12 Big "Get Acquainted" Sale For Saturday Only We want you to get acquainted with our exclusive styles and economy prices that prevail here in shoes for men. women and children, and to this end, we will sacrifice profits to-morrow by offering Special Prices For Saturday Only t » Ladies' and Misses' High & Low Shoes )'/ New models in plain and /ctij A combination leathers M Jfj $5.00 Values. ! $4.00 Values, | $3.00 Values, Jn \ 1 . Saturday, t Saturday, i Saturday, $3.95 $2.95 $1.95 J Ladles' White Canvas Pumps. I Ladies' White Canvas Oxfords, diamond tip, $3 a i ap I rubber heel and sole; /t»« O C value. Saturday, «|) 1 , | * 2 00 value - Saturday SHOES FOR MEN ft Men's Russet English Oxfords: rub -11 ber heels and soles; (I**l A $4.00 values, «/3 \ Saturday T 4 " Men's Mahogany Eng- ft» rj /* •- lish Oxfords; $3.50 BVI value, Saturday T # \ Men's and Boys' Black m a Tennis Oxfords; 65c value; Lt special Saturday Then there are a number of other specialties in shoes of excellent quality, too numerous to mention. You must come to the store to ap preciate the wonderful opportunities that are present for to-morrow. Come—we'll make it interesting. M. & M. WILLIAMS SHOE CO. 5 South Fourth Street THE HOME OF BEACON AND FLORSHEIM SHOES FOR MEN Grand Jury For Second Time Returns "No True Bill" Against Hargest The Dauphin county grand jury once again failed to find a true bill of in dictment against John J. Hargest, Jr., the chauffeur who was charged with in voluntary manslaughter in connection with the death of Miss Grace Maugans. New Tear's night. Hargest drove the car that collided with a Valley Traction Company trolley at Front and Walnut streets. SERVICES FOR MAX KILLED WHEN SCHOOLHOVSE FALLS IN The funeral of John McGregor, of Lancaster, who was killed yesterday in Rockville, when the school building ®intr®pri^^e(lle:®S Embroidery for Horn* Decoration ORIGINAL-DESIGNS Picture Frame—How to make it BY MADAME JEAN 'T'HAT It is possible for the * dainty woman to have frames b the colors to which her best friend or her 1., band or her chil dren or—her sweetheart—is most partial and in which their photo graphs may repose in artistic back ground as well as being preserved from dust and other forms of van dalism, may delight the devotee of the embroidery art. (Tbo above designs and mora thnn 450 other transfer patterns from The World Famous Embroidery Outtlt. with a complete equipment to make them. Including hoops, needles, bodkins, stiletto and booklet, telling how to make all the stitches, can be secured from tills paper at th' nominal cost of 68 cents (7 cents extra for postage with mall orders) by clipping one Embroidery £oupos troja this paper, coupuu appearing la the {Mtper FRIDAY EVENING, collapsed, will probably be held in Lan caster. The body was turned over to Undertaker Charles H. Mauk, and will be taken down to-morrow. OPEN BRIDGE BIDS JI'XE 28 Bids for the construction of a con crete bridge across Armstrong creek, a few miles back of Dauphin, will be opened by the county commissioners June 28. NEW POLLING PLACE IN SEVENTH The polling place of the Sixth Dre clnct of the Seventh ward was ordered by the county commissioners to-day to be removed from 101S Herr street to 1028 Herr street, the restaurant of J. Sheldon. Chose any delicate shade of linen, or pure white and make this dainty and tiny design on it. White with the forget-me-not col ors is always pretty, or pale pink or pale blue, either worked in a little deeper blue than would be used on the white background would be effective. The edge should be worked in the heavy over and over stitch. EFFICIENCY FIRST IN HIGHWJir DEPT. Keynote of Address By Commis sioner Cunningham at Hunt ingdon Banquet Huntingdon, Pa.. June 18. —"Effi- ciency will be the first requisite of those now in the State Highway De partment. Those holding positions and for whom there is work will be re tained and given an opportunity to demonstrate their fitness and ability to hold the places they now occupy. Political pressure, or the pressure of a political boss, will not hold anyone in hir, position if he lacks efficiency." This was the keynote of an address delivered by State Highway Commis sioner Robert J. Cunningham at the banquet given by the Huntingdon Chamber of Commerce here last night. Gcvernor Brumbaugh, who had spent the day here, was also a guest at the banquet. Commissioner Cunningham reviewed the subject of good roads in general and compared the problem confronting Pennsylvania with that of other states in the Union. He pointed out that New York state, which is now expending $100,000,000 on its highways, has approximately one-half the system that this state has to main tain; New Jersey about one-flfth, Maryland about one-ninth and Massa chusetts less than one-tenth. The commissioner further said: "This Highway Department, as our Governor so aptly expressed it. is 'a business man's proposition," and we ex pect of all employes the best that is in them and their fullest co-operation in order that we may demonstrate to the public generally that every dollar ex pended on our roads is being honestly and efficiently used. No dead wood will be carried in the department. Drones and those who expected to hold their positions through political lieutenants are being rapidlv re moved." Court's Attention Called to Narrows Along River I The court's attention has been call jed to the unsatisfactory condition of the "Narrows" around Peter's moun tain in Upper Paxton township by Constable Jacob Hoy in his quarterly statement of highway conditions. Before the State Highway Depart ment took over the maintenance of 1 this road Constable Hoy savs the 1 Pennsylvania Railroad had kept it in good shape, but since then little if any improvement at all has been made to It. Bad roads are also reported in Lower Swatara and need of repairs in the road leading from Union Deposit to Sand Beach. Colonel Joseph B. Hutchison, chief of police, made the only spepific report on the city's peace. He referred es pecially to the growing tendency of white men to frequent the rooms maintained by negresses and of the trouble the police are having in break ing up this practice. Silver-haired Defendant and Cripple in Invalid's Chair Appear in Court Across the counsel table In No. 1 court room to-day a silvery-haired old woman faced a thin-faced woman half prone on an invalid's chair as defendant and plaintiff, respectively in a larceny action. Mrs. Margaret Emmenheiser and her son. Albert, were charged with having kept and sold several thou sand dollars worth of furniture be longing to Miss Lulu Clark, who formerly lived with them. The plain tiff's story was that she moved her goods to the Emmenheiser house and agreed to allow them the use of her furniture, if they would care for her as long as she lived. At her death she said the goods were to go to the Emmenheisers. Several months ago, she contends, the Emmenheisers sent her to the almshouse and sold her furniture. Steel Corporation Will Build New Zinc Plant New York. June 18.—The United States Steel corporation will build a new plant near Pittsburgh, probably at Donora, for the manufacture of zinc and by-products at a cost of from $2,500,000 to $3,000,000 ac cording to announcement to-day by Chairman Elbert H. Gary. GIRL GETS THIRTY DAYS FOR SLAPPING COP Margaret Sullivan, aged 23, who re sides in North Cameron street near Maclay, went to jail to-day for thirty days for slapping Patrolman Carsou and kicking Patrolman Phillips on the shins. Witnesses say the girl was on a rampage last night, broken onen and smashed a floor at 1913 Wallace street, threw chairs at people and defied the entire police department to take her to jail. CHIEF WITNESS NOT CALLED Horse, Silent Testimony In Stolen Goods Case Waits Outside Court room During Trial The chief witness in the trial of Harry Stevens, acquitted to-day by a June criminal jury of the charge of receiving stolen goods, .was never taken into court. This was a horse that originally had been the property of Alfred Yarman: the bores was "the goods" in the case. The horse was outside the courthouse. CONVICTED OF FIGHTING Charged with assault and battery by H. F. Bueck, borough tax collector of Lykerns, Charles N. Finton. outside foreman of the Susquehanna Coal Company to-day was convicted by a June criminal jury. TARIFF INCREASES EFFECTIVE By Associated Press Washington. D. C„ June 18. Tariff i increases amounting to from 15 to 30 I per cent, ad valorem on practically , all articles imported into Turkev, went i into effect June 2, according to cable 1 advices to the State Department from the American Consul General at Con stantinople. APARTMENTS AT 7 S. FRONT ST. Building permits issued to-day in cluded one to William Jennings to remodel 7 South Front street for apart ment purposes at a cost of $5,000, and to H. A. Sherk to build a $2,800 dwell ing at 1721 Boas street. HAND CRUSHED BY PI.I'NGER F. G. Romberger, 1196 Walnut street, employed by the Harrisburg Pipe and Pipe lending Works, sustained two ' crushed fingers on his left hand this morning when a 2.300-pound plunger on a shrapnel shell machine fell on them. The plunger had a pressure of 3,200 pounds. 10,000 CHII.DREN FREE More than 10,000 boys and girls In the public schools were dismissed this tqr th« summer vacation. HARRISBUR d£lj£& TELEGRAPH XX | Hot Weather Prescription J 5$ On sale in every section of the city, where the sole purpose is to serve the best. There is an ♦♦ tt all-pervading sense of excellence in Russ Bros. Velvet | ♦♦ which is irresistible. It is a happy combination of choicest materials .experience and unceasing tt ♦♦ care in the making. Guaranteed to contain nothing but the purest and best materials obtainable. tt Made in a clean, sanitary plant, fully equipped with the most modern devices known in the manu facture of ice cream. The cream from which it is made is pasteurized at the creamery and re- tt ♦♦ pasteurized at our own modern plant, thus complying with the Health Officer's recomendations ♦♦ tt in favor of the purest ice cream possible. ♦♦ ♦♦ We spare no expense to maintain a high standard. Dealers and consumers agree that our H ♦♦ Velvet Ice Cream is the acme of perfection. tt TT ♦♦ ♦♦ H Russ Bros. Velvet Is Not Sold I 1 • ♦♦ ZZ ♦♦ | From Wagons On The Street | | ASK YOUR DEALER | tt ££ Our plant is open for public inspection at all times. » S RUSS BROS. I H Sixteenth and Walnut Sts. HARRISBURG, PA. « tt tt if i s i ir ♦♦ :l 8 H )|((| 1M|||||MI111HII1I""MIIIIMIII M | I ,"|', I ,„ 1 H Look Out For This Man! fAEPER/CK S PENCE ESCAPED "IIFER" Ossining, N. Y., June 18.—The arms of little children will reach in vain to give their daddies a goodby hug and the men of Sing Sing will have to go grieving back to their cells for the caresses they cannot have all because Frederick Spence broke his trust with Warden Osborne, the reform Sing Sing warden, and escaped from Sing Sing, where he had been sentence for life for murder, after a moving picture show. Osborne promised the men a number of privi leges, all tending towards their own betterment and the production of bet ter citizens for the State of New York, if they themselves kept certain rules laid down by their own Welfare League. By Spence's act 1,700 men lose some of their most cherished rights under the new regime, and it is safe to say that Spence, when he is brought back to Sing Sing, will be the most unpopular man there. Threats of ostracism are being made against him though, oddly, no one blames Warden Osborne for his cur tailing of the former privileges of the convicts. All realize that the prisoner has broken faith with the war den and that he must act as he docs. A delegation of prisoners, repre senting the Welfare League, waited upon the warden and offered their services and deposited SIOO made up of funds of the prisoners themselves as a reward for Spence's capture. The escape of Spence is the first ever tried si., 'e Osborne took charge of the prison and organized his Golden Rules regime. OPEN BIDS FOR ROLLER. Bids were opened at noon to-day by City Commissioner W. H. Lynch, superintendent of streets and public improvements, for a 5-ton road roller, for use in connection with the city as phalt repair plant. The proposals follow, the Barber Asphalt company I being low: Steam driven, Good Roads 'Machinery company, Philadelphia, Monarch Standard, $1,483; Buffalo Steam Roller Co., Philadelphia, tan den double drive, $2,250; tanden single drive, $1,675; tanden bevel gear, 1,350; Barber Asphalt Paving company, Philadelphia, Standard Iroquois, $1,539; gasoline, Austin Western Road Machine company. New York, $2,000. LOOKS BRIGHT FOR CAMP HILL PAVING Special Election To-morrow; All Concerned Promise to Do Their Part Every effort is being made to get out the vote for the Camp Hill pav ing loan election to-morrow. Burgess Milhuse has Issued a circular letter to the voters on the subject and the pub lic Improvement element of the bor ough Is active in behalf of the enter prise. One of the most encouraging fea tures of the proposition up to this time is the reception by the burgess of the following letter from State Highway Commissioner R. J. Cunning- I ham: "In reference to our conversation of even date relative to State aid for Camp Hill borough, would advise that any money that may become available for State aid construction In Cumber land county during the years 1915 and 1916 will be held for the Camp Hill borough improvement." In an interview with the president of the Valley Railways Company this morning he authorized the publica tion of the following statement— "The Valley Railways agrees to pave between the rails and twelve inches on the outside of each rail, with the understanding that the borough will guarantee the legality of the present ordinance, and also that the borough and Traction company will agree upon a proper form of jitney regulation In Camp Hill." The present franchise of the com pany requires that the company keep its tracks in condition to be croseed by wagons, but makes no mention or paving, so that the offer to pave at an expenditure of from $20,000 to $30,000 on the part of the company, comes merely from the deaire of the manage ment to see Camp Hill improved and to do its share in that direction. It looks to-day as though the paving loan will go through with a big ma jority as all of the debated questions appear to have been answered to the satisfaction of everybody. GERMANY WILL BE ABLE TO HOLD OUT UNTIL EXl> OF WAR By Associated Press London, June 18., 3:65 a. m.—Ac cording to the Times an important de bate on trade subjects and the main tenance of Important industries dur ing the war occurred in the budget committee of the Prussian Diet Mon day. All the published reports of the proceedings were carefully edited but it is stated that Deputy Hirsch, who is reporter to this committee, said that although trade was not brilliant, Ger many could certainly, if the present state of affairs was maintained, hold out economically, whatever the dura tion of the war might be. FIND TRUE BILL IN BURNED BOY SUIT Among the weary little witnesses that created a lot of sympathy about the Courthouse to-day was youthful Paul Erb. who reclined in an invalid's chair. He is the boy who, about a year ago, was seriously burned when another lad placed a lot of lighted fire crackers in his pocket. The boy was visiting at the home of Joseph and Annie Albitz, in the upper end of the county, at the time and the boys, it is charged, fur nished him liquor. The June grand Jury to-day found a true bill against the Albltzes on a charge of furnishing ,liquor to minors and without license. JUNE 18, 1915. / 11 s This is the Birthday Anniversary of iBBW Mi;, _;, BENJAMIN W. DEMMING well-known state official, worshipful master of Harrisburg lodge of Masons and exalted ruler of Harrisburg lodge of Elks. The Telegraph wishes him many happy returns of the day. Declares Passage Was Secured For Only One Man By Associated Press Burlington, Vt., June 18.—Dr. An ton H. Appelman, German exchange professor at the University of Ver mont, in a signed statement to the Burlington Free Press says: "I want to refute the charge pub lished in many papers that the Ger man embassy by securing safe passage for a personal envoy of the German ambassador had sent out two men, one by the name of Dr. A. Meyer and the other by the name of Dr. A. Ger hard. This is not true. For one man only passage was secured. One man only sailed and his name is Dr. Anton Meyer-Gerhard. This is the full and real name of only one man, I know from my acquaintance with him and from our correspondence (at any one's disposal), in which he has always signed himself in full." Dr. Appelman said last night that he had planned to work under the supervision of Dr. Meyer-Gerhard for the German Bed Cross this summer, traveling to the Pacific coast. He added that as he had been in constant communication with Dr. Meyer-Ger hard until within a few days ago the fact that letters from the latter had ceased to come furnish him convinc ing evidence that Count Von Bern storff's envoy had left the United States. CONTINUED PROGRESS IS BEING MADE BY ITALIANS Rome, June 17, via Paris, June 18, 8.16 A. M.—Continued general prog ress by the Italians as the result of a number of successful actions Is re ported in to-night's official statement. FINDS BED IN FLAMES When their bed caught fire from sparks from a curtain, which a Ran Jet had ignited, Joseph Parllo, a notary public'at 302 South Second street; his wife and four-year-old daughter, nar rowly escaped death, yesterday. Parllo I awoke to find the bed in flames. He hnat them out with n. hlankAt. First Registration Day Is Thursday, August 26 In calling attention to-day to t#b three city registration days City Chair man Harry F. Oves pointed out that all of the days will be prior to the September primaries. The Fall primaries this year will be held September 21. The registration days occur on Thursday, August 2fi, Tuesday, August 31, and September 11. DIES FROM PNEUMONIA E. O. Keller, aged 64, died at his home 233 Ann street, Middletown, this morning from pneumonia. He was a member of the Holders' Union and Junior Order American Mechanics. Funeral services will be held from the home Monday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Burial will be made In Middletown cemetery. WHEREVER you live, park, drive or store, in any part of Pennsylva nia or Delaware, you can get prompt, effi cient ATLANTIC service. Atlantic trucks and tankers deliver any quantity, any place, any time —all you need to do is hail the first At lantic driver you see, or 'phone the nearest Atlantic station. The best garages, too, sell Atlantic Gasoline — the "gas" with the go —and Polarine, the 100- percent lubricant that keeps upkeep DOWN. Use this efficiency team regularly and note the difference. THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY ATLANTIC GASOLINE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers