francis Ferdinand's j younger brother, late Archduke Otto. The heir is now in his twenty-seventh year. Empire Must Soon Be Governed by Man Who • ' Has No Experience \ Vienna, June 29-—The tragedy at Sarajevo yesterday is bound to have a momentous political effect on the dual monarchy. The situation produced by the equally tragic death of Arch duke Rudolph repeats ItAelf to-day. Archduke Francis Ferdinand, when he became heir presumptive, was as | comparatively unknown as is Arch duke Karl to-day, but with this im- 1 portanl difference that Emperor Fran- •' cis Joseph then had prospects of many ' years til reign. Now in the nature of ' things, the empire must In a compara- • lively short lime be governed by an i inexperienced prince instead of a ruler wit. htwenty years' close acquaintance with State affairs and second only in influence to the emperor himself. Archduke Francis Ferdinand on be coming heir to the throne formally renounced ail title to the throne on behalf of his children. This was nec essary because Austrian laws debar the off-spring: of morganatic marriages becoming rulers of the country. No such disqualification exists under the Hungarian laws and lit the event of a division of the monarchy without such voluntary renunciation of the son Francis Joseph might succeed to the Hungarian throne. Burdens on Kmpei-nr The death of Francis Joseph will throw all burdens of government upon the aged Emperor and at the moment it is next to impossible to predict what political results will follow yes terday's tragic events. The late arch duke had a tremendously strong per sonality and wielded an enormous In fluence in every department of politi cal, military and naval affairs. He possessed a temperament of fiery energy and had strong clerical sym pathies. He was bitterly opposed to Hungary and all separatist move ments. He was in favor of the restor ation of temporal power of the Pope which made him unpopular with Italy endangered Italian alliance and is believed to have looked to an alli ance with southern Slav races to wwh raC iv ■ Hun sartan influence. Whether this was true or not he cer tainly was anxious to increase Aus trian influence in the Balkans and worked energetically with that aim in view which is held as explaining Ser vian antagonism toward him Little is known of Archduke Karl !• rands Joseph s political leanings, but it is supposed that with the disap- SU rancis Ferdinand. Archduke Was Warned of Feeling Against Him by Minister in Vienna By Associated Press London, June 29.—Every dispatch to-day from Sarajevo and Vienna brought additional evidence that the ass issination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand and the Duchess of Hohen berg yesterday was one of the most carefully planned crimes ever carried out against royal personages. Indications from the scene of the tragedy show that it was engineered by persons possessing more mature or ganizing ability than that of the youthful assassins. It is generally thought in Austria and Hungary that the plotters had their headquarters in Belgrade. The Servian hatred of Aus trians, which always has been violent, has been fomented by the newspapers in Belgrade and by agitators through Servia and Bosnia who have helped to Inflame the minds of the students and to induce them to sacrifice their lives in (he belief they will go down in history as patriots. Yesterday's crime seems likely to have a contrary effect, to that desired by its authors. Even before the bod ies of the murdered couple have been buried, the Austrian authorities are contemplating severe measures against the Serbs among the inhabitants of Austria and Bosnia. These measures are likely further to embitter the rela tions between the two countries as well as those between Austria and Kussia, the protector of all the Serbs. Aware of Hanger Archduke Francis"^ r erdlnfind, it is asserted today, was well aware of the danger he was running during his tour of Bosnia, which he undertook as in spector general of the forces of the empire. This title was conferred upon him last year by Emperor Francis Jo seph. Mis chief task was to inspect the Austrian army which guarded the Servian frontier during the recent Balkan wars and prevented any en croachments by Servian troops. The Servian minister at Vienna told Archduqe Francis Ferdinand of the peril of his visit to Sarajevo at the present time and implored him even if he insisted on going there himself, at least to leave the duchess at home. When the Duchess of Hohenberg ivas informed, however, of the dan- The End 1 The close of the most successful coupon distribution that a newspa- !! per has ever made for the benefit of its readers is at hand—The imported large type sets of I Shakespeare Hugo Dickens Dumas are nearly all gone—To-morrow our Last Library Coupon, good for if these splendid Library volumes will be printed. Your opportunity is I passing. 3 |i Reduced Photooraph of the Imported 8e» - I II Bound In Red Irish Buckram Cloth and Gold T||||||| Last DUMAS Library Coupon Will Appear Tomorrow ||| Distinctively Individual fejATIMAI /I|| V TURKISH" BLEND I CIGARETTES 9 i A subtle blending of S \flp| § choicest tobaccosJ' H I Ruima Coupons can be exchanged for distinctive, djjb gorouavnature of the journey the arch duke was about to take, she said her place was at h*» husband's side. Servian Hap;* Raised When the archduke and the duchesa arrived at Sarajevo on Saturday some signs of hostility were shown by the Serb portion of the population. Just before the couple passed through the city the authorities succeeded in get ting rid of a great display of Servian flags which the people had hoisted in stead of flying the Austrian colors. The bitterness of feeling, however, was carried to the extreme when at a session of the Bosnian Diet called to express sorrow at the death of the archduke four Servian deputies ap peared in light suits in contrast to the sombre black of their fellow deputies. The plans of the assassins contem plated, it is said, the blowing up of the royal train when the archduke and his wife were leaving Sarajevo in case the attempt by Gavrio Prinzip failed. Roirtbs on Tracks It was learned to-day that several bombs were found along the Sarajevo railroad over whicti the archduke and his wife would have traveled. Prlnzip's own plans were carefully laid. He secreted himself behind a building at a spot where it was neces sary for the archduke's car to slacken speed. Some accounts of the crime say that Prinzip actually stood on the stop of the ducal car as he fired the shots. Against all ihese carefully laid plans of the criminals the extraordinary precautions taken by the authorities proved unavailing, for the murderers guessed rightly that the archduke would not be frightened into giving up his program after the first bomb had failed. In Prinzip's rooms the policy to-day found a. large sum of money, which they say is further proof that he was a paid assassin of some Servian or ganization. The sympathy not only of the rulers but of the people of Europe has been expressed to-day to the aged Emperor Francis .loesph, whose much-needed rest at his summer residence at Ischl has been broken by the crime. He left Ischl where he was recuperating from his recent severe illness for Vienna this morning. The imperial train stopped at Arstetten where the. l.vJn •« 1 .loinod by Archduke I rancis Salvator by his only daughter, the Archduchess Marie Valeria. Pastor of St. John's Church at Dallastown Resigns special to The Telegraph Dallastown, Pa., Jnne 29.—T0 tha regret of every member of St. Paul's Reformed congregation, the Rev. John Samuel Adam, pastor, last, evening ten dered his resignation to accept tha call to the Reformed Church at Me chanicsburg. The resignation will ba considered by tho members of tha consistory this evening. The resignation takes effect on Au gust I Since his pastorate here tha Key. nr. Adam was married to a Brooklyn lady, who, like (he husband, nan become an active worker in civio as well as church work. They have one daughter yet in its infancy. CIIKKIUES, I CENT PER QUART. Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa.. June 29.—0n one day of the past week Peyton Har baugh and two young inen of Waynes boro spent a few hours gathering cher ries on the farm oT a resident near Shary Grove and secured 120 quarts, which cost them only I cent per quart, they doing ihe picking. A Mr. Peters] near Shady drove, has about 200 bush els of cherries going to waste, not having time to pick them, as lie and his help are busy saving their wheat and hay crops. Samuel Howbecker, of near Kosier ville, picked 4,000 quarts of cherries oft six trees.