A SMART SKIRT WAIST A New Model Especially Adapted to Summer Needs. , v. W/ By MAY MAN TON ' i 8684 Yoke Waist with Box Plaita, 34 to 40 bust. This blouse that can be buttoned up closely about the throat or rolled open as occasion requires is surely a valuable one. It is admirable for travelling, is perfectly adapted to golf, tennis and various other •ummer sports and makes a perfect model for general morning wear. Here, it ia made of the crJpe de chine that washes eo well and is so generally satisfactory, but it can of course be copied in any sea sonable material—'in handkerchief lawn or in cotton crepe or cotton voile, in wash able taffeta or in any similar silk. Either long or three-quarter sleeves can be used as liked. Plain materials are always desirable and this season and there is a fancy for colored lawns, colored crfpes and colored voiles, but stripes are especi ally smart and the handkerchief lawns and tub silks in striped effect are perfectly adapted to this use. The lront edges are finished with hems and lapped one over the other. The lower edge of the yoke is lapped onto the plaited portion. For the medium size will be required yds. of material 27 in. wide, 2h yds. 36, 2% yds. 44. The pattern 8684 is cut in sizes from 3a to 40 in. bust measure. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Depart ment of this paper, on receipt of ten centa. Bowman's cell May Manton Patterns. AM SUFFERING 'FROHECZEMA In A Fine Rash on Back and limbs. Would Itch and Born. Terrible Loss of Sleep. HEALED BY CUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT "My husband was tormented for quite a while with eczema which he contracted from the dust of buckwheat flour and ha suffered extremely with K. It started In a fine rash on the small of hie back and on his limbs, and It continued to spread, and later started to weep. It became very much Inflamed and would itch and burn continu ally, and so badly that he was obliged to Irritate it by scratching. When the ecsema was In its worst stages his clothing would aggravate the eruption very much. It caused disfigurement and also a terrible ion of sleep. "His mother advised him to use Outicura Soap and Ointment, and in five seeks he was rid of the ecaema." (Signed) Mrs. Elmira S. Crissey, R. F. D. No. 1, Box 10. Manns Choice. Pa. April 13. 1915. Sample Each Free by Mail With 32-p. Sldn Book on request. Ad dress post-card "Cnticura, Dept. T, Boa ton." Sold throughout the world. O SAFETY! FIRST The object of "Safety First" Is prevention. You can prevent your advertising from meet ing the fate of the waste basket if you will make It attractive with proper Illustration. Bring your next copy to us for illustrative treatment. One treat ment will convince you that our methods are a success. The Telegraph Art & Engraving Departments 216 Locust Street JL : Merchants & Miners Trans. Co PERSONALLY CONDUCTED Tofrna Leaving; Baltimore. Wednesday, July 21st, 1915, for OLD POINT COMFORT, PROVIIIENTP NEWPORT, BOSTON AND " NEW CASTLE-BV-THE-SEA Twelve-day Trip, $60.00 Including necessary expenses ... . An<J An *™»« IStfc, 1915, for NORFOLK. OLD POINT COMFORT FROVIDENCE, NEWPORT. BOSTON AND NAHRAGANSETT PIER Eleven-day Trip, $02.00 Including necessary expenses. Send for Itinerary. £" 1 «r T tcket office, Light A German Sta. W. P. Turner, G. P. A., Baltimore, Md. Are You Having Trouble With Your Player Piano? Why not sead a postal to the play -1 H. DOOLITTLE 425 Hummel St. MONDAY EVENING, Story No. B—lnstallment No 1 WH(jmYS? Today on<fTomorrow Hy EDW* BUSS •aw w V UU. far Path* Bxchus*. I MS. ia ■o*ia« picture rtfhti sod all foraUs ooprrigbta strictly re—rrid. "T-R-U-B-B-E-L, Trouble, Mr. Payne." Pat Grady solemnly spelled his prediction. "I kin smell it in the air plain as I smelt the rotten food in the mess shack that's causing it all. And I'm telling you now that there'a no saying where it'll lead any more than I can tell where it'll end. Trouble and bad grub—they been twins from the beginning of time."* Lee Payne tapped the table thought fully with his pencil. A young man he was not inclined to take the mat ter so seriously as the old foreman of Ira Monroe's oil fields, still there wai no dodging the fact that the men were lately become sullen and apa thetic in their work, and a few of them openly insolent. "And you think the food at the bot tom of the men's actions." "Their stomachs is at the bottom of it—stomachs and lack of food," Pat corrected. "But it can easily be remedied." "Then why ain't it?" Grady did not wait for an answer but pointed out the window silently, toward a group of laborers loafing boldly beside the near est big tank. In the center of the Cindy Conquering Black Joe in the Mess House Mill. proup a broad shouldered, swarthy, beetle browed fellow was frantically gesticulating to emphasize his re marks, remarks which the two men in the office could not hear but which caused their brows to furrow anx iously. "Brown Joe's at it agin," muttered the foremai as though to himself, "and he's got the right of it this time. I tell you, Mr. Payne, I'd rather have a rattler sleeping with me than a mouthy workman. Get rid of that fellow and do it quick. Look at him." Payne slowly nodded and turned back to his desk. He had only been brought to a realization of the serious ness of the situation by certain pangs in his own stomach after being nause ated by the sight and smell of the food placed before him on the breakfast table. Bad it had been for a long time now and worse it was steadily growing. And the sight of those men listen ing to the notorious agitator as well as the wild gestures with which the man brought home his points, the sig nificantly bowed shoulders as they in clined their heads tbat they might lis ten more closely—truly, Pat Grady had done well to warn him. He glanced at his watch and felt a little tremor of anticipatory fear as he noted the noon hour was upon him. There had been open mutterings this morning. If the food had not im. proved for dinner, what would those mutterings become? For a half day's labor in the oil wells is not conducive to making one's appetite dainty or bird-like. The situation must be im proved and that immediately. If only he could gain a little time. As the whistle summoned the men from their work he waited for them in the shack, watching them being seated at the long table, noting the furrowed brows, the somber eyes, the signifi cance of their steady scrutiny of Brown Joe, seated next himself. That there was something afoot he could not doubt. What that something was he had no means of knowing or of guarding against. Pat Grady at the opposite side the table winked signifi cantly as he caught his eye, winked and then resumed his steady glare at Brown Joe. The cook entered, heavily laden with a couple of steaming plates. There was something savory looking about that steam, but the look was dispelled almost instantly by the ran cid odor that percolated through it. As that smell sifted through the room there came no answering sign of in dignation from the men. Only their eyes glowed a bit more angrily and the tightened lips of them dug little furrows that spelt danger down the sides of their faces. Payne followed the direction of their silent, steady gaze and shivered a bit, despite him self, as he caught the sneering, veno mous expression on the face of Brown Joe—Brown Joe to whom they all evi dently looked to as their leader? None of the customary rattle of plates and cutlery, the harsh crunch ing of teeth in mastication; none of the sighs and grunts of voracious men" piling into the fuel that would replen ish the heavy fires that must needs keep burning within them to keep the furnace going for the day's work; none of the satisfaction of men well fed; nothing but a steady, menacing silence, a silence that got upon his nerves and made him want to grapple with the situation he felt was In evitably upon him. As the cook placed a steaming plate before Brown Joe, the young superin tendent strained forward, every muscle flexed to anticipate the trouble he knew instinctively had reached a crisis. But even as his fists balled, even as a hoarse cry of rage bfoke from Pat Grady's throat, the swarthy, evil-eyed fellow looked at the unsav ory mess before him, lifted the plate as though to sniff its contents, then hurled it squarely in the cook's face. As the fellow staggered back, dig ging wildly at eyes and ears and nose to wipe the stuff away, Brown Joe lunged forward. But not so quickly that he escaped the heavy right hand swing of the foreman. Grady, quick to take advantage of the man's stag ger backward was instantly upon him. For a second Payne felt himself glued to the spot, unable to grasp the full significance of what had hap pened. As he threw himself beside his foreman, swinging with both fists, the men lunged forward en masse. In a second the mess hall was a shambles. Chalra, dishes, tables were hurled aside like straws before the brutal ferocity of the enraged crew. Wild with the delight of combat, Grady fol lowed up his advantage, inflicting fear ful punishment upon Brown Joe, re gardless of the fact that he was get ting into the open, where the fellow's supporters would make easy work of him. Slipping upon the messes of food, stumbling over the wreck of the hall, they threw themselves upon him, swallowing him up as In a whirlpool. Payne tried to fight his way through that Jam, only finding each effort sent him further away. There was a mur derous note in the hoarse gutturals of the men, (OOHTIHCV) TOUOUOW.) ~FO»H£AL TrtANoSTMiffCfjj DEPTONOI | MADE IN A HEALTH RESORT. AT DRUG STORES: SLooPer BOTTLE THE PEPTONOL CO . ATLANTIC CITY fS) . Quit Trading Type- these nationally known *WTT* A- n nt w §f writers; g« the Royal S ummer G OO J S VlCtOr- Be Sure It IS J£ M. A HOFF Ladies' Underwear Vi rf J-a| a c Stieff . I Whrna., Ro y .i Arm an«l Hosiery When you put a piano § n xJ'WwraMHßg // Chairs, McDougall Kitchen * , . it r? Vi Bwtf&fflß I Cabinets, Notaseme Re- „ _ And yOUI" home, be Sltre it s<g frigeratops, Maoey Book- oummcr K.id Ciloves j s a Stieff and through- 5g WMM> ™ ba.mo rnmims Victor Records y° ur . I ' fe ' im<! y° u ' 1 Sweepers, Whltedge Bed perfect in washing qualities. * IVI,VI I%VVUI U " Will be Satisfied. g The Royal Is" built to use and Springs, Ross Cedar Che«. Ladies' and Misses' .ires, in Olir term*-make mir-. « i>g not to trade out. short and eight-button lengths. J?v «. • lg| Let us demonstrate. N*w CumWljiml y chasing easy. § I ""ESSfC" iw ' Tl i.™Sl op p. M. OYLER cms. M. STIEFF- I '|ij 40 ft. 1 * 64 FOURTH AND BRIDGE STS. 222 Locust Street 14 S FoUl"th St 212 North Second Street g ig \V£>Gr> J WHERE TO FIND art S NATIONALLY Ml ADVERTISED I Motorcycles J 1 | Harrisburg Ajency ! I fii IsskHE-. B 1 I M.&R.KEEFE VjVJUiJij 1 HSj Head and Tail Light, and Stewart fcxS 1 C Z::tTZT P The World's Best Merchandise "TrSr 1 m In and Near || What we say It is, it Is We are sole agents for Harris- §??) ::S HARRISBURG. PA. 1 V; 1 ua J Merchandise that will bear national advertising has to have exceptional merit. 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PA. rroni drKCI ltlOlOr OUppiy Be „ Phone H43 1019-1025 MARKET ST. gS known variety B. F. REYNOLDS, Sales Agm*. Robert L. Morton, Manager. DR. STOUGH WORSHIPS' GOD OF GOLD, CHARGE Held Up to Ridicule in Star Cham ber Hearing on Scandal Suit Wllkes-Barre, Pa,, July 12. —Argu- ment In the $50,000 slander suit of W. J. Cullen, Hazleton councilman, against Evangelist Henry W. Stough, was held in private chambers in the courthouse to-day. Dr. Stough's counsel announced they opposed "star chamber" sessions, and refused at first to argue the case, later they agreed to go on with the case with only the interested parties present. Paul J. Sherwood, for Dr. Stough, argued that the plaintiff's statement and all the evidence showed the al leged slander to have been a privi leged communication uttered in good faith by one interested for the welfare of society and hence is not actionable. He argued that probable cause for the Stough remarks had been shown and that because there is probable cause there is no malice in the case. Attorney James Scarlet, of Dan ville, also argued for the plaintiff and claimed that there has been no slan der per se in the suit and that no slander was uttered in the Statements upon which the suit is based. He also argued that the moislhle government in any community is always open to attack in the press, and from the pul pit, and the rostrum. John H. Bige low closed for W. J. Cullen. He was bitter in his attack on Dr. Stough ans his methods. Worships "God of Gold" He charged Dr. Stough with wor shiping the "God of Gold" and said that Stough did not care whom he hurt so long as the golden stream pours in. He held the evangelist up to ridicule in refusing to answer ques tions and in hiding behind a poor memory. He charged Stough with making false statements and claimed that he had showed a disregard for truth. Bigelow talked for more than an hour and In that time he defended Cullen. Bigelow'g was the last speech made. Counsel on both sides submitted briefs. Within seven days after the arlbtrators have reached an award they must file it In court. There Is no limit to the time In which they are privileged to deliberate on the evi dence. HUERTA CASE CALLED ' El Paso, Texas, July 12.—The neu trality cases growing out of the ar rest of General Vlctoriano Huerta, former president of Mexico, were set 1 for a preliminary hearing to-day. HXKRISBURG TELEGRXPH ; Enforced Pasteurization i of Milk Supply Urged in July Health Bulletin ! Among many other things the July j bulletin of the City Board of Health contains a brief resume of the typhoid I situation. "While our municipal water filtra tion plant has eliminated local water borne typhoid fever, we will be in constant danger of milk-borne ty phoid, from our varied and unpro tected milk supply, until we acquire efficient milk pasteurization," is the warning sounded in the bulletin. The department declares officially that it favors pasteurization enforced by city regulation. A careful Investigation of the sources of typhoid infection show that of the twenty-nine cases in and around the city, a majority were caused by the drinking of polluted water. BROWN REUNION JULY 16 The descendants of the family of Jacob Brown, of Reading, will hold a reunion July 16, at Boiling Springs Park. Members of the family are scat tered throughout Dauphin, York, Cumberland, Lancaster, and Berks counties. A program Is being ar ranged for the day, Including ad dresses by well-known speakers. MINERS RETURN TO WORK Joplin, Mo., July 12.—A strike of nearly 5,000 lead and zinc miners which began here two weeks ago ended to-day when every mine In the dis trict resumed operations. There was no settlement. The men went back to the mines and asked for their places at the old wage scale. They^ Won't Spoil PAR'owa^ED^^^-^^^ That preserving demon— ~ chance with Parowu, the double-pure paraffin* that's clean enough to M ; Vl " \ 1 IW% chew. All 70a do U dip I ill \ rWj|| < II I the tipi of your jars in I : ll Y* I [ $ ! I melted Parowax—it doe* I ill (.. \W h $ II the rest. Box of 4 bi| I /II FAI I I cakes, 10c, everywhere. I W* {A IB Thm Atlantic Refining Co. I •.;■ Street Car Men Thought Man Dying; the Police Send Him to Jail Garrett Toomey, well known in po lice circles, according to the officers, took a joyride this morning on a street car. On the way he imbibed alcohol, j the police claim, and when the car arrived in town the motorman and conductor thought that the man was dying. Instead of sending Toomey to the hospital the coppers hauled him to Jail to awaist a hearing, charged with disorderliness. Well-Known Players Here With Rochester Rochester will bring a bunch of well-known players to Harrisburg to morrow to open a three game series in the afternoon with the Indians of J the International League. Priest, second baseman, Williams,; catcher, and Hoff, a pitcher, were for- ! mer New York American team play-: era; Piez, outfielder, Holke at first | base, Kores, third base, Huenke and | Erickson came from the New York Giants; Clemens, right fielder, and Stevenson at shortstop, from the St. Louis Nationals; Snjlth, left field, from Washington Americans; Erwin, former catcher on the Brooklyn nine; and Palmero, the Cuban twirler tried out by McGraw this year. To-morrow, Wednesday and Thursday, the Roches ter team will play here, while double headers with Toronto are scheduled sfor Friday and Saturday on the Island JULY 12, 1915. ARREST RECRUITING OFFICER I By Associated Press Los Angeles, Cal„ July 12..—Ken neth Croft, who claims to be a lieu tenant in the British mounted infan- I try, was under arrest here to-day on .a charge of recruiting soldiers for the British army. He will be taken to [ San Francisco to plead to an Indict | ment returned against him there last I Thursday. MIRRORS RESILVERED WE ALSO MAKE NEW MIRRORS Reasonable prices; work guaranteed W. D. MANAHAN & CO., 24 S. Dewberry St. i V J : ®,FIiECO'UPONM WORLD FAMOUS EMBROID- gHgB ERY PATTERN OUTFIT 'iggre To indicate you are a regular reader you must < present ONE Coupon like this one, with 68 cents. THE WORLD FAMOUS EMBROIDERY OUTFIT B GU®.' anteed to be the best collection and biggest bargain in pattern* ever offered. It consists of more than 450 of the very latest for any one of which you would gladly pay 10 cents, beat hardwood em broidery hoop*, let of highest grade needles (assorted sizes), gold-tipped bodkin, higher polished bone stiletto and fascinating booklet of instroc> boos giving all the fancy stitches so clearly illustrated sad explained that any school girl can readily become expert SEVERAL TRANSFERS FROM EACH DESIGN ONLY SAFE METHOD —| All old-fashioned methods using water, benzina or injurious fluids are crude and out-of-date. This ia the only aafe method. Others oftea v | I • N. B. Out of Tows Readers will add 7 cents extra for postage and expense of mailing BALTIMORE WANTS CONVENTION' By Associated Press Los Angeles, Cal., July 12. —Thou- sands of members of the Benevolent Protective Order of Elks were here to-day to attend the > reunion of tho Grand Lodge which will open Its first business session to-morrow morning. The Baltimore delegates have started their campaign for the next reunion, for which Atlanta also Is a contender. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers