4 THE QUALITY STORE Friday Economies Store Closes To-morrow at Noon EXTRA SPECIAL—Ladles' and Ratine. Suitings—3« Inches wide Misses' White wool Serge Suits that | n tan. pink, rose, hello and wls each $5.00 P° r > arard . styles and colors will be sold Friday at ONE-HAL!' PRICE. All-over Aprons made of percale ..... , . , ... and gingham. In stripes, check and Ladies' Lawn V alsts, made with . . . low neck and short sleeves—em- fifnired patterns all neatly bound broidery trimmed; worth 81. Sne- and well made. Regularly s»c. cial for Friday at, each s P pc '«* l for Friday at, each. EXCEPTIONAL—Curtains 2 % Bleached Pillow Cases, made yards long and 38 inches wide, w jth a 3-lnch liem—a good ser ««•<■» —• » inch double edge, hemstitched. two sizes—l 2 Vjc and 14c regular!). Regularly $2 special for Friday nt Special for Friday at, each. . 1 1 #> $1.39 M .lust a limited number of these. 3fi-lncli Comfort Sateens—good , , ~ ' . . heavy weight and in beautiful pat- Shirtwaist Lotcs—well made of . „„ „. , - ... , . selected white basswood good. ' ' ,Ol Frida>, heavy brass hinges and brace—cov- 20c values at. per yard 1 ered with cretonne of a neat design ' —slightly soiled—only one. Was 12 values at. per yard lOf 55.00. Special "for Friday at $1.98 Men's Night Shirts—made of nice I quality of cambric—low neck, full 40-inch hemstitched and drawn- , alld trlmmof , (n „ hltc or work edged \ odes and Scrims ill . .. . white, cream and ecru—every piece 't 1 ! sizes 15 to 18. A regular 75c perfect. Regularly 25c. Special quality. Special for Friday at for Friday at. per yard 59^ Cushion Cord in all colors—were Men's 50c fancy Silk and Silk 12% c, 15c and 19c per yard. Spe- knitted 4-in-liand ties. Special cial for Friday at. per yard .. . "i Friday at 35c each, or 3 for _ H SI.OO Dress Ratine—lo inches wide, in 25c qualities. Special Friday at. brown and mahogany—was $1.25 each 1 per yard. Special for Friday at. ' per yard I \g>, _ —~ +«> V SLOO and $1.25 White Cambric Dress Waflle Checks—2B Inches Skirts, made with a deep cmbroid widc in brown, navy and garnet— ery flounce—also lace trimmed was 15c per yard. Special for Fri- Special for Friday at, each . J:()/■, day at, per yard 9H Five styles of Indies' low neck Wash Fabrics at a special low and short sleeve gown in round, price—one table of summer wash square and V-necks, lik-c and cm fabrics that were values up to 25c broidery trimmed, made of a good per yard. Special Friday at, per quality cambric and longcloth. yard Regularly SI.OO. Special for Friday ' ' at. each (»{)(* Rice Cloths. Voiles and silk.s— this season's most popular wash Kimono Dress Shields worth fabrics that were 25c and 37 * Ac 25c. Special for Friday at. per pair, per yard. Special for Friday at 1 per yard .. .. J a nd 1 7<* ' White Crochet Buttons—all sizes Shirtwaist Linens absolutely —were 12 and 15c values. Spe purc linen, a nice light cambric cial for Friday at. per card .. . Xf>t weight, in medium and light blue. ' V helio. pink and light green—was 50c per yard. Special lor Friday at Odds and ends of small fancy per vard «> Isi trimming buttons. Special for Frl " Ol IT day at ONE-HALF PRICE. L. W. COOK iinunni nvn np i t ,h of ln(liana Bllbject sionprs to Sim So That to a PP r ° val of the Dauphin commis sioners 10 Jign vjo inai sioners and township supervisors. State Can Proceed Herbert —schwarz The wedding of Miss Myrtle May The contracts for the construction Schwarz. daughter of* Mr. and Mrs. of th»> connecting link of State-aid Frederick Schwarz. and Lewis Henry highway known as the Union Deposit Herbert, was performed last evening road will be sent to the Dauphin county at the parsonage of the Reformed commissioners to-day by the State Salem Church by the Rev. Ellis N. Highway Department and it is not j Kremer. Miss Edna Herbert, sister thought that there will be much delay lof the bridegroom, and Frederick In having it executed. Schwarz, brother of the bride, were This road has been much desired in the attendants. OOomen L u u ma y 9 r L may no * be accompanied by backache or headache or bearing down. I'hc local disorders and inflammation, if there Is any, should be treated with Dr. Pierce's Lotion Tablets. Then the nervous system and the entire womanly make-up feels the tonic effect of I®, PIERCE'S ! Favorif® Prescription Take th!s in Ucj&csd cr iafclet form and be a WQ/I woman I -, ■ , periods. Have Uken ieveral cement medicines but found 1 ft vorlte P"*crlpUon hts riven fh: most relief ol any- BMUHIvaWAJWaMM or thins I have ever tried. Am very much better than I have W 0 . been in some time. 1 dJad.y rscomnionj this remedy to any B tti i woman in need of a tonic. Vrrtlc Or. V. AL [•.rco, Bu.'telo, H. Y. ■ I On. Plan-so's Plnrr-artt Pallets 8 Wfomanhctodl ( foguiato siosnaoSb [Jvor, boweia jjj Wothsrhood JUNIATA COUNTY a , ~ . _ _ September 9to 11 £ XjL A. £\j special trains PORT ROYAL Thursday, September 10 Leave Harrisburg Thursday. September 10, at 7.45 A. M„ Newport 8.46 A. M., Millerßtown 8.54 A. M., Thompsontown 9.04 A. M Re turning leave Port Royal 5.30 P. M. for Harrisburg and intermediate stations. REDUCED FARE EXCURSION TICKETS Ifold to Port Royal September 9 to 11, good returning until Septem ber 12. Inclusive. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD THURSDAY EVENING, GEORGE SUTTON MJlf SING IN OPERA AGAIN Baritone of Ohev Sholom Hat Of fer From a New York Op eratic Company I George Sutton, baritone, of this city, |is considering an offer from a New | York operatic company to take part in | an opera to be produced early in No vember. Mr. Sutton has been in New | York for several weeks. He has also I received a very tempting ofTer to re main in New York. Mr. Sutton has not yet accepted any of the propositions, He is a member of the choir at Ohev Sholom Syna gogue, and it is understood will return |to Harrisburg before announcing his decisions. Two season's ago Mr. Sut ton filled successfully a position with the New York Operatic Company. When business declined the company was taken off the road and Mr. Sutton ! resumed his local engagements. Re cently, it is said, he has given several tests of his voice, and if he decides to fill the New York engagements, will have v an opportunity for still greater honors as a vocalist. HAVE ST T PPKR AT PAXTANG West End folks last evening enjoy ed a ham and egg supper at Paxtang 1 Park. Among those in attendance , were Dr. and Mrs. C. M. Ewing. Wil liam Sites, Mrs. Margaret Bitting, Mr. | and Mrs. Herbert Allen Reed and their | son, Herbert Allen Reed, Jr., Archie j Welsh. Mrs. M. L. Hofting. Miss Al jfaretta Horting, Miss Jennie Horting, .Miss Ida Beck. Miss Mary Evans, Mrs. | Cora Swing Harr, Miss Sara Mae Harr, j Miss Charlotte Stewart and Charles I Long. PICNIC OX ISLAND ! The A. F. W. Club held a picnic at j Independence Island this afternoon. Supper will be served to the following: | Mrs. Harvey Rutter, Mrs. Frank Ben- Iner, Mrs. John Seidel, Mrs. Lawrence | Bowman, Mrs. Harry SlaJley, Mrs. I George L. Savis. Mrs. Clarence Moretz, | Mrs. Charles Wenrick, Mrs. Paul Reynolds, Mrs. Dallas Wolf and Mrs. E. M. Wagner. j Miss Grace Elberti is the guest of ! her aunt, Mrs. Wellington G. Jones, • 1325 Derry street. I Clarence O. Backenstoss, secretary to Mayor John K. Royal, is the guest of Wilmington friends. Frank KitzmiUer, the Derry street jdrugßist, and family have returned to | the city after a summer's sojourn at ' their cottage at Stoverdale. j Mrs. E. L. Cowden, 701 North Sixth 'street, has returned from a summer's j visit to points in Canada. | Miss Sarah Weitzel, of 1314 Berry | hill street, and Miss Mary Reagan, of | South Cameron street, are home from j Niagara Falls, New York and points I of interest in Canada, j Miss Mina Myers has returned to j her home in Mt. Holly after spending iseveral weeks with Mrs. William Trax j ler, at 315 Burchhill street. Mrs. Jacob Shumaker, of 23 North | Fifteenth street, has returned home from Philadelphia. I P. J. Sweeney, of 1 South Eighteenth : street, is spending several weeks in | Philadelphia, New York and Chicago. | Miss Marie Gordon, of Philadelphia, is the guest of Miss Mame McGeehan, at 1616 Market street. Mrs. M. V. Miller, of 224 North Second street, is spending the week in New York city. Miss Ellen Kelly, of Altoona, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Kelly, 19 South Seventeenth street. Mr. and Mrs. P. G. Diener and fam ily, 1226 Market street, have returned from Mt. Gretna, having closed their cottage for the season. Miss Mary Bowman and Miss Ger trude Bowman have returned from Mt. Gretna after spending the week end at the Katola cottage, occupied by Mrs. J. E. Bowman and Mrs. Jesse S. Parlan^n. Chauncey Colestovk, of New Ox ford, is visiting Mrs. Edith Smith, 2004 Susquehanna street. Mrs. Smith, her son William and Mr. Colestock spent yesterday at the Cove as the guests of Mrs. Samuel Donley. Mrs. C. F. Greenawalt, of Lucknow, and Mrs. Paul D. Messner were guests of Mrs. J. Bowman at Mt. Gretna for a few days. Mrs. H. O. Burtnett and daughter. Miss Mary Burtnett, of 27 South Nine teenth street, are home from Williams Grove. John M. Smith, of Llnglestown, has returned from Vermont, where he spent his vacation. Miss Sarah Denehey, 1423 North Front street, who has been visiting her aunt, Mrs. George Loveland, at Palmerton, is now the guest of her cousin, Miss Elsie Croll, at Princeton. Miss Martha Tomkinson and Miss Ellen Finn Tomkinson, 605 Boas street, have returned from a stay at Mountain Lake Park Park. Md. Mrs. A. Carsan Stamm, Miss Julia Owen Stamm, Miss Catherine Estelle and Miss Maude Hanson Stamm, 333 South Thirteenth street, will return this week from Buena Vista. Mr. and Airs. C. I. Leas and daugh ter. Miss Mildred Leas, of 320 South Thirteenth street, are home after spending a week in Washington, D. C. John Welsh and Joseph Welsh, of Pottsville, are guests of Mr. and Mrs. William Masimore, at 215 South Nineteenth street, oh their way to Roanoke, Va. \ Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Robinson, 1538 Derry street, are visiting relatives at Loganport. Ind. Mis Miriam P. Carl, of 404 South Fourtenth street, is home from a month's visit with her sister, Mrs. i Howard Brine, Jamestown, N. Y. The Rev. and Mrs. J. A. Lyter and their son, Thomas B. Lyter, are home from a three week's vacation. Mr. Lyter will preach at Derry Street United Brethren Church on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. James C. McAllister, of Second and Calder streets, • an nounce the birth of a daughter, Jane Bricker McAllister, Wednesday, Sep tember 2. Mr. and Mrs. J. Hay Barnholt, of Denver, Col., announce the birth of a daughter, Mary Jane. Wednesday, Sep tember 2. Mr. and Mrs. Barnholt are guests of Mrs. Barnholt's parents, Mr. and Mrs, Frank E. Musser, 702 North Sixth street. BARRISBURG TELEGRAPH SUFFRAGE WORKERS AFTER FARMER VOTE Harrisburg Enthusiasts Go to Wil liams Grove; Mrs. Jones Makes a Speech More than a sr ore of Harrisburg suffragists, headed by Mrs. Mabel Cronlse Jones, president of the Wo men's Suffrage Association of Central Pennsylvania, this morning took the train to the Grangers' Picnic grounds at Williams Grove. Every one In the party is an en thusiastic worker In the votes for women cause and every one went to the picnic determined to bring more enthusiasts Into the fold. During the early part of the afternoon they as sisted the Carlisle suffrage workers, who have a booth at the grove, to dis- tribute suffrage emblems to the crowds. Tellow fans handed out to the farmers were in evidence everywhere. Mrs. Jones was one of the speakers of the afternoon, making her address between the speeches of Dr. Brum baugh and Secretary of Internal Af fairs Houck. Mrs. .tones' Speech Mrs. Jones said that the States adopttngs woman suffrage have all | been contiguous to suffrage territory; that Wyoming, the first suffrage State, is bounded on the south by Colorado— and Colorado, after looking across the border for some years, seeing that Wyoming had the lowest percentage of divorce of any State In the Union, and that the. viewpoint of the women In matters legislative was helpful to the home and to the Interests of the child, adopted it also; Utah and Idaho, bor dering these two States, looked across their borders and were the next to adopt suffrage; the other full suffrage States, Washington, Oregon, Califor nia, Arizona and Kansas, all touched suffrage territory; that they were so situated as to-be able to watch the workings of woman suffrage, and had It been a failure they would never have adopted It. "The majority of people," Mrs. Jones went on, "are at heart conser vatives and they object to anything that is not in accordance with the established order of things. Those who are anti-suffragists to-day, had they lived in the early part of the last century, would have opposed giving women any privileges In the public libaries; they would have objected to women's learning the alphabet lest it make them unfamiliar—and, of course, they would have objected a few decades since to women entering high schools, colleges and professional life." Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Gebhard, of Riverside, have returned home from a very pleasant trip to New York, As bury Park and Ocean Grove. Miss Bess Oyster has returned to her home, 13 3 4 Green street, from Belle Terre, 1,. 1., where she success fully completed the summer course of interior decoration at the New York School of Fine and Applied Art. Mrs. Charles Aronson and daughter Jeanette, of 257 Forster -street, have returned home after spending the summer at Long Branch and Asbury Park. Mrs. William J. Ettlnger, of 122 Calder street, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Gough, 322 Lewis street. Riverside, have returned from a trip (to Pittsburgh, Columbus and Dayton, 'Ohio. While in Dayton they visited E. J. Ettinger. Mrs. R. E. Keever, 42 5 Forster street, and son John are home from Philadelphia, where they spent several weeks with relatives. I Miss Martha. Trace, 227 West State street, has returned to Hollidaysburg, where she is an instructor in the Hoi ■ lidaysburg High School. Miss Mary Elizabeth Shearer has returned to her home at Oxford, after visiting Miss Katherlne Elizabeth Gor gas, 216 Maclay street. J. Earl Steinhauer. of Lemoyne, is visiting friends in Reading. Mrs. Thomas H. Wilson and small daughter, Mary Elinor Wilson, of 1847 Regina street, will return Sunday from an extended visit among friends in Connecticut. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Fry and Mrs. Windsor, of 108 Herr street, have just returned from Pittsburgh, where they i visited relatives. Dr. J. S. Culp, 211 Locust street, returned home from his vacation in Sulphur Springes, W. Va. Miss Gertrude Snyder, 318 South Fifteenth street, who has been spend ing her vacation with her parents, will return to-morrow to Washington, D. C.. to resume her studies In the Providence Hospital. Miss Gertrude George, 203 Kelker street, has returned from a visit among friends in Philadelphia. FRENCHIVEiMENT IS TRANSFERRED [Continued From First Page] ranks have been filled up from the waiting reserve forces while the call ing out of a new class of reserves brings us to-morrow new resources in men and energy. Endure and Klglit "Endure and fight! Such should be the motto of the allied army, England, Russians, Belgians and French. "Endure and fight. While on the sea our allies aid us to cut these enemies' communication with the world. "Endure and fight. While the Rus sians continue to carry a decisive blow to the heart of the German empire. "It is for the government of this republic to direct this resistance to the very end and to give to this for midable struggle all its vigor and effi ciency. It is Indispensable that the government retain the mastery of its own actions. <>n the demand of the military authorities the government, therefore, transfers Its seat momen tarily to a point of the territory whence it may remain in constant re lations with the rest of the country. It Invites the members of parliament not to remain distant from the gov ernment In order to form, in the face of the enemy, with the government and their colleagues, a group of na tional unity. City Is Defended "Thr> government does not leave Parle without having assured a de fense of the city and Its entrenched camp by all means In Its power. It knows It has not the need to recom mend to the admlrahle Parisian popu lation a calm resolution and sangfroid for It shows every day It is equal to'its greatest duties. "Frenchmen, let us all be worthy of these tragic circumstances. We shall gain a final victory and we shall gain it by untiring will, endurance and tenacity. A nation that will not per- I ■wwwmwwvllii' here not alone because pnrea are lower, hut heraime Qualities are 0 Store Closes Tomorrow at Noon li Another Short Day ef Exceptional Prices on jj Seasonable Things TO-MORROW ONLY To crowd a day's business into four hours means prices that will bring crowds here every Ij Ij minute from 8 until 12 o'clock. We have succeeded every Friday thus far this summer, and if 11 ij price cutting counts for anything, to-morrow will be no exception. Remember the store closes ;! ; | at noon, II Q> TDDI ICC 1 250 ladies ' ribbcd vests; Friday price... 190 jj OvflUuL )J