10 MBS. HIRST IS 101 UNDER ARREST Police Pounce Upon Her as She Leaves Headquarters to Go to Lunch WILD SCENES IN COURT Papers and Pens Thrown From Prisoners' Dock During Hear ing in London By Associated Frets London, July B.—The brief respite in the militant suffragette agitation ended to-day when Mrs. EmmeJTne Pankhurst resumed command of the forces of the Women's Social and Po litical Union at their London head quarters. Mrs. Pankhurst, who re occupied the offices at noon, was, how ever. permitted to remain in active command of the militants for only a very brief period. When she emerged from her headquarters to BO to lunch J the police pounced on her and took I her to Holloway jail. Simultaneously with the reappear- | ance of Mrs. Pankhurst a violent scene i was created in the central criminal court, when Mrs. H. F. Alice Hall. ! Miss Grace Roe, Miss Julia Jameson j and Miss Ellen Armes were brought up | for trial for conspiracy. The charge against them was "conspiring with others maliciously to commit damage and injury and to spoil certain real and personal property of the subjects of our lord the king." The prisoners had been arrested during a raid on a West End flat on May 21. In their rooms were found a new shrapnel grenade of ingenious manufacture, coils of fuse and plans of houses with instructions how to reach them and as to the usual move ments of the police in the vicinity. Miss Roe and Mrs. Hall, when brought into court, surrounded by ] women wardens, refused to plead. , They threw papers and pens from the ! prisoners' enclosure and shouted a [ commentary on their treatment in Holloway jail. Two policemen and five women attendants started to carry them out of court to the cells below. When the judge decided to proceed i with the trial In the absence of the I two women Mrs. Hall threw herself on the floor and kicked several policemen j and it took some minutes to remove j her. The other prisoners pleaded not! guilty. ' Harrisburg School Sketches BY J. HOWARD WERT Xo. I—The Harrisburg School Directory of 187 I. The School Buildings of That Period. 'Hie IxH-hiel. Boas and Yerbeke Buildings Were the Big School Edifices of Harrisburg Forty-two Years Ago That the writer has had a lifelong fad for he collection of documents of all kinds, is known to some. It has been very vividly impressed on some of the newspaper workers of our city who have spent time in exploring portions of his unique collections. There has been a time when he in curred the ridicule of some for storing up old stuff. Hardly so now. For many of these collections have received added value with the lapse of years, and have been utilized effectively in many serial contributions on various subjects written for the periodicals of our own and other cities. It is a case of "He who laughs last, laughs best." No one is now disposed to ridicule the labor and forethought which built up these collections, little by little, through a long term of years. I took down one little package from its place recently and saw in it the suggestive foundation for a few ar ticles that will recall many memories to many people. It is a substantially complete file of the directories issued by the Harrisburg School Board, cov ering a period of almost half a cen tury. I will talk to-day about the pam phlet directory issued in 1874—forty two years ago, for there are items in it which give vivid portraitures of the wonderful strides in the public schools of our city in a period of a little more than four decades. In 1874 there were few commodious or comfortable school buildings in our city. A majority of the edifices owned by the Harrisburg School Board were obsolete shacks, destitute alike of com fort or ordinary sanitary protection: while several hundred pupils were housed in rented rooms in various por tions of the city, the majority of which ■would not be tolerated a single day Business Locals ITEALTII IS YOITII To maintain health is to preserve the vigor of youth and see the cheerful side of life. The best method of main taining good health is occasional baths that differ from the ordinary. For instance, sulphur vapor haths, percus sion baths and various other kinds will cleanse the pores and have tonic-like effect. Health Studio, John H. Peters, H. D., 207 Walnut street. CHOICE OF THE FIX I.ST Furniture, like art, is an interesting study, and the finest construction com- j bined with the beauty of finish appeals to all with artistic temperaments. The character of one's home is largely de termined by the taste shown in the harmony of furniture selection. The greatest display of the artistic in fur niture is always a feature at Gold smith's. 206 Walnut street and 209 Locust street. REBUILT BICYCLES Thoroughly overhauled and rebuilt bicycles will be sold at real bargain prices. The greatest values for the money in the city. Come to us for rebuilt wheels. Agency for Flying .Merkel. the wheel with the five-year guarantee. $25 to $45. Bicycle tires from 50 cents up. Keystone Supply Company, 814 North Third street. IS YOUR NAME OF VALIE? Did you ever see the business or professional map who neglects to have his name or the nature of his business stand out prominently as a guide to those who are seeking him or his mer chandise? Your sign is a beacon of commerce. Let us repaint the old or design a new one. Gohl & Bruaw, 310 Strawberry street. AWNINGS IX T>EMAXI» The hottest days of summer art yet to come fend the advantages of awnings over shades is apparent by the increasing demand. They do not obstruct the view and permit free cir culation of air and verandas are made more comfortable and attractive by their use. For best materials and esti mates consult Harris, 221 North Sec ond street. WEDNESDAY EVENING HARRISBURG nSßfe TELEGRAPH JULY 8, 1914. I BOOSTER MEETING I j FOR MOTOR CLUB : Boiling Springs Outing, "Hard scrabble." and Orphans' Day, Are Discussed 1 A supper at Boiling Springs and a , "booster meeting" on the evening of I August 13 was planned by the board of governors last evening at the Motor Club rooms. The success of a similar ' outing two years ago prompted a num ber of the members present to ask for j another of a similar nature this sea- , son. It makes a short trip that can I be easily made after business hours ; and still permit an evening of socia- I bility and educational work by pronii- j nent speakers. Besides the members ! of the Motor Club invitations will be extended to all motor car owners of Carlisle and surrounding territory. The members may leave Harrisburg at any time that is convenient to reach there by 7 o'clock. Orphans' day at Hershey Park promises to be as great a success as the preceding onas. Assurance of cars j from owners for August 5 are being received daily by J. Clyde Myton, sec retary. About seventy cars will be necessary to carry the 300 or more children from the various institutions. A regular first-clas dinner will be pro vided for each child and the amuse ment privileges of the park placed at their service. Novelties from various merchants will no doubt be contributed as souvenirs and a jolly good time will be the order of the day before returning in the evening. The communication from the Cham- | ber of Commerce regarding the elimi- ; nation of the "Hardscrabhle" district t from Riverside Drive was considered j and the sentiment of those present was that the club would "neither op pose nor favor the move unless the ordinance carries with it the location of the western curb line." Nickel-plated club emblems for plac-1 ing on the radiators of motor cars J were received and may now be had from the secretary. And one hundred ! danger signs for road purposes are j being placed at the dangerous cross- , I ings and curves of surrounding terri- ! j tory. The club is doing everything j ; possible by such methods to promote i isafe traffic conditions on the highway I and protect all vehicles and those who ' | use them. j i. AST OF Tin-: s.m> PLAYER PIANOS Will be sold this week. Only four at j this low price. Terms. $5 cash and $8 monthly. J- H. Troup Music House, i j 15 South Market Square.—Advertise-I iment. I for school use, at the present time. School Buildings of 187 I I Near the beginning of the 1874 school directory is a list of .the seat • ing capacity of each building or room I owned or rented by the School Board, as follows: Loehiel, 600; Harris Park, 309; Front street, 90; Eleventh street. 80; I Mount Pleasant. 404: Chestnut street, i 133: German, 100: Fager. 296; West ■ State street. 187; Boas. 4 2S; Verbeke, 1 J2S; Calder street, SO; Ridge avenue, \ -SO; Pennsylvania avenue, 280; 1 Fourth street. 50; Springdale, 70; De j Witt, 366: Vernon street, 64. Rented Rooms German church, 1 112; Odd Fellows' Hall. 60; Knipe, 192: Chapel, Second-and-a-half and j Calder streets, 120; Jennings, 166. The total seating capacity was 4,995. To-day the public school buildings of Harrisburg seat 11,500 and crowded conditions in various sections permit | little pause in building operations, j Tt will be noticed from the foregoing i table that the Loehiel, now used only as an open-air school, was, In 1874, the big school building of the city. It had l»een erected at a time when the boom In iron industries, which followed the Civil War. seemed to give promise of almost indefinite expansion I for South Harrisburg. At that time, | what Is now a city in itself on Allison Hill, was almost entirely farmland with a narrow fringe of dwellings in Thirteenth street and its immediate vicinity. Similarly the builder's hand had not touched the Camp Curtln, sec tion. and even the area from Rel'ly to Maclay streets presented more ex j panses of vacant lots than houses. He j would have been deemed a wild pro phet Indeed who would have dared to predict for the eastern and northern sections of our city the wonderful growth which has become an actual fact In the forty years which have in tervened. Boas and Verbeke Buildings Next to the Loehiel, the largest school buildings of Harrisburg, in 1874, were the Boas, at the intersec tion of Forster and Second-and-a-half (now Green) streets, and the Verbeke building in Verbeke street not far from Third, named, respectively, after two Illustrious citizens. Daniel b. Boas and William K. Verbeke. They were erected by the hustling school board of Harrisburg's North W'ard prior to the consolidation of the North and South Wards Into one school district, and the possession of these up-to-date buildings by the North Ward was the ground for considerable financial bick ering between the two sections of the city when the consolidation took effect. For years the Boas and Verbeke buildings were the show buildings of our city to visitors Interested in school matters. They were regarded as the last word In school architecture. Very proud was Harrisburg of those two buildings, whilst those In the remoter sections of the city were also a trifle envious. These buildings are still In excellent condition after half a century of service, attesting the substantial, honest work that was done in their erection, but how trifling they appear when compared in size with some of Harrisburg's school buildings of recent years! When the Roas building was being erected an old lady of considerable means came to one of the prominent members of the North Ward School Board, Dr. Fager (grandfather of the present efficient principal of the Tech nical High School), to purchase school bonds, which had been issued to meet the expense of the new structure. She said: "Some of my friends want me to buy government bonds" (then being issued to meet the expenses of the Civil War), "but I do not know those people at Washington and the United States government may fall; but Dr. Fager I know, and Dfen BOPS I know, and I feel certain the School Board will never fall." In the next number of this series there will be a further chat about hlctoric Incidents connected with some of the school buildings of the list pub lished above. - ENVOYS WILL MEET ON MEXICAN BOHR Arrangements Are Being Made For Gathering of Rebel and Fed eral Representatives By Associated Press Washington. July B.—Mexican ter ritory probably will be chosen for the I scene of the proposed conference he | tween Huerta's envoys and constitu j tlonallst delegates over plans for tile establishment of a provisional govern j ment. Constitutionalist representatives j in Washington to-day expressed pref erence for a neutral place In Mexico —probably along the border—for the peace parley. Two of the Niagara mediators—Ambassador r>a Oama and Minister Suarez—were to confer :n New York to-day over details of the meeting. With oissenslon among the consti j tuUonalist leaders Apparently nearing adjustment, members of the revolu tii nary junta here repeated expres s'ons of confidence that the proposed Huerta-Carranza conference would take place. While the constitutionalist agents here have not determined on any par ticular place for the meeting, yet it is known that in discussion of the re public's internal affairs, they desire that there shall be no appearance of foreign influence. , John D. Rockefeller 75 Years Old Today By .Associated Press New York, July B.—Although John j D. Rockefeller is 75 years old to-day, ;no celebration is being held at his i Vocantico Hills estate where he is spending the summer. Mr. Rockefeller planned to follow his daily practice of playing his 18 holes of golf. Weather rarely Inter- I feres with that exercise. Later In the day he may take an automobile ride. He will probably also go the rounds of the estate with his superintendent. 1 There will be no birthday gathering, as Mrs..Rockefeller and her sister are in feeble health and John D., Jr., Is at Seal Harbor. Maine. Many congratulatory messages have already been received which pleased ! Mr. Rockefeller, although he said he wished the day might pass without I publicity. Mil HIT SOU [Continued From First Pago] . __ tees, which are in session this after- I noon hearing the family troubles: I For Philadelphia —W. S. McLean, | Wilkes-Barre; Asher R. Johnson, Bradford, and E. Weldenheimer, Mil ton, all accomplished machinists. For the others—Horace Lehr. Eas ton; J. B. Evans, Pottstown. and B. S. Duncan, Duncannon. Bruce Sterling, the Fayette county boss, was not present. The Susquehanna county contest at tracted some attention as the attorney for one faction Is a woman. It was stated that the campaign would start around Grangers' Picnic time and that the committees to gather shekels and crowds would be named later. Just before he went into the meet ing Palmer gave out an interview in which he said that the campaign had | already opened, that the organization work would go on during July and that In August he and McCormlck would address farmers, labor organiza tions and other meetings, commencing the tour of the State in September. He said he will go to every county. Palmer said that the prospects were getting better every day, etc., and then patted the Progressives on the back by saying they were going to cut a big figure. The $33,000 and the $21,000 kittles appeared to be clawing the Congressman, for he launched Into an attack on the people hack of Penrose and said that some accounts had not been filed. Bonniwell Cuts Ixx>se While Palmer was talking Judge Bonniwell cut loose with some re ! marks about the State committee ar- Irogating to Itself power to boss county committees. This Is the way he hand ed it out: 'The State executive committee has no authority whatever over contests for members of a county committee. They have undertaken to set up such authority in their new State rules, but even these do not actually make such a provision, and if they did they would be in direct conflict with the law. "The uniform State-wide primary act was drawn by the present Repub lican State organization at a time when its State committee was in the hands of a hostile chairman, Mr. Was son, representing the Flinn element. The framers of the act took good care to see that it did not give the State body any power over the organization of subordinate bodies such as county committees. "At any rate, the spirit of the pri mary law is that the people at the polls shall decide such questions di rect, and it is requgnant to the whole Intent of that aet for a State body to undertake to Interfere in a purely lo cal matter. "Suppose the State executive com mittee should refuse to recognize John M. Hill, for Instance, as a member of the Philadelphia county committee, and the latter committee pays no at tention to the action of the State body and seats Mr. Hill regardless of thje wishes of the State leaders. What hap pens? Nothing, unless the State com mittee should undertake to refuse 'recognition' to the county committee and attempt to set up a new organi zation In Philadelphia. And what then? Why, they would find under the dtcision In the Coray case In 1901. that the State body has no surh right. "It doesn't matter what the rules say. Rules caijnot annul the law. There Is absolutely nothing to this whole affair." Two Battleships Are Sold For $12,535,275.96 By Associated Press Washlr-ton. D. C., July 8. The sale of the battleships Mississippi and Idaho for use in the Greek navy was consum mated to-day by the delivery to Secre tary Daniels of a check for »U'.53i).- 275.96. The check was signed bv an American agent representing the Greek Government, who does not figure direct ly In the transaction. The check was at once endorsed by Secretary Daniels and sent to the Treasury. SCHOOL TREASURER FILES HIS REPORT $261,603.05 Balance at End of Year; $177,294 Sinking Fund at Interest According to the annual report of George W. Mllhenny, treasurer of the ■ Harrtsbug School Hoard, the school , fiincis of the city were never in better ! shape than at present. Of the taxes |of 1912 not more than $25 is out- I standing and for 1913 not more than I sso. j There is a total of $177,294 in the sinking fund, all of which is at inter i est at 3 per cent., and during the past ! year the interest on the sinking fund amounted to $5,276.93, and on bonds i bought by the board before they fell | due $1,204.75, making total earnings I to the amount of $6,481.68. I The expenditures show that the I largest sum paid out was for salaries | for the 310 teachers employed by the j board, $238,184.22, and the largest I other expenditure was $27,078, for I opal, wood and supplies, while janitors ■ received in salaries a total of $26,tk17. j More than $5,000 was paid to The ; teachers' retirement fund and the pub : lie library was given $3,000 toward its I support, that being considered a part j of the educational system of the city. Medical inspection and the open-air | schools, both popular institutions, cost ■ almost $3,000 each and nearly SIO,OOO j was paid out on the new Shimmell school building. The total receipts during the year, . including several short loans,amounted * 1.761,57 and the expenditures *550,158.52, leaving a total balance in the treasury at the close of the tlscal year of $261,603.05. Last year the balance at the close was $163,093.47. School fluids The receipts and expenditures as a « hole follow: Receipts—Balance in hands of treas urer, $103,093.47; 1906 real estate tax, $20.21; 1907 real estate tax, $15.95; 1909 real estate tax, $3.39; 1910 real estate tax. $196.44; 1911 real estate 1912 real estate tax, $31.0.76 1913 real estate tax, $394,- 9- 4.23; 1912 personal tax, $114; 1913 personal tax, $9,851; interest on sink ing tunds, $.>,276.93; interest on bonds, $1,204.75; tuition. $1,827.59; rent of }, £j? nU ' al high school auditorium, $102.50; sale of lot in Tenth ward, $1,200; sale of Day building, $11,500; fines, $4; temporary loans. $79,500; State appropriation, $47,188.81; insur ance Reily building, $141; Shimmell building fund, $90,780; purchase of 1910 sinking fund bond, $100; pur chase of general sinking fund bonds. $3,000; purchase of twg SSOO bonds, SI,OOO. Total, $811,761.57. Expenditures Salary of superin tendent, $3,500; salary of secretary, $1,800; salary of treasurre, $ 1,098.0 i; salary of clerks, $3,180; salarv of teachers, $238,184.22; salary of jani tors, $26,617.62; commissions of col lector of 1912 taxes, $20.98; cominis si .°? s of collector of 1913 taxes, $6,794.97; buidings, etc., $20,535.63; Technical high school. $6,168.32; text • & 1,078.38; medical inspection, $3,- 852.40; printing and advertisement, $2,064.50; open-air school, $2,898.22; contingent fund, $4,720.65; interest on bonds, $47,911.67; State tax on bonds, $3,520.46; teachers' retirement fund, $3,876.28; Shimmell school building, $9,592; sinking fund, $24,300; tempo rary loans, $96,000; public library, $3,000. Total, $550,158.52. Halance on hand, $261,603.05. Treasurer Mcllhenny said this morn ing that this report is merely supple mentary to his monthly reports. At the end of each month he is required by the rules of the board to file a financial statement setting forth in de tail just how much money has been spent, and how, and how much money there still remains in each fund. These reports for the period covering his tenure of office are now all on file at the offices of the School Board. Tht> treasurer says that the funds of the board entrusted to him are deposited in nine of the banks of the city, all sinking funds bearing 3 per cent, in terest. as he believes in dividing the money among many banks rather than in concentrating It in a few. The larg est amounts of the sinking fund re main undisturbed in the banks that held them when Owen M. Copelin re tired as treasurer of the board. His July report shows that his receipts from_all sources amounted to $313.- 538.27, while his expenditures on war rants drawn by the board amounted to $51,935.22, leaving a balance of $261,- 603.05, which his report also further shows is invested as follows: In sink ing fund. $177,294; bonds purchased by School Board. $3,100; Shimmell building fund, SBI,IBB, and cash in general fund, $21.05. TEILSOFUMIS WIFE VISITING HIM [Continued From First Pago] to follow him. She said emphatically, however, that she would not get a divorce, on account of her daughter. The witness said one of his instru ments was installed after he received a letter from Mrs. Carman announcing when she would have her husband out of the way. 'Later Mrs. Carman de manded and received this letter. Recorded Conversations Mrs. Carman and her mother called upon him next on May 25, said the witness. Mrs. Carman told him she was "satisfied" and that she had been keeping in a diary a record of every thing she had heard over the instru ment. She said she had some diffi culty in hearing ail that went on in the doctor's office because the doctor and his woman patients sometimes whis pered. She bought two additional but teries on this occasion. Boissonault denied that any instru ments had recorded Mrs. Carman's conversations with him, and he was then excused. Elizabeth Carman* 12-year-old daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Carman, tes tified that directly after the shot was fired she ran up stairs and saw her mother, her aunt and her grandmother there. Her mother, she said, was in a kimono. No Longer a Mystery That the murder of Mrs. Bailey was no longer a mystery is the belief of Lewis J. Smith, district attorney of Nassau county. To-morrow Mr. Smith will appear before the grand jury and according to a statement made by him he will ask that an indictment be re turned against the person he suspects of having killed Mrs. Bailey. The presentation of the case before the grand jury will go on, no matter what given at the coroner's inquest. District Attorney Smith and Sheriff Pettlt have eliminated Coroner Norton as a co-worker in the case, it is said. Detectives to-day were running down a new theory of the killing that was advanced in Freeport yesterday. This was to the effect that a New York gunman played a part in it, that he brought the weapon from New York, broke the glass of the window 2300 INSPECTIONS WAS JUNE'S RECORD Sealer Boyer Reports to Commis sioners on Weights and Measure Work bl i ——.J—- .\1 r' lioyer sub mitted to the county commissioners to-dav. The towns visited included Steel ton, Middletown, Lykens and Wico nisco, some of the larger boroughs in Dauphin county. And the county only had to pay $23.52 for the service ac cording to Mr. Boyer's expense bill. Here Is a brief resume of the work of the month: Inspections, 2,246; adjustments, condemnations, 426; scales seal ed, 208; Scales condemned, 28; dry measures, 224; condemned, 199; liquid measures sealed, 582; condemned, 119; automatic gauges sealed, 55; oil pumps sealed, 13; avoirdupois weights sealed, 578; condemned. fi2; miscel laneous sealed, 138; condemned, 48. Want I flan Co. License. —Monday, August 10, at 10 o'clock, has been fixed by the Dauphin county court for the hearing of the application of the Equitable Investment Company for a license to loan money. Auditor Arranges First Sitting.— Assistant District Attorney Frank B. Wickersham, the auditor recently ap pointed by the Dauphin county court to examine and audit the accounts of Frank J. Shaffner, receiver for the Charles H. Hutton, M. H. Spahr Co., Inc., has announced that the first sit ting of the auditor will be held at 11 o'clock Monday, July 20, In the court library. School Taxes For 1»11 Due. —No- tices have been sent out to city prop erty owners announcing the fact that school taxes for 1914 are due and payable and that If paid to City Treas urer O. M. Copelin before October 1 the bills can be squared at their face figure without abatement. After Oc tober 1 a five per cent, penalty will be added. Whitehall Street Viewers to Meet. — E. Clark Cowden, James D. Saltsman and Paul G. Smith, viewers recently appointed by the Dauphin county court to ascertain and assess benefits and damages accruing from the open ing and grading of Whitehall street from Prospect to Market streets will meet on the ground at 10 a. m. Mon day, July 20 to hear testimony. Commissioners Hoar About (■ Mills.—The quarterly report of tl, managers of the Glen Mills school for delinquent boys and girls was sub mitted to the Dauphin county com missioners to-day. The report for the three months ending July 1, 19X1 shows that thirty-two boys and fif teen girls of Dauphin county were confined there. The total number of days was 3.803, at a cost per capita of 26 cents or a total of $989.88. Auditors I'or MiddlcUmn School Report.— The Dauphin county court to-day appointed C. Edgar Detweiler and William P. Keever, auditors to examine the school accounts of the Middletown school district for the past year. Submit Plans For Creek Bridge.— County Engineer Clinton M. Hershey to-day submitted to the county com missioners plans for the construction ot a new bridge over Reefer's creek in Upper Paxton township about three miles below Millersburg. Awarded Small Contracts. Con tract for supplying half a dozen or more steel standards to be used in re pairing the Nineteenth street bridge waa awarded to-day by the county commissioners to E. N. Cooper for S2B. Mr. Cooper was also awarded the con tract for supplying "1" beams for the Beverly Station bridge at S3HO. The (J. W. Ensign Company got the con tract for "I" heams for a bridge at Halifax at a cost of $3lB. Await lilein Co. Schedule. —As soon as Klein Company, the Market Square clothing firm, files its schedule of lia bilities and assets, John T. Olmsted, ! federal referee in bankruptcy, will call a meeting of the creditors and arrange for the election of a trustee. In the meantime the business will be conducted by Attorney Job J. Conk lin, the receiver. July 13 For Keystone Hearing.— Monday. July 13 was fixed to-day for the further hearing of the request 'by the State authorities for an inquiry in to the Keystone Indemnity Company of which D. L. Kaufman, Highsplre, is secretary and treasurer. The Key stone company it is understood, is in a precarious condition but Mr. Kauf man explained this morning that ar rangements are now being made to have another insurance company re insure the Keystone. Federal Reserve Board Soon to Become Active By .4 \Sociatcd Press Washington, V. C., July 8. With three members of the Federal Reserve Board. Charles S. Hamlin. \V. P. G. Harding and A. C. Miller, . confirmed, the board must soon come into actual existence as the act creating it pro vides that members must take oath and qualify within fifteen days after notice of appointment. These three active members of the board, together with the Comptroller of the Currency and the Secretary of the Treasury, give the , necessary five votes, out or the total of seven, required to pass any measure through the board. It is known that the three members already confirmed and the Secretary of the Treasury and Comptroller of' the Currency, who are ex-officio members, prefer to wait. If possible, until the complete hoard Is named before rush ing through organization plans. Several ' experts have been called upon to out line the steps necessary to create the Federal Reserve banks in a satisfactory and speedy manner. looking upon Dr. Carman's office and handed the gun to the slayer, took it back after the shooting and then es caped with it. For some reason this theory was re garded by both official and unofficial investigators as more worthy of cre dence than any of the other wild stories which have been drifting about Freeport ever since the night of the! shooting Several suhpenas have been Issued : ordering witnesses to appear before' the grand Jury. Among those who J received one Is Miss Hazel Coombcs, the young girl who testified at the j last session of the inquest that Mrs. J Carman was down stairs fully dressed, about half an hour before the shoot ing. j The QUARRY Bu JOHN A. MOROSO Copyright 1913, by Little, Brown St Co. ; He reached the net poles and paused to get his wind, but he was off again In a moment and soon made the shore. A Creature That Seamed Mors a Rep tile Than a Human. The tide was well out. and he found refuge under the landing pier of a boat club. -He uttered a prayer of gratitude as he pulled off his heavy blouse and trousers and wrung them free of wa ter. He was without shoes, but he did not fear rocks and shards In his path to liberty and life and happiness. He would have gone barefoot through coals of Are to the goal he had set for himself. Then, too, he knew the soft country lanes and field paths lending from Nyack to West Nyack. A village clock struck the hour of 2. Montgomery's heart leaped within him. He could make the fast freight, a mile and a half across country, eas ily. He started from the river at a fast walk. When the fast freight on the West Shore from West Nyack to Jersey City stopped with a grunt and a clan gor of iron couplings at Homestead a creature that seemed more a reptile than a human crawled from a brake beam under the last car, wiggled from the crossties and disappeared in the marsh. Hidden In the wide stretching fen, Montgomery saw and reveled in the | Joy of the first sunrise he had looked I upon in five years, made glad his starv ed soul with the sound of the birds stirring from their nests and in his heart echoed n Te Deura for his deliv erance from prison walls. CHAPTER VII. Help From the Dead. THE long ride on the brakebeam bad covered Montgomery's face, bands and clothes with dust and grease until he seemed a part of the bog in which he had sought shelter from the hounds at his heels. Moving cautiously and always fearful of a pit of quicksand, he sought onp of the high and dry hummocks Bill had told him of. He needed sleep and rest, for he had worn out his feet and legs In the race j from Sing Sing to North Tarrytown | and his arms in the swimming of the river. Clinging under a freight car for the rest of the flight had racked every nerve and muscle in him. Montgomery came to a little estuary of the bay piercing the marsh grass. On the other side he could see as he peered through the rent he made in the green wnll a rise in the marsh lev el and. topping it a cluster of wild flowers. He recognized it as his ref uge against hlgb tide and a place { where he could lie down and sleep. | ! No bed ever felt so soft and alluring j to a worn creature. The sun at meridian beat down In a straight shaft upon the sleeping man, and gnats and mosquitoes fed upon him. but still be slept Only semi conscious of the act, he pulled his gray biouse over his head and face and stuck Ills hands under It when the tor ture became too great. In the afternoon the breeze froth "the sea Increased to a gale as the tide reached the flood and the skies be came overcast. A great clap of thun der awakened the sleeping fugitive. Tb«> water was lapping at his feet The wind had sent mosquitoes and goats to cover. He stripped and wash ed himself clean A glance at the ben vens told him that soon the rain would fall bad been twenty-four hours witbet a drink of water or a particle or (T>od. Bill had warned him about the of thirst He placed Ihe felt hat -iven him by the bnrgliur ■o that it would catch the rain. Hi* followed Bill's advice and of his blouse made a little cloth reservoir supported on sticks of driftwood. The fall of the rain on his naked body and up turned face would reduce the fever set up by the stings of the pests, and he would hoard as best be could what rainwater be could catch in blouse and hat The rain began to fall, and the first (plashing of it against bis body was as • o*>w of ointment to the sores of Job after a flood of stale words from bis comforter Bildad, the Shuhlte. iTo Be Continued] I How to Make Your Hair Beautiful Trn Mlbulfh' Home Trratmrnt Work* Wonder*. Stop* I'iillliik Hair, ltrk- Idk Scalp and Dandruff anil Makes the Hair Soft, llrllltant, I.u«- troua and I'lutTj. Better than all the so-called "hair tonics" In the world Is a simple old fashioned home recipe consisting of plain Bay Hum, Lavona (de Composes), and a little Menthol Crystals. These three mixed at home in a few minutes, work wonders with any scalp. Try li Just one night and see. Get from your druggist 2 02. Lavona. 6 oz. Bay Hum and a drachm Menthol Crystals. Dis solve the Crystals in the Bay Hum and pour in an 8 oz. bottle. Then add the Lavona, shake well and let it stand for !an hour before using. Apply it by | putting a little of the mixture on soft I cloth. Draw this cloth slowly through I the hair, taking Just one small strand •at a time. This cleanses the hair and scalp of dirt, dust and excessive oil •and makes the hair delightfully soft lustrous and fluffy. To stop the hair from falling and to make it grow again I rub the lotion briskly Into the scalp I with tiie linger tips or a medium stiff 1 brush. Apply night and morning. A | few days' use and you will not lind a single loose or straggling hair. Tliev j,wlll be locked 011 your scalp as light ® s a vise. Dandruff will disappear and itching cease. You will find line downv new hair sprouting up all over your scalp and this new liair will grow with 1 wonderful rapidity. | Any druggist can sell you the above j The prescription is very Inexpensive | and we know of nothing so effective .and certain in Its result. Advertisement. Business Locals ALWAYS INVITING That noon-hour lunchson that Is specially prepared for the busy men of Harrlsburg at the Columbus Cafe is surely a delicious luncheon (or 40 cents. The food is nicely cooked and faultlessly served. Try one of theso luncheons to-morrow noon. Hotel Co lumbus. Third and Walnut streets. SPECIAL ON ABBOTTS Reduced prices prevail on all four cylinder Abbott-Detroit cars to meet the competition of the new low priced and cheaply built four and six cylin der models. This remarkable an nouncement means that you can now get a really good car at the price of cheaply made ones. See the models at Factory Branch, 106-108 South Second street. REMEDY FOB TIRE ILLS We liave a sure cure for every ill that tires are subject to. Punctures, blow-outs, rim-cuts, blisters, valve troubles, etc. All receive the most intelligent treatment at our hospital j which is equipped with the most mod |ern surgical instruments and vulcanlz jing apparatus essential to the jiroper I treatment of tubes or casing. Sterling Auto Tire Co., 14 51 Za.rker street. TABLE FERN'S Of e\\ ry kind, large and small in size, | splendid in shape—can he selected at j Schmidt's. Always the best in flowers for table decorations, flowers for the sick, stork, bouquets, corsage and flowers for the "only girl," are here in I splendid assortment. Schmidt, the I Florist, 313 Market street. LET US SHOW YOU I How to own a Lester Piano. Service and satisfaction have been indelibly I stamped upon every one of the thou sands of Lesters which for more than I a quarter of a century have been | spreading joy throughout the coun try'- It is that quality which makes every Lester owner delight In its pos | session, proud to have It in his home. ]H. G. Day, 1319 Derry street. USE OUR MONEY To pay your immediate obligations when you are temporarily embarrass ' ed for th» need of ready money. Our confidential system of loaning money at the lowest rates, and even lower than the State permits us to charge, makes it possible for you to secure money whenever needed without hu -1 miliating yourself or imposing on good friends. Pennsylvania Investment Co., 132 Walnut street. WE DON'T HAVE TO be told as much as we have to be re minded. Everyone knows that Bill Jones is in business, but if he fails to rem.nd them of what he has to sell they will naturally think of his com petitor who tells them his story. Let us show you our multigraph facsimile letters. Weaver Typewriting company, 25 North Third street. GEISHA WAISTS And other Japanese articles Innumer able, such as long crepe Irlmonos and kimonos for babies, embroidered slip pers, beads, hand embroidered fans, • Jewel cases, cushions and the many ' quaint and artistically designed ar~ j tides from Japan. All so distinctively different from the average that the difference appeals to all who see them. Mrs. Ida Cranston. 204 Locust street. BETTER CUT THE SHOE than pinch the foot. Is not modern logic. Send the shoes to us and we'll put on a new sole and expand the vamp so as to permit greater comfort. The shoe will then be as good as new. j The Goodyear way Is our way. While | you wait, if desired. City Shoe Re j pairing Co., 317 Strawberry street. *>ARTY FAVORS Place cards and candy favors, bless ing games and all the things to do at a party to make it an enjoyable af fair to the guests, are here In excellent variety. Other games entertaining to the children as well as odd toys and things suitable for unique prizes at party gatherings. Marianne Kinder Markt, 218 Locust street. 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 we try to givf especial attention to; Just 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 1 brings our wagon. Hoffman &> Schooley. THE HAPPY PAINTER Will be pleased with his Job when he comes and finds that you have ordered the famous Davis paints from the Shaffer Sales Co. A painter always appreciates quality materials to work with, as his reputation for workman ship depends largely on What he has to work with. When you want the best for interior or exterior or roofs call at 80 South Cameron street. SHARPLY CUT PRICES Summer clearance prices prevail on all coats, suits, skirts, dresses, waists and underwear. No greater oppor tunity for purchasing the most sea sonable as well as women's garments for all-year service. A splendid va riety of new and dependable mer chandise to choose from. Klein Co., 9 North Market Square.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers