\fc?o(Yien r "Their Married Life Copyright by International News Service. L_ J (Copyright, 1914. International News Serviced "How would you like to take in a show?" said Warren as they were fin ishing dinner. "There are some really good shows in town now and It Is a pretty cool evening." "I think it would be fine, dear. That sounds awfully good?" "I'll go and look one up in the paper and phone down while you are dressing. We ought not to have any trouble getting seats just now; what do you think?" "I shouldn't think so. go to see something real good. I mean a real play, not a musical comedy." And Helen, without waiting for an answer, went Into her room and switched the lights on over her dresser. She felt singularly happy to-night for some reason or other, and she hummed a gay little tune as she slipped out of her dress and Into a kimono. She tied her hair up swiftly with deft fingers and then stopped a minute to decide whether to wear a suit or one of her pretty dresses. "Warren." she called finally, "shall I wear a suit or is tt too warm?" "Anything." from the living room. "Say, how would you like to see that new thriller, "I'p Against It?" That ought to be gloomy enough for any one!" "If you're sure you'll enjoy that! kind of a play, dear. I want you to; be satisfied." No answer but a rustling of the paper, and Helen went to the closet and lifted a cool black and white gown from Its hanger. The dress was a very smart one, and one of Warren's favorites, and she did want him to be pleased with her to-night.; Soon little Winifred would be home j again, and Helen caught her breath with the thought. Somehow the! thought of Winifred took away the, glad feeling that she had had all even ing. She wondered if she ought to be going to the theater while her little girl was 111 and needed her. And then the thought that she would be with her so very soon brought the color back to her face. Surely War ren knew what was best and he had said there was no need to worry. Warren Thinks Helen Is Pretty Dressy Helen pulled the drawer of her dressing table open hurriedly and sorted out a clean -pair of gloves, and then pulled a soft black velvet hat down over her facet &nd went out to the living room. Warren looked np as she came into the room. "Pretty dressy, aren't you." he re marked, looking hex up and down critically. "It is too warm for n suit, dear, and you always liked this dress so much." "Tb» dress 1s aTI right. T got the seats, but we'll have to go flown early to get them. Til Just wash up a bit and then I'll be ready." Going down in the elevator Helen looked into the tiny mirror anxiously to see If she really looked all right. A woman always likes to have a last look no matter how often she has herself of the fact that every- Thln'if is all right. Warren did not notice the furtive glance or ho would have been sure to make a remark of some kind, and it wasn't until they had reached the theater and Warren had gone to the box office for the seats that she heard any one speak appralstngly or other wise about her appearance. Then a woman passing rather neax to her re marked lauguidly: "Stunning little gown, isnt It? But that woman is rather too pala for black and white." The women were lost In the crowd and Helen could not see what they looked like, and a moment later War ren came back with the tickets and they were being shown to their seats. Helen was very quiet during the time remaining before the curtain went up. A casual remark abut her looks worried her unreasonably. She always had been sensitive about her self, and, although nearly all the wo men she knew touched up their cheeks occasionally when they wero going out, she had steadfastly held out against it. Somehow or other, the idea of painting her face was repul sive, even though it be just a light dusting with a rabbit's foot. "Pretty good seats, aren't they?" re Gas and Electric Domes and Portables Reduced » We are crowded for room and in order to fa cilitate plans for the changes we wish to make we offer at reduced prices, catalog numbers of gas and electric table lights, electric and combination fixtures, dining room domes and hall lanterns. Also special reductions on Regina and United States. VACUUM CLEANERS Just a few of each of these makes to be closed out at a reduction. The Columbia Electric Co. 13th and Market Streets Sister: Read My Free Offer! * j know a wo ma n's trial*. , <# / y °i a ' "2? are unhappy becauseof fll-nealth, feel unfit for household duties, social pleasures, or \ daily employment, write and tell me just how you suffer, tfgs3gL J and ask for my free ten day*' trial of a borne treatment RPswVffluh 1 suited to your needs. Men cannot understand women's i Botterrags. What we women know from experience, we wK 3 know better than any man. I want to tell you how to V 7** ,*& cure yourself at home at a cost of about 12 cents a week. ■K - * MmSi . suffer from women's peculiar ailments caus % J In* pain in the head, back, or bowels, feeling of weight an r ? r *SK' n * down •entution, falling or displacement of VMSP mSJKr*? Hr / P«mc organ* causin* kidney and bladder weakness or w* «- 'WET/ constipation and piles, painful or irregular periods, \(r w®/ catarrhal conditions and discharges, extreme nervous- ' oe»», depressed spirits, melancholy, desire to cry, fear of y' epmething eyil[about to happen, creeping feeling along S . •Pine, palpitation, hot flashes, weariness, sallow com* pfexion witb dark circles under the eyes, pain in tbe left breast or a general feeling that life is not worth tiring. I INVITE YOU TO SEND TODAY FOR MY FREE TEN DAYS' TREATMENT and learn how these ailments can be easily and surely conquered at home without the dangers and expense of an operation. When you are cared, and able to enjoy life again, you can pass the good word along to some other sufferer. My home treatment is for young or old. To Mother, of Daugb len,l will explain how to overcome green sickness (chlorosis), irregularities, headaches, and lassi tude In young women and restore them to plumpness and health. Tell me if you are worried about your daughter. Remember it costs you nothing to give my home treatment a ten days'trial, and does not fnterfefe with daily work. B health i, worth asking for, then accept my generous offer and writ* for the free treatment, including ray illustrated booklet. Women's Own Medical Adviser." 1 will send all In plain wrappers postpaid. To save time, you can cut out this offer, mark your feel, ings. and return to me. Send today, as you may not see this offer again. Address. MR9. M. SUMMERS, - - - - - Box H, SOUTH BEND, IND. SATURDAY EVENING, marked Warren, and Helen was just about to ask him If he thought her too pale, when a sudden thought cheeked her. Perhaps It would be Just as well not to tell Warren what she had overheard; she would keep It to herself and some time when she could put the gown on for she would ask her opinion. Somehow, she did not believe that Louise used anything of the kind. A moment later the curtain rose, and for the rest of the evening Helen was enthralled with the play. The! situation was very strong, with, many | tense moments, and Helen hardly spoke, even between ai:ts. "Wasn't it good, dear " she queried : when it was all over and they rose ] to go. "Oh, I don't know, I'm not so very strong for a play of this kind. 1 wanted you to see something you! liked, you know, and 1 knew this: would be just about what you wanted, j I should think you women could get enough sorrow out of real life with out coming to the theater for more!"] Helen followed Warren out of the theater and together they mingled) with the crowd on Broadway. "Where shall we go for a bite to' eat, might as well do things up 1 brown!" "Anywhere, dear, you know it doesn't make a bit of difference to me." "All right, we'll go right in here, they can tlx up a lobster in here as well as they can anywhere In New. York. Are you hungry?" It was quite a gay little supper with Helen looking her best across the table; the rose colored shades casting a faint pink Hush over her cheeks, and Warren was most considerate. As they stepped into the apartment later Helen j thought that she had had quite as nice! a time as she had expected. They walked on into the front, and a moment later Nora unlatched thej kitchen door and came to the door of the living room. "Did you get your telephone mes- ] magijt, Mrs. Curtis? I waited up for' fear Vou wouldn't find it. There it! is written out over on the table." Warren picked up the paper and glanced over it casually before hand- ] ing it to Helen. Nora had'scrawled across the paper I the words "Mr. Atkinson called up." j Helen read the message with a I queer sinking of the heart, and then : she looked across at Warren. Nora had slipped back to her room, now i that the message was off her mind, and Helen was inwardly glad for fear j Warren should decide to ask her j questions. That would be too humili- | ating, and if the thought should hap-j pen to strike him Warren would think nothing of cross-questioning Nora. Helen felt, somehow, as though the time had passed when she could spend a pleasant evening with Warren. Soine>- thlng always happened to spoil tt all. Helen Tries to Kxnlain the Case to \\ ai ren Warren had been regarding her steadily for some time. Not angrily, as she had supposed he would, but with a surprised look in his eyes. Be fore he could speak l!"len crossed the room to his side, something inwardly driving her on. "I know it looks as though I have not told you the truth. Warren," she said slowly, "but I assure you from the bottom of my he.-irt that T know no more about this man than you do. The whole thing sounds like a Joke to me. and If I can look at it that way, surely we can laugh at It together?" Warren said nothing even then, and Helen, feeling as though it would be useless to say anything more, went on into her own room. She wondered as she took her hat and slipped off her gloves if this sort of thing would he kept up indefinitely. If anything more happened she could hardly ex pect Warren to believe, that she knew nothing about it. And yet there was nothing she could do, absolutely nothing, unless the thing happened to blow over while she and Warren were out of town. For a long time after the light was out she tried to think of a possible reason for such attention from a man. I Was it going to mean an estrange-' ment between Warren and herself?! Surely not that. (Another installment of tills story of evpry-rtay life will appear soon.) THE LAST SHOT By FREDERICK PALMER 4 ' hr Scrlb«*r-» Son., [ Continued] The capt ) embarrass ment. "I—l can't speak too strongly," he declared when he had regained his composure "Thot.;:;i everything seems to be safe here now. it may not be In an hour. You must go, all of you. This house wilt be en Inferno as eoon as the 53d falls back, and I can't pos sibly get your mother to appreciate the fact. Miss Galland.'' "But I said that 1 did appreciate it and that the Oallsr. ls have been In Infernos before— not as bad as this one that i«- coming—bat, then the Oallands must keep abreast of th> times," replied Mrs. Oalland. "I have asked Minr;. nr ? i Prefers to re main. t am glad of that I am glad now that we kept her. Marta. She is as loyal aa my old maid and the butler and the cook were to your grand mother in the last War. Ah, the Gal lands had many servants then!" 'This isn't Mke tho old war. This place will bQ shelied. enfiladed! And you two—'"the captnin protested des perately. ■ "I became a GalHnd when I mar ried' said Mrs Galland. "and the Galland women have always remained with their property in time of war. Naturally, I shall remain!" Miss Galland, it was you—your In fluence I was counting on to—" The captain turned to M;-rtr> la a final ap peal. Mrs. Galland was v.-s telling her daughter's face Intently "We stay!" replied Mnrta. and the captain saw in the depths of her eyes, a cold blue-black, that further argu ment was useless. Now came the sweej, of a rising roar from the sky with the command to at tention of the rush of a fast express train past a country railway station. Two Gray dirigibles with their escort of aeroplanes were bearing toward the pass over the pass road. The auto matic and the riflemen in the tower banged away to no purpose, but the central sections of tho envelope of the rear dirigible had been torn in shreds; It was buckling. Clouds of blue shrap nel smoke broke around its gondola. A number of field-guns Joined forces with a battery of high-angle guns In a havoc that left a drifting derelict; the remainder of the equadron had com pleted Its loop and was pointing toward the plain. From a great altitude, literally out of the blue of heaven, high over the Gray lines, Marta made out a Brown squadron of dirigibles and planes de scending across the track of the Grays. The Gray dirigibles, stern on, were little larger than umbrellas and the planes than swallows; the Brown diri gibles, side on, were big sausages and their planes specks. To the eye, this meeting was like that of two small flocks of soaring birds apparently un able to change their course. But imagination could picture the fearful clash of forces, whose wounded would find the succor of no hospital except impact on the earth below. Marta put her hands over her eye« for only a second, 6ho thought, before she withdrew them In vexation— hadn't she promised herself not to be cowardly?—to see one Brown dirigible and two Brown aeroplanes ascending at a sharp angle above a cloud of smoke to escape the high-angle guns of the Grays. "We've got them all! No lips sur vive to tell what the eye saw!" ex claimed the engineer captain, his words bubbling with the joy of water In the sunlight. "As I thought," he continued In professional enthusaism «md discrimination. With high-power binoculars glued to his eyes. he then turned to see if the faint brown line of Dellarme's men were going to hold or break. If It held, he might have hours in which to complete his task; if it broke, he had only minutes. Marta came up the terrace path from the chrysanthemum bed In time to watch the shroud of shrapnel smoke billowing over the knoll, to visualize another scene in place of the collision of the squadrons, and to note the cap tain's exultation over Fracasse's re pulse. "How we must have punished them!" he exclaimed to his lieutenant. "How we muat have mowed them down! Lanstron certainly knew what he was doing." "Yon mean that he knew how we should mow them down?''asked Marta. Not until ehe spoke did he realize that she was standing near him. "Why, naturally! If we hadn't mowed them down his plan would have failed. Mowing them down was the only way to hold them back," he said; and seeing her horror made haste to add: "Miss Galland, now you know what a ghastly business war is. It will be worse here than there." "Yes," she eaid blankly. Her color less cheeks, her drooping underlip con vinced him that now, with a little show of masculine authority, he would gain his point. "You and your mother must go!" he said firmly. This was the very thing to whip her thoughts back from the knoll. He was thunderstruck at the transforma tion: hot color In her cheeks, eyes aflame, lipe cuiving around a whirl wind of words. "You name thi very reason why 1 wish to etay. Why do you want to save the women? Why shouldn't they bear their share? Why don't you want them to see men mowed down? Is it because you are ashamed of your profession? Why, I ask?" The problem of dealing with an angry woman breaking a shell Are of questions over his head had not been ready solved in the captain's curricu lum like other professional problems, nor *&B it mentioned In the official OXRRISBURG TELEGRAP*? Instructions ~i, „ urtenses of the Galland house. He aimed to smile soothingly in the helplessness of man In presence of feminine fury. It is an old custom." he WM say ing:. but she had turned aw y. Lanny s pip n—-now them down! mow them down: mow them down!" she went on. more to herself than to him. Was there nothing for her to do? Could she only look on in a fever of restlessness while action roared around her? The sight of several au tomobile ambulances In the road at the foot of the garden stilled the hrobe of distraction in her temples with an answe-. The wounded! They were already coming In from the field. She hurried down the terrace steps. The tnajor surgeon in charge, sur prised to find any woman in the vl olnlty, was about to tell so auto matically; then. In view of her inten sity, he waited for her to ppeak. "You will let us do something for them?" Marta asked. "We will make them some hot soup." He was Immediately businesslike. No less than Dellarme or FYacasse or Lanstron or Westeriing, he had been preparing throughout his professional career for this hour. The detail of caring for the men who were down "Why Do You Wsnt to Save the Women ?" had been worked out no less system atically than that of wounding them. "Thank you, no! We don't want to ■waste time." he replied. "We must get them away with ail 6peed so that the ambulances may return promptly. It's only a fifteen-minute run to the hospital, where every comfort and ap pliance are reedy and where they will be given the ripht things to eat." "Then we wi'l give them some wine!" Marta persisted. "Not if we can prevent it! Not to start hemorrhages! The field doctors have brandy for use wheiv advisable, and there is brandy In all the ambu lances." Clearly, volunteer service was not wanted. There wr.s no room at the immediate front fcr Florence Nightin gales in the modern machine of war. "Then water?" The major aurreon aimed to be pa tient to an earnest, attractive young woman. "We have sterilized water —we have everything," he explained. "If we hadn't at this early stage I ought to be serving an apprenticeship in a vil lage apothecary shop. Anything that means confusicr tfc'ay, unnecessary excitement is bad r :d unmerciful." Marta was not yet nt the end of her resources. The recollection of the dy ing private who had s. "';ed her mother for a rose in the last war flashed Into mind. "You haven't any flowers! They won't do any harm, even if they aren't sterilized. The wounded like flowers, don't they? Don't you like flowers? Look! We've millions!" "Yes, I do. They do. A good Idea. Bring all the flowers ycu want to." The major surgeon's smile to Marta was not altogether on account of her suggestion. "It ought to help anybody who was ever wounded anywhere In the world to have you give him a flower!" he was thinking. She ran for an armful of blossoms and was back before the arrival of the first wounded man who preceded the stretchers on foot. He was holding up a hand bound In a white first-aid bandage which had a red spot in the center. Those hit in hand or arm, if the surgeon's glance Justified it, were sent on up the read to a point a mile distant, where transportation in requi sitioned vehicles was provided. Tbeee men were triumphant in their cheer fulness. They were alive; they had done their duty, and they had the proof of It in the coming souvenirs of scars. Some of the forms on stretchers had peaceful faces In unconsciousness of their condition. Others had a look of wonder, of pain, of apprehension in their consciousness that death might be near. The single word "Shrapnel!" by a hospital-corps corporal told the story of crushed or lacerated features, in explanation of a white cloth cover ing a head with body uninjured. fTo Be Continued] Try Telegraph Want Ads iPOULTimnews HARRISBURG HEADS ~ POULTRY MEET LIST More Attractive Inducements Of fered Here Than in Any Other City For Big Show Secretary A. J. Gies. of the National | White Wyandotte Club, has issued j blank ballots to club members to he | used in voting for the national and I various State meets. It will be inter ! estlng to local poultrymen to learn ' that Harrisburg heads the list of cities to be voted for. which means that the inducements offered by the Central Pennsylvania Poultry Association are considered more attractive than those of any other city. Th National White W>andotte Club' by vote holds its annual meeting in connection with one of the larger win- j ter shows of this country each year. ' At this show the members exhibit their birds in competition with each other and at the same time attend the meeting to transact the business of the organization. It means a great gathering of White Wyandottes and White Wyandotte breeders for the fa vored cfty. A circular mailed with the ballot says: "The national meeting last year was held in the West, at Cedar Rapids, lowa, and in justice to the eastern breeders your officers feel that the annual meeting, if possible, should lie held this year at some place in the Hast." The associations that have bid for the meeting and the order in which they appear on the ballot are as fol lows: Central Pennsylvania Poultry Asso ciation, Harrisburg, Pa., December 8 to 12, inclusive. 1914. The Greater Buffalo Show, Buffalo, N. Y„ November 23 to 28. The Great Coliseum Poultry Show, Chicago. 111.. Dec. 11 to 16. Madison Square Garden. N. Y., in February (dates uncertain). Chicago Breeders' Association. Chi cago, January 14 to 20. GIVE EGGS THE CARE OF MILK AND CREAM They Absorb Odors Just as Read ily ; Avoid Storing in Musty Cellars If farmers were to give eggs the same care they give milk there would be a big saving annually in this prod uct. In the jiimmer months, eggs should receive the same care and con sideration as sweet milk and cream, and be marketed daily if possible. They should not be exposed to drafts of warm air and should\be protected from the rays of the sun and from moisture, in handling, marketing and shipping. The common practice of holding eggs for a higher price in autumn results in poor quality and serious loss instead of gain. Under or dinary farm conditions eggs should never be held. The farmer, however, is not the only one responsible for the shrunken eggs on the market. Coun try merchants have been equally blam ahle for the big annual loss due to the holding of eggs for a better price. A fresh egg will absorb odors as readily as fresh milk. Mustiness or moldy growth in egg cases or tillers will taint the egg and lower its qual ity. Eggs should not be stored in musty cellars or in room* with fruit, vege tables or fish. The (lock should never be allowed to drink tilth.v wa ter, be fed musty grains or strongly flavored vegetables, such as onions and garlic, nor given access to decay ing meat or substances that will flavor the egg and impair its quality. Heavy Feeding Is One Cause of Egg Blood Clots Poultry keepers are more or less annoyed by the presence of blood clots in eggs. This trouble is far more common to-day than In bygone years when intensive methods were un known in egg production. Blood clots are usually found in the white of an egg but may occur upon or within the yolk. They are caused by over congestion of the egg making organs, with' an occasional rupture of a small blood vessel. The blood from the rup ture becomes a part of the egg as the egg is formed. Heavy feeding upon meat and other rich foods, and the use of condiments, is believed to contribute largely to the trouble. The farmer, whose hens run at large and know not of the luxury of fish and meat scrap, seldom hears complaint from his customers on this score while the man who specializes in egg production is reminded of this objectionable quality more or less fre quently. The remedy for this trouble is more exercise and green food for the fowls and less meat or green cut hone. It may be that there are one or two hens in the flock that are especially subject to the trouble and that their removal will put an end to the annoy ance. Poultrymen to Attend Big Allentown Fair The big Allentown fair poultry show next week will bring together a large number of Pennsylvania's leading poultrymen. Not only will the poul trymen be on hand but their exhibits will be there as well. Not only Is the Allentown show the leading Flail poultry show in this State but it has distinct features, new ones being added each year, that make it unique in many ways. W. Theodore Whittman, poultry ex pert of the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, continues to manage the big show. The Pennsylvania State Poultry So ciety has arranged for a meeting in Allentown during the week of the fair. A session at which officers will be elected has been called for 2 p. m., Wednesday, September 23, at the Ho tel Allen. f CHAS.H. MAUK (11 UNDERTAKER —5 Sialh and K«lker Streets Largest establishment. Best facilities Near to G>u as your phone. Will go anywhere at your call. otor service. No funeral foo small. None too -xpensive. Chapels, rooms, vault, etc.. used 3ut cbar4» SEPTEMBER 19 ,1014. Every hußino is*. man knows how difficult it is to keep the pigeon holes and drawers of his <•"'k l'reo .'rotn the accumulation of uselosr. papers. Evary housewife knows bow difficult it. in to ':o»p Mr home free from tho accumulation of all manner of useless thinr . : it is .with tho bo<:--. It. is difficult. to keep it free from the accumulation o; waste matter. Unless the waste is promptly eliminated the machin ery of the body soon becomes clopsjed. This is tho beginning of moat human ilia. PIERCE'S GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY C i T.-.blet or Liquid Form) Assists the stenaeh in <'•■> p--- ('i-ert'oa of food, which in turned into health sustaining blood and nil poucnon* wnoto ma. tor ii speedily disposed of through Nature's channels. J, rnalcimen or. I women clear-headed and able-bodied—restores to them tho hor'i.h r.nd r'-nr 'in! youth. I'ow is the time for your rejuvenation. Scud 60 cent • f r a trial bci < J Cv.z raet'iclne. sr—l n '•a*-*—* P-. r -rmon P.-nw Metier! '■ iviv—— * "Ip,vrti-v..r S \ / *w/* h-"0~ r in cqieoi family iiiness* -r.—---'" - ~~ ~ APPLY A i LNIVERSITY I PENNSYLVANIA \ EVENING \ COLRSES ! AT HARRISBURG UNIVERSITY BUSINESS TRAINING A chance to set a training: for a successful business career, under 3 | professors of the Wharton School of Finance and Commerce of V i Philadelphia. j A course in the Wharton Evening: School has meant better posi- i ! lions and increased salaries for hundreds. It means dollars and J i cents to you. S NOT A CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOL You will have the great advantage of personal contact with J i university professors. You will learn Business Law, Accounting, Ad- S | vertlslng and Selling, Money and Credit, etc. j MODERATE FEES | Tuition is SSO a year, payable in two installments. J Harrisburg will have this school if 100 applications are made on < , or before September 21. Professors Raine and Tator, of the Law 1 | and Accounting Departments, will meet you in the Chamber of J i Commerce Office any day from 2to 4.30 or any evening from 7to 9, < | except Saturday. ] Information and Registration Headquarters [ UK. THOMAS LYNCH MONTGOMERY, State Library. J C. HARRY KAIN, Arcade Building , PROF. W. SHERMAN STEELE, Central High School ! | DR. SAMUEL Z. SHOPE, 610 N. Third Street j I». D. HAMMELBAUGH, School Board Offices. APPLY AT ONCE War ft Map ijkCoupon Latest European War Map Given by THE TELEGRAPH to every reader presenting this COUPON and 10 cants to oove* promotion expenses. BY MAIL—In city or outside, for 12c. Stamps, cash or money order. This is the BIGGEST VALUE EVER OFFERED. Latest 1014 European Official Map (S colors)— Portraits of 18 European Rulers: all statistics and war data —Army, Naval and Aerial btrer.ath. Populations, Area. Capitals, Distances between Cities. Histories oi Nations Involved, Previous Decisive Battles, I*>»• torv Hague Peace Conference. National Debts, Coin Values. EXTRA 2-coC. CHARTS of Five Involved European Capitals and Strategic Naval Locations. Jtldad, with handsome cover to fit the socket. ————MW—■—■»! | LANCASTER Greater and Grander Than Ever \ September 29 to October 2, Inclusive i 1 largest display of machinery ever made here. Hun dreds of blooded cattle, sheep and hogs. Free band con- J certs and thrilling circus acts. Balloon ascensions and para chute drops. Fastest racing in this section—s(l,ooo In | purses. Biggest dog show in Southeastern Pennsylvania. j A poultry show without any peers. Miles of attractive Midway Shows of all kinds. ] The One Big Fair i Admission 25 Cents ! Special Excursions on AH Steam and Trolley Roads. IF YOU ARE IN NEED OF GLASSES j i You Cannot Afford to Miss This Extraordinary Offer j j Glasses regularly sold at $5.00, for SI.OO j ! New style Staytite, finger mounting, regularly $5,00, for $2.00 ! > This 1h positively the most exceptional offer ever made to the people i I of Harrisburg; and vicinity. In our examinations we use the latest and ! | most modern methods known to optical science, which la made without ! | extra charge. This otter will prevail for a short time only. Commenc- J [ ing Saturday. September 19. j ! OFFICE HOURS—From 8 A. M. to 8 P. M. Also special prices on « ' prescription work. DAUPHIN OPTICAL CO. 15 South Third Street OFFICES FORMERLY OCCUPIED BY DR. MILLER. M | >ITTI"T~* "**"****************•****************""""-" 3
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