Only 1H More Days and Kaufman's Wonderful Bargains for Friday. Store Opens ~y f— I— '7 5c Foptiicr Prloo up to $4.50 Pretty waeh materia Is, This season's materials" Tailored and 7SO y '■» r N f 1 •~ mmm ~ — ■^—— s__^ POK FRIDAY ONXY FOR FRIDAY ONLY FOR FKID.VY O\I,Y FOR FRIDAY ONLY FOR FRIDAY ONLY FOR FRIDAY ONLY FOR FRIDAY ONI.Y Women's Silk Dresses Girls' Balkan Suits Separate Short Coats Women's Moire Coats ™°u™l%i.£.™ ns /50c w £ m tiL. °? wers \ 15c nJS"™'.. 69c 1 ~ ■>_,,„ . «_ «„ Worth up to $5.00 , Ju . st 29 to sell l made of Lonjf- * Just 150 blouses to sell; made Former Price up to $6.50 Worth up to $2.50 Worth up to $1.95 C '° th s, "» Vim Floo" ° f SfflT&'VfSt ¥toS. ! Rear.'" 8 ' $l.OO 55c c $1 OO ►"« K» d .V ~M., K,„R ,,,,,, A R^,, V ""■ v . * Only 4to sell. *r Women's Hose, 101/ 9 Women's Petticoats, 1Q Children s Hose Sup- 0^ Black Jap silk dresses, pret- Made of Linon. Colors. Tan, , 2 Women's Hlack Coats. ~ , ~ . , > 25e Value, for 16 /*C B <»* Value, for AJ/1» porters, for tlly trimmed. This season's Blue and White. Girls' sizes. Sizes 34 and 38; 2 Misses' Senre ilaile or mack moire. Only women's Just 100 to sell fast hi,,i, „ , Value to 20c. styles. Only 6to sell. Sizes 16 Only 11 to sell. Be here Norfolk Coats, Sizes 14. Be 7to sell. Sizes 18 tr> 40. Be lisle thread hose! in tan only featherweight pKtlcoS?. h i»,?J V ?L £hPt« al! P slze a er "' to 3fi. Be here earlj. earlj. here early. here early. Sale on First Floor. Sale on Second Floor. Sale on First Floor, Roar. *■ » ' ■ V v— V— 1 Women's and Misses' . 1 Women's and Misses' " | For Friday onl y ~ ' I For Friday 0«l y Summer Washable $ I .j" sL^" 8 HSC ".Ores, Skirts 9k r w TAST j DR M S m ' Skirts IMp Former Pri«? S t! 6 55.00 at . Former Prices to $2.50 at.. Worth up to $1.25 Worth up to $2.00 ... , n „ TA ttv vnti.«. lin.ni erenei tt« Desirable styles in all the wanted wash materials includ- .. . , , _ Pretty long Russian tunic styles in best quality. Whit® „4"„r,sr° % •»« »«™.»-»«• •*>*«, ™ a . A » ..... „ * h ".U m w on " 20,0 ■*"• Be ■>«..,>«. »* o„„. „.„ „,,. » „,,,. « rty . sizes for women and misses. • extra size waist bands for stout women. — FOR FRIDAY ONI.Y FOH FRIDAY ONI.Y FOR FRIDAY ONLY FOH FRIDAY OSI.Y FOR Fltin.4V OM.Y FOH FRIDAY OITLY [p . | n , ' Women's House Dresses Children's Guimpes Girl's Wash Dresses Children's Hose Men's and Boys' Belts Men's Wash Ties FridaY Bargains $l.OO VALI E, FOR 50c \ ALL E, FOR VALUES 50c AND 75c. FOR 10c VALUE, FOR 25c VALUE, FOR 15c VAI VE9 3 FOR w jd *p ® f 25c 10c 29c 5c 15c 25c In Boys Suits Just 40 to sell, made of Per- Just 28 to sell, made of white Just 65 Dresses to sell; n\ade 200 pairs to sell. fast hlack Just 50 belts to sell In T„.» inn «»n „.„v, »„„„ i„ cUICI 1 cHIIS cales: small sizes only. Lawns: mostly small sizes. of Percales; sizes. 2 to 14 years. rihhed hose; all sizes Just so belts to sell, in black Ju.t 100 to sell, wash four-ln- W Sale on Second Floor. Sale on Second Floor. Sale on Second Floor. Sale on First Floor. " Sale'on First Floor. Rear. Sale on First Floor. Front. Bovs' 75c WASH nN ; V ' SUITS ZoC A Great Sale of WOMEN'S NECK WFA r\ Frid °y Bargains in MEN'S SUITS AND PANTS] SUITS $lOO WASH 50C /i urear oojeor j JVCL-A im/in Me „. S SI .OO SUM- ON . M e„' S S^GE e n M™- 5 522.50 sl■■ CN . BOY-SUO WASH Over 2,000 Sample Pieces F.r Less THU Half Price mer COAT I9C TA AUS ILS SUITS 75C Men's $1.50 Kha- OA , , Boys' $2.00 (f» j aa Women's Silk Bows Women's Neckwear Women's Newest Organdie ki I>ants o*/C p ant ° s n S s3Mix :sl.sol a nr.'. s : w . LonB .. 75c I Wash Suits ij) 1 .UU Lace and organdie Neck- Only the newest styles, made Neckwear & Chemisettes Men's $lO.OO PA L M Wa^h^t" 5 ° JRI 2 '"l wear; value to 39c. Choice, for * Va.uea t o $l .OO. Choice, ,o r 56.75 SuS7!'.f 7sc 75c lOc 19c 29c Men's $lO.OO Q»a f-fl Men's $13.50 CH Boys' $l.OO Straw of Suits <PT"• Ox/ 'P.liie Serge Suits, %P f »DU Hats Richelieu & Ontario Division Vacation Trips on Lake and River Steamers "Rochester" and "Syracuse," leave Toronto and Charlotte (Rochester Port) and Clayton dally, for j Thousand Islands, and j through the Rapids to Mont real, Quebec, Saguenay River, Gulf of St. Lawrence and Labrador. For particulars write: IS East Swan Street, (Elllcott Sq), Buffalo. W. F. CLONET, District Pa... Agent Charles B. Cluck Carpenter and Builder jobbing promptly attended to; screen doors and windows a specialty; alio One cabinet work. Call Bell Phone J 317-1, 2200 Logan Setret Business Locals MAKES YOIU MOUTH WATER B. B. D. Coffee has that delicious ftaste and delightful aroma that is un equalled. Careful blending and roast ing after selecting the choicest berries makes this possible. The proof of Its quality is In the fact that It is our "best seller." People keep right on using it year after .year. Phone us for a trial order. B. B. Drum, 1801 North Sixth street. Try Telegraph Want Ads. THURSDAY EVENING. fiARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JULY 23, T9T**" Army Worm Seems to Have Done His Worst—ls Disappearing Devastations by the army worm in i Harrisburg to be practically at an end for this year. During the incur- I sion of the black pest the past several i days, lawns in nearly all sections of, the city have suffered. Soon after the ! worm appeared and the Telegraph printed instructions as to how to set rid of the pest, drug stores did a rush ing business in arsenate of lead solu tion. The question uppermost In the minds of the owner* of lawns now is. where did the worms *O. and why? Upon In quiry from entomologists in this city it is learned that the worms that sur vive the arsenate of lead solution—and It is believed that not many of them perish from this cause—that they bur row in the ground, after their visit to the upper air. there to lay eggs that will in turn hatch again. An Easy Way to Increase Weight Good Advice for Thin Folks The trouble with most thin folks who wish to gain weight is that they Insist on drugging their stomach or stuffing tt with greasy foods; rubbing on use less "flesh creams," or following some foolish physical culture stunt, while the real cause of thinness goes untouched. You cannot get fat until your digestive tract assimilates the food you eat. Thanks to a remarkable new scien- ! tlflc discovery, it is now possible to I combine into simple form the very ele ments needed by the digestive organs to help them convert food into rich, fat-laden blood. This master-stroke of modern chemistry is called Sargol and has been termed the greatest of flesh builders. Sargol alms through its re generative, re-constructive powers to coax the stomach and Intestines to lit erally soak up the fattening elements of your food and pass them into the blood, where they are carried to every starved, broken-down cell and tissue of your body. You can readily picture the result when this amazing transfor mation has taken place and you notice how your cheeks fill out, hollows about your neck, shoulders and bust disap pear and you take on from 10 to 20 Jiounds of solid, healthy flesh. Sargol y absolutely harmless, inexpensive, ef ficient. G. A. Gorgas and other leading druggists have It and will refund your money if you are not satisfied, as per the guarantee found in every package. Caution!— While Sargol has given ex cellent results In overcoming nervous dyspepsia and general stomach troubles It should not be taken by those who do not wish to gain ter\ pounds or more. Advertisement. Business Locals TRUE MUSICALLY Whether you strike a chord or a single key on the Lester, the response In mellow tonfc satisfies in quality and quantity. The instrument has won and it retains the confidence of the musi cian, because Its tone Is true musically, and because it never disappoints in volume. It lasts a lifetime. H. G. Day, 1319 Derry street. WERE AFTER YOU! And you'll be mighty glad when we get you on our list of satisfied Troy patrons. We will relieve you of your laundry bundle or your garments that need dry or steam cleaning and return them to you with a guarantee of sat isfaction. Our process does not Injure the most delicate fabric, and our charges are very reasonable. Try the Troy. Either phone. ALWAYS INVITING That noon-hour lunoheon that Is especially prepared for the busy men of Harrisburg at the Columbus Cafe is surely » delicious luncheon for 40 cents. The food is nicely cooked and faultlessly served. Try one of these luncheons to-morrow noon. Hotel Co lumbus, Third and Walnut street. Young Canoeists Who Frightened Friends by Absence Return Home Roland Douglass and Miss Ftliel Shenk, New Market, whose absence yesterday, after '.hey ha.l started on a canoe trip the previous evening, caused such apprehension among their friends and relatives, turned up. at their homes yesterday afternoon. Miss shenk re turned to New Market about 2 o'clc k with the information that she had spent the night with a friend on Allison Hill, and about two hours later, Dougless re turned to New Cumberland and said lie had gone on up the Conodoguinet and had spent the night with a party fish ing along the creek. Douglass says lie landed Miss Shenk about 10:30 In the evening and placed her aboard a car in Second street, and then returned to go out on the river agatn. Not realizing that there would be any anxiety over his absence, he spent the night in a cottage at West Fairvlew with some boy friends. Douglass Is a University of Pennsylvania student who <■ visiting his sister, Mrs. Horace Snodgrass, at New Cumberland. Mrs. Carrie N. Orsinger Injured in Auto Crash Is Improving Rapidly Mrs. Carrie N. Orsinger, 1208 North Sixth street, widow of Vincent G. Or singer, formerly proprietor of the Or-- singer Hotel, Third and Verbeke streets, was slightly Injured yesterday when an automobile in which she was riding was struck by another car In the Petersburg turnpike, near Richmond, Va. According to reports received here to-day Mrs. Orsinger Is improving, John H. Stoner, son of Mr. and Mrs. 1 John R .Stoner, 2235 Penn street, was j also in the automobile. Other passen- ; gers In the car were. Police Justice ; Crutchfleld and his daughter, Mrs. George B. Wright Orutchfield's knee was sprained. Stoner, who is employed by the Cen tral Pennsylvania Construction Com pany, has been employed on a contract at Richmond. He left this olty the lat- 1 ter part of April. Mrs. Orsinger left 1 for Richmond, Va., a week ago on a visit. TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS Nominations for Federal offices in I Pennsylvania may be confirmed to day. Democrats alarmed at amount car ried by the appropriation bills and be gin talk of reducing the amounts. Dr. Brumbaugh and Senator Pen rose will tour the State, meeting at Pittsburgh August 26, when the Re publican platform will be adopted. Officials of signal company plant, Involved In recent Westinghouse strike, retire. Soft coal operators to move head quarters from Philadelphia to Clear field. • Senator Penrose pays fine levied by My erst own Justice for auto speeding. ! To Discard Freckles, Tan, Pimples, Wrinkles The use of creams on the face sometimes causes hair to grow. You can avoid the risk of acquiring »u -perfluous hair by avoiding. cosmetics and using mercollzed wax instead. There is nothing better for any condi tion of the skin, as the wax actually absorbs the offensive cuticle. The lat ter Is naturally replaced by a clear, smooth, healthy complexion, full of life and expression. It's the sensible way to discard a freckled, tanned, over-red, blotchy or pimpled skin. Get an ounce of mercollzed wax at any druggist's and apply nightly like cold cream, erasing In the morning with soap and water. It takes a week or so to com plete the transformation. The Ideal wrinkle eradlcator Is made Iby dissolving an ounce of powdered saxollte in a half pint witch hazel. I Bathing the face in the solution brings [ almost Instantaneous results. Harrisburg School Sketches BY .1. HOWARD WERT No. 7—Early Hlsh School Crnriu ates. How the Hnrrlshurj* Schools of 1871 Compared With the City's Other Developments. The Mulberry Street Schoo[house Which Became the Harrisburjj Hospital j The last number of this series pre sented some very surprising figures | showing the contrasts between the I Harrisburg public schools of to-day land those of forty years ago. Indicat ing forcibly how wonderful has been ' the growth and development in that Itlme. These figures were especially remarkable in regard to the high 'schools of the'city. But yet more remarkable is the fact that the commencements, which form Iso prominent and enjoyable a part of each school year, were substantially unknown as an Institution of the town up to 1874; for, in that year, for the first time, there was a grad uating class from the Boys' High School. This class numbered two, the young men being J. Henry Spicer and Samuel N. Diven. From the Girls' High School classes had been graduated In 1858, 1863, 1866, 1867, 1870, 1872, 1873, the-whole number of graduates In these classes aggregated forty. The exercises, how ever, attracted little attention or popu lar interest until the first joint com mencement of the two schools was held In 1874. From this time on they became a prominent feature of the educational life of the city, becoming more elaborate and attracting greater and still greater attention every year. If space permits I hope to have some thing to say of some of the features and Interesting points of these com mencements before closing this series. Harrisburg Forty Yearn Ago and Now But to prevent any misapprehension, let it be said that the Harrisburg of 1874 was fully abreast educationally with the Harrisburg of 187 4 In other respects. 1874 is not so long ago. Only forty years have Intervened. I meet on the street every day many men In the prime of life and business activity who were then school boys. I meet some, who aro yet hale and good for many years of usefulness, who were already prominent in the in dustries and professions of the city In 1874. Let us for one moment recall what the Harrisburg of 1874 was in other lines outside of school work, and you will then not be surprised at the great contrast between the educational equipment then and now. In 1874 there was no telephone ex change In Harrisburg, for there were no telephones; and their convenience heing unknown, they were not missed. I All type In newspaper offices was la boriously set by hand, letter by letter, for the ingenious linotype machinery of to-day was unknown. In 1874 elec tric lights existed not and the city fathers thought the big iron posts from which gas Jets endeavored to illuminate the murky night the height , of progress. In 187 4 Harrisburg was not only a very small, but a very dirty city. There were no street sweepers for there were no paved streets. The citizens staidly and solemnly accepted the alternate mud unfathomable and dust unbear ble, for twelve months of the year, as a wise dispensation of Providence against which It would be Impious to rebel. And when, years later, the paving of the City's main thorough fare was undertaken, the fossils of that day, who were a numerous clan, sought to prevent It by suits innumer able. In 1874, along Market street and in Market Square, wooden shan i lieu, venerable in their decrepitude, was the prevailing style of architec ture. Hnrrlslmrg- Street Travel 40 Years Ago In 1874 letters were written by hand with pen and ink, consequently pen manship had not then become a lost art submerged beneath the wave of expeditious work In dictating to a bright girl who banks the keys of a typewriter at so much per. But if the Harrisburg of 187 4 had no tele phones, no linotype machines, no elec tric lights, no paved streets, no type writers, it at least had street cars. There was a line which ran from near the Pennsylvania Railroad tracks up Market street to the Square, and then, reaching Third street by way of Second and Walnut, went up the first mentioned thoroughfare as far as R.eily. It had been constructed dur ing a spasm of enterprise near the close of the Civil War. A branch at Third and Verbeke streets, running alongside the uncompleted stone mar .kethouse to Ridge road (Sixth street), had led Camp Curtin way. Bm, with the abandonment of that rendezvous. It was found unprofitable and aban doned, and subsequently the tracks were torn up. Tt was an odd kind of a diminutive bob-tailed car that hauled the citi zens of that day over the Third and Market street lines, —or at least those of them that had plenty of leisure. If a man was In a hurry, he generally walked. The motive power of these queer cars was horses and mules In various gradations of laziness, cussed - ness and emaciation. In front of the car sat a driver with almost any kind of a bean-pole, ox-goad or sapling: that, whacked across the backa of the brutes, would be perwuaalva In Induc ing locomotion. The man who got on In the morning at Broad street oould have his paper read and digested by the time he reached Market Similarly with the evening paper on his return. In 1874 the awesome and evfl-amellhig old "Camelhack," replete with assaults and robberies, was the only means of communication between Harrisburg and the Cumberland county shore. Many more illustrations of the changes of forty years might be given, but enough has been said to show that the Harrlsbunr schools of 1874 w*re fully abreast of the other develop ments of the Harrisburg of that period. The Mnlberry Street Public School Something has been said In previous number* of some of the school build ings which existed In 1874. Before concluding the series I hope to Bpeak of others. But I wish now to say a few words about one that had dis appeared from the roll a short jfme before. When, a little past the middle of the last century, the South Ward of Harrisburg grew tired of log huts on back alleys for schoolhouses and, un der the leadership of Valentine Hum mel, began to assert Itself, its school board erected a fine two-story brick school building In Mulberry street near front. Then the South Ward began Ito put on airs, and, truth to tell, It was a very superior school structure ;as things then went In the towns of ' Pennsylvania. [ But presently things were not so gay Iby half, for the trains of the Cumber land Valley, and Northern Central Men's $1.50 Stiff Tr? Hats 75C Railroads thundered by Its doors—and that was an age when railways tvere setting busy. Soon It became evident that the site was a deal more suit able for hospital than school uses, for patients are not expected to lejive their cots for the purpose of murder ing themselves beneath locomotives, but It Is not near so safe to gamble on frisky urchins of from 6 to 12 not doing so. So the Mulberry street school building hecame the nucleus of that magnificent institution, the Har risburg Hospital. Relief for Catarrh Sufferers Now FREE You Can Now Treat This Trouble in Your Own Home and Get Relief at Once. tHow the Remedy for C&tarrlt Was Discovered. By the new terrible disease method the nose I has raged unchecked TrtatTli Tn L for years simply be. fenTy aXfd cause symptoms ham been directty to the treated while the cause of ifanes. the trouble has been left to circulate In the blood, and bring the disease back a* fast local treatments could relieve it C. £. Gauss, who experimented Ibr years on a treatment for Catarrh, found that after perfecting a balm that relieved the nose and throat troubles quickly, he could not prevent the trouble beginning sfßactLi on , ***** h0 direct influence completely remove all cous membranes signs of Catarrh from nose full's a dt and throat, but In * few ease by remov weeks they were back. tng the cause. Careful experiments and investigations have shown that as the troubles were expelled from the nose and Goes to the Root of throat, the real cause of fhe disease was overlooked and io a short time the Catarrh would return stronger Stopped-uji noses than ever. Mr. Gauss has .gone way ahead of the Constant ordinary methods of treatment and has provided a throat" remedy that Nasal discharges Hawking and spitting Removes the Cause K^*th night and Immediately Gives Re lief to the Nose and Throat Smothering sensation 1b Reese Jones, of Scranton, Penn.. says that after trying dreams many other treatments, he used this new method and— Sudden tits of sneezing "My nose is now entirely clear and free and I am not Drv mums in now bothered by the disease any more. The New Combined /'J ". V/ Treatment is worth its weight in gold." an< * any of the other symp- Temporary relief from catarrh may be obtained in other toms that indicate ap ways but the New Combined Treatment must inevitably proachmg or present catarrh be accepted for permanent results. Sarah J. Cape. Mount Pella, Tenn., says. "I I suffered the pains and distress of catarrh for • C._J fk.T.itTnahn«it thirteen years and needless to state, tried nearly ■ Jcuu lnc 1 esl * reaUlieiK every method. But by your new method lavas I CD 1717 completely cured and you cannot imagine the r KCiEi joy that has come over me." I C E GAUSS Trial Treatment FRFF 1 6008 M«n str«>t f Mich. 1 ridl 1 reaimeni riVCiL . If your New tombined Treatment wilt This new method is so important to the wel- ; relieve my Catarrh and bring me health fare of humanity, to vital to every person suffer- I and good spirits again, lam willing to ing from «ny k form of catarrh, that the oppor- . be shown. So. without cost or obUgation tunity to actually test it and Prove ita reaulta. I «° ® e - B " d ' ' ully the Treat wiß be gladly extended without ene cent of coat, j ment and Book. A large trial treatment, with complete, ml- a niite directions, will be sent free to any catarrh- I sufferer. j 1 " mo Send no money, take no risks, make no * promises. Simply clip, sign end mail the cou- I Addreaa ........ pon and the test package of the New Combined . Treatment will be sent, fully prepaid, together ■ . ■ with the valuable book on Catarrh. I .......1—.., • V BRYAN AT MTIiIJKRRBURG Special to The Telegraph Millersburg, Pa., July 23. —The Mil lershurg Chautauqua Association pitched its tent on the TTlrich lot, north of Moore street, Wednesday for the third successive year and is giving the people of Millersburg and vicinity the opportunity of hearing the best talent In the East. Secretary of State Wil liam Jennings Bryan is scheduled to give one of his lectures here Sunday. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers