Hl,xv£,6 "gas" with go and gallop galore Atlantic "Gas." It has gumption, but no grit. It has a uniform "boil ing point." which means that every gallon of "gas" you buy is sure to be just like the last, banishing frequent carburetor adjustment. It has more miles to the cubic inch, and a liveli ness that enables you to get away quickly in all kinds of weather. Atlantic Gasoline is made from the finest crude oil that flows, by the oldest and largest refiners in the State. All good garages have it, and Atlantic tankers deliver anywhere, any time. Be sure it's Atlantic. Atlantic POLARISE Is the 100-ptr eent lubricant that flows freely at all temperatures. It keeps upkeep DOWN. THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY ATLAN^fif. G AS OLINE Resorts ATLANTIC CITY, >. J. MILLER^jt«¥°ANNEX 1 N.GEORGIA AVE ATLCITY N J. 'V Scrupulously clean, electric lighted throughout. White service. Hot and cold water baths. $1.25 and $1.50 daily. $7 and $8 weekly. Estab. 36 years. Booklet. Emerson Crouthamel. Mgr. BEST LOCATED POPULAR PRICE FAMILY HOTEL NETHERLANDS »nf York Ave. SO Yard* From Roardnalk, Atlantic City, X. J. * Overlooking lawn and ocean. Ca pacity 400 Elevator, private baths, running water. Special free features, lawn tennis court and dance . floor. Bathing from hotel; shower baths. KARLY SEASON RATES—S9.OO TO $15.00 WEEKLY. $2.00 UP DAILY. American Plan. Write for free booklet and points of interest in Atlantic City. AUG. RUHWADEL. tALENfHIALL \rLANTICC!TYu U/V.J. riOTEL-SAMATORIUM Tdeeu.in its appointments comforts.tabie service witM3<}Uis forpleasureor/iealtfi. ALWAYS OPEN . CAPACITY3SO F.LYOUNC.U.II.W HOTEL NORMANDIE Kentucky Ave., near tne Beach. Noted for Its excellent table and home com forts. Fresh vegetables from own farm. New metal beds. Rooms with bath. Klevator to street level. Near Board walk, churches, piers and depots. Free bathing from hotel. Garage in connec tion. Rates s:'.oo daily. Special week ly. J. HAMILTON. EJATr! r ATC 18 S. Missouri ave. rIU i LLi VjAuEi Fireproof Rooms. only. Hot and cold water every room. SI.OO per day up. Special weekly rates. Bathing from hotel with shower. THOS. L. GAGE. Prop. MOLST URETXA, PA. Hotel Conewago—On Lake Conewago; mod. convs. Apply to Samuel H. Lewis, Prop., Newport Apts., 16th and Spruce Sta.. Phila.. till June 10. DOUBLING GAP SPRINGS, PA. WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS Doubling Gap, Yevrvllle. Pa. An ideal mountain health and pleas ure resort, dry climate, medicinal waters, refined environment. Fresh vegetables only. Special rates. MRS. G. A. KRETER. BEDFORD SPRINGS, PA, Bedford Springs (Pa.) Hotel&Baths Spend your happiest, healthiest summer at this alluring resort. Es tate of 3,000 acres In the most at tractive section of the Allegheny Mountains. MAGNESIA WATER that rivals that of the Marlenbad and Carlsbad. Every outdoor and indoor diversion—every conveni ence. Now open for automobile tourists. Formal opening June 12. H E. BEMIS, Manager. Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect May 24, 1914. TRAINS leave Harrlsburg— For Winchester and Martlnsburr at 6:03, *7:50 a. m.. *3.40 p. m. For Hagerstown. Chambersburg, Car lisle. Mecnanlcsburg and Intermediate stations at 6:OS. *7:60, *11:53 a. m_ "5:40. 6:32, *7:40, *11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanlcsburg at 9:48 a. m„ 2:18; t:t7 6:30, 9:SO a. m. For Dlllsburg at 8:03. *7:60 and (CU:S3 a- 2:18, *3:40. 6:32 and 6:30 TJ m. •Daily. All other trains dally except Sunday. H. A RIDDLE. J. H. TONGE. Q. P. A. TUESDAY EVENING, STEAMER ENDEAVORS TO RUM SUBMARINE Underwater Craft Pops Up 100 Yards Ahead of Cunarder Near Liverpool Sp*aol to The Telegraph London. June 22.—The prompt ac tion of Captain Kinnard, of the Cu narder Cameronla, which sailed from New York June 11 and docked yes terday at Liverpool, probably saved the ship from being torpedoed by a German submarine. Peter Fletcher, of New York, an intimate friend of Sec retary of the Interior Lane, related the narrow escape of the Cameronla to day when he called at the Ameirlcan embassy. With his wife. Mr. Fletcher sailed on the Cameronla. feeling, as he told embassy attaches, that It was just as safe to travel on a liner flying the Brit ish flag as on an American ship in view of the promiscuous attacks by Ger mans on all shipping. It was broad daylight Sunday morn ing at 7 o'clock and the Cameronia was steaming slowly into the mouth of the Mersey when Captain Kinnard saw a periscope pop out of the water 100 yards ahead. Suddenly a submarine rose to the surface of the water. The Camero nia's captain dropped his binoculars and. steering his ship straight ahead, made for the submarine to try to ram it. The engineroom responded to a j call for full steam and the Cameronia fairly leaped ahead. The captain made a bee line for the submarine. It looked as If the liner, ' says Fletcher, who was standing on the promenade deck, would ram the submarine fairly in the middle, but the submarine shot down into the water, diving beneath the steamship. Three minutes later the submarine appeared on the opposite side of the ship, fifty yards away. The submarine again took a sight on the liner, but the Cameronia's captain now had his ship going on an entirely different track, having sharply swerved. The submarine was out of range for a sure shot. It tried to catch up with the Cameronia. but Captain Kinnard's tactics had enabled him to escape in safety. The submarine pursued for a mile, but was unable to gain on the Cam eronia. and finally gave it up. CHURCH CO UN" CHI, TO ELECT Officers will be elected and reorgan ization for the year will be affected at a meeting of the Civic Council of Churches, this evening in Zion Luth eran church. The meeting was called by the Rev. E. Victor Roland, secre tary. PENNSYLVANIA FOLKS It Your Stomach Wrong? Sooner or later you will be wrong In every organ of your body. It is a well known fact that over ninety-live per cent, of all sickness is caused by ailments of the digestive organs. If you have the slightest suspicion that your stomach requires treatment, don't delay a moment. Little ills soon grow Into serious ills. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discov ery soon rights the wrong. It helps the stomach digest the food and manufac ture nourishing blood. It has a tonic effect and soon enables the stomach and heart to perform their functions in a natural, healthy manner, without any outside aid. Millvale. Pa.—"One spring I suf fered with stomach trouble and my family physician could not help me. I saw Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery at the drug store and I secured and used one bottle. I found it re lieved my trouble so that. I needed no other treatment." — Mr 3. J. W. BRY3ON, 8 Butler Street, Millvale, Pa. As Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery contains neither alcohol nor narcotics there is no reaction. For nearly 50 years it has stood the test of both use and abuse and is today the greatest remedy of its kind in the world. Begin now! Take it home to day! Sold by medicine dealers in liquid or tablet form, or send 50c to Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y„ for a trial box. A Great Book Every Woman Should Have Over a million copies of "The People's Common Sense Medical Adviser" are now in the hands of the people. It is a book that everyone should have and read In case of accident or sickness. It is so plainly written that anyone can under stand it. Send three dimes (or stamps; for mailing charges to Doctor Pierce, Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., and en close this notice and yon will receive by return mail, all charges prepaid, this valuable book. SLARGOI CJ the |j FLESH BUILDER sold by George A. Gorgas and leading druggists everywhere on a positive guarantee of weight increase or money back. Contains no alcohol or danger ous drugs. THIN PEOPLE WHO WANT TO GAIN WEIGHT can easily and quickly put on from ten to twenty-five pounds of healthy "stay there" flesh if they will simply continue to eat three ordinary hearty meals a day and eat with every meal a single Sargol Tablet. These tabletß mix ing with your food extract from It the flesh, fat and strength making nourish ment it contains and prepare it in a form which the blood can readily ab sorb and carry throughout your body. —Advertisement. I Relieve Your Feet —and ba fitted for better work, and enjoyment. Reach the cauM* of your trouble and permanently eliminate the pain— Mack's Foot Life Relieves tired, aching feet, corn*, chil blains and callouses. A few trials prove wonderful relieving properties. To elderly people. Mack's Foot Life makes long walks as enjoyable, as short walks were formerly painful. Keeps you fresh. Quickly applied I and absorbed. Sold by drug, shoe and department I stores In J6e and SOc jars. Send 10c i for trial jar, to DOQ ON FOOT tUCKt MEDICAL CO. tat, . 333 A Trsment Street, Boston, Masa. j COUPON! i \ f( enclose 10c. 1 el Send Trial Jar of Mack's Foot Life. I I Name WIKjTBiYS? Unfc> Her&fAlone Qr COW* BUSS Copyright. 1915. bj Path* Exchtnm, Inc. AM morin* picture rights and all foreign copyrights strictly r— rrgdL (continued raou yisticbdat.) Alio*: Your latest defiance of all feminine law haa closed my home to you. I hare placed one half of your father 1 * fortune to your credit. Your maid and trunks are at the Goldcrest Apartments. Mother. m. Thsre was the hirrt of longing on j Esther Halstead's face as Alica fin ished showing her tfirough the dainty little Ooldcrest apartment. Not the : longing for freedom which seemed the principal reason for Allca's delight; i not the pride of ownership the younger girl had displayed, but the thought of how perfectly It would j serve as a setting for the life she had Imagined with the man ahe loved, the picturing of Felix Lynn's oocupylng special little nooks and cosners of the apartment—that was what brought the tears all unconsciously to her eyes. "And yeu will oomt to my reception —just a llttla house-warming tomor- j row afternoon, Esther?" She started to shake her head In dissent, smiling at the eagerness of the girl to begin making the most of her new-found liberty. But Alica prat- i tied on before ahe had time to an- i rwer. "First Urn going to aak Fell* Lynn and—" Esther's lips parted In & smile. She could not forego the delight of seeing him again. And In such Intimate sur roundings! True, she owed a great Seal to her ailing father. But she owed a debt to this other man as well. While Alica darted to the 'phone, upon carryinftjout her plan Im mediately It entered foer head, Esther thought It over. Was she doing right »r wrong? Torn between two impulses even without the right to consider her iwn desires she could make no decl lion without hurting father or hus band. But It meant posibly the life of her father, and if Felix refused to wait the short time old John Halstead had to live, if he could not be unself ish then —She frowned unhappily as the thrust the thought away from her. "Felix is living on his yacht now," Alica poutingly announced as she re entered the room. Esther smiled lightly as she took ber leave. Lacking irresponsibility herself, it was charmingly delightful to ber In others. And it was so becom- Alica Flung the Cobwebbed Bot tle Against the Prow of Lynn's Yacht. Ing to Alica, her naive delight In this freedom from restraint She was still laughing as she left the house and came back to her own distressing re sponsibilities. So engrossed in fact, she did not turn back and see Alica slipping lightly down the street in the opposite direc tion. Even her innocent mind would have suspected that the young about to do something which, to put it mildly, might have been termed in discreet. For Alica Knight's very back bris tled with defiance, her pretty chin was uplifted and her eyes looked out a bit Insolently upon pedestrians as though defying them. Now and then she would halt dubiously, biting her lips thoughtfully, a little fearfully, then quickly resume her journey. It was the hour immediately before the curtain of night descends upon the twilight that Captain Judd looked up sharply at a hail from the dock, j While he waited at top of the land l lng stairs for the girl, he wondered 1 mightily as Alica Knight lightly ! climbed beside him. What in the I name of common sense could this | young woman want aboard the yacht at such an hour? Ajjd what should he do? then Captain Judd did exactly as most people do when puz zled. He pointed toward the rail where the owner stood dreamily star-- ing out to sea. Lynn was tired, very tired, and the rest he sought out here upon the equally troubled sea came not so readily as he had expected. The very soul of him chafed at John Ualsted's I bitter mandate that he -was to be a stranger at his home. He had thought, out here, to get away from the tor ment of being In the same city with Esther and yet so remote from her. That the same sounds he heard might reach her ears, that the same sights he saw might be In her eyes at the same moment and that she was still thou sands of miles apart from him for all the good it did—that was what tor tured him beyond endurance. Halstead's failing strength, the precariousness of his clutch upon llfo Esther's obedience to him were in Lynn's thoughts—he was forced to admit, when calmness soothed his harrassed brain, that the i qualities that kept EBther away were the self same qualities that caused him so to idolize her. And still he rebelled against the harsh dictum of fate; still he -«i*ed at her; still he tortured himself with dubiety regarding the love that would sacrifice so much for duty. Alica Knight A slight smile curved his lips as he recalled the beautiful, wild, young creature. Alica j Knight—untamed, rebellious at con ; ventlons, heedless of the morrow, in | love with life! Why could not Esther have some of the A little laugh, a bit timid despite lt» bravado, made him turn swiftly. It was aa though a Merlin had -waved his wand and materialized his thoughts. He could not quite con ceal his pleasure at sight of Alica, looking at him a little defiantly, a little bashfully, an she stood just a few feet away. He could not quite cloak the Insincerity of his re proaches, allowed them to be snuffed out completely as her Angers brushed lightly against his own as side by aide, they leaned against the ta ft call. (connmiio tououow.) COMMEND SIiAYTON'S ACTION Governor Slayton's action in the Leo Frank case vas commended in reso lutions adopted by the Young Men's Hebrew Association at a meeting last nurht. Afterward the athletic commit tee made arrangements for baseball, tennis, hikes and other trips. Try Telegraph Want A SAFJUSBURG TELEGRXPH The Grand Prize Highest Honor Panama-PacificExposition i Just Awarded r to the UNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER The Latest Proof of Typewriter Superiority i "The Machine You W . CUB TO BE BUILT IT FRONT 1IMS? Messiah Lutheran's Publication Says Council Has Been Author ized to Sell Present Site property and to purchase the new site at Front and Boas streets. No other plans have been an nounced at present but should the site now in view be purchased It is be lieved that plans would be pushed for the erection of a new building in the near future. The council has also been given the power to appoint a building committee of five to consult with architects and make plans for tfce new church. WILL OBSERVE ANNIVERSARY OF AUGSBURG CRADLE ROLL The tenth anniversary of the Cradle Roll of the Augsburg Lutheran Church will be observed on Sunday at the morning service. In the evening the Rev. Amos M. Starn ets, pastor, will speak to the members of the Knights of Malta. A number of commanderies will be present. Many Sunday Schools Will Picnic at Hershey A number of local organizations, in cluding many Sunday schools of this city have made arrangements for their annual picnics at Hershey Park. Among them are the following: United Evangelical Sunday school to-day, Covenant Presbyterian Church and Ridge Avenue Methodist Church, to morrow; Derry Street United Breth ren, State Street United Brethren and Sixth Street United Brethren, Thurs day: Reformed Union Sunday Schools, Friday: Otterbein United Brethren Sunday school, Tuesday, June 28: Cur tin Heights Memorial Methodist Church, Thursday, July 1. WESTMINSTER PRESBYTERIAN FROLICS AT BOILING SPRINGS The annual picnic of the Westmin ster Presbyterian Church was held to day at Boiling Springs Park. A num ber of other Sunday schools have planned to hold picnics at the park this summer. Those scheduled soon Include the following: Calvary Pres byterian, to-morrow: Union Baptist Sunday school, Thursday; Tuesday, June 29, Second Reformed Sunday gchool; St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, Wednesday, June 30. PYTHIANS CONFER DEGREE The third degree was conferred on a large class of candidates last night hy John Harris Lodge, No. 193. Knights of Pythias, at a meeting In Union Square HalU Kefreshmsala were Berved. < HAXGS HERSELF. Tying a twisted sheet around her neck and tying it to a bed post, Ethel Adams, 25 years old, an inmate tit the State Insane Hospital, jumped from the bed and hanged herself Sunday. The woman was formerly a school teacher at Newport. Her mind became deranged from overstudy. Burial will be made at Newport. Never before has Geo. Stallings' autograph or endorsement appeared in connection with WirlPfW^/ an advertisement. The genuine goodness of \ml§BSWf Coca-Cola induced him to break this rule. Demand the genuine by full name — nicknames encourage substitution. Whenever V THE COCA-COLA COMPANY you see an % ATLANTA. GA. ' Members of the Messiah Lutheran Church, according to a reecnt issue of the "Church News" of Messiah Lutheran Church, have passed a res olution authorizing the church council to proceed with the selling of the present church JUNE 22, 1915. KXIG'HTS TEMPLAR FIELD PAY AT CARLISLE THIS YEAR Harrisburg and Lebanon Com m&nderies will be the guests of St. John's Commandery, Carlisle, at the annual Knights Templar field day, to be held In September In Carlisle. The event was held on Island Park last year under the auspices of Pil grim Commandery. No. 12. CALVARY PIC.VIC TO-MORROW Calvary Presbyterian Church will picnic at Boiling Springs Park to-mor row. An interesting program of sports hߣ been arranged. A feature will be a quoit-pitching contest between th* Brotherhood and All ■ Comers and a baseball game between the Brother hood and tb eMcGraw, Feehrer and Shelley casses. 5