J Important Annoiincement From^Kaufman's Underselling Store / A We are pleased to announce that our new store is 1 if ' ~ nearing completion. All mechanics are hustling and are C I on the home stretch, finishing up every little detail. The c store fixtures are here and are now being installed and v the New Kaufman's Underselling Store will be ready in ' ample time for the fall business. A Ready-to-Wear PnPnnJ Department Store of which all of Harrisburg and vicinity Si® w^ian( * may i proud. But remember there is a vast amount of hard work rjP a^ f° r our buyers and department heads. An immense p§j» amount of merchandise is to be bought and gathered to gether and it requires time to do this properly. The I f 11 merchandise must be the best the markets have to offer, f ifflL ~~ "t—l'll Must be the best from a quality standpoint and must be | N j d secured at prices as low as the prices of the largest pur -5 The New-Bigger and Better chasing power in the country. Therefore, all of our time 1 Kaufman Underselling Store from the day that we close this Temporary Store will have C Will Soon Be Ready for Occupancy to be spent in the New York Market. 1 Prior to undertaking the great amount of work connected with the opening of the new 2 store we feel that our salespeople should have a chance to rest, a chance for recreation and I enjoyment, so that they will be prepared to serve you with the same courtesy and ability you 5 have always found with us in the past that they will be ready to help the new Kaufman's ) Store to do the biggest business of its career. For these reasons we have decided and found |it necessary to close our Temporary Store as soon as possible and devote our entire time to 1 arranging for the opening of the new store. I We want to thank our friends and the public in general for their loyalty and patronage 5 during our stay in this small Temporary Store. We also ask for your kind indulgence and /patience for the space of time that we cannot serve you, as we are only closing this store to I make it possible to serve you better in the new store. | Our Temporary Store Will Be Closed in a Very Short Time J Before closing we are going to WIND-LJP SALE of ?q// merchandise now on hand.All o/ this be sold, as nothing but entirely new merchandise will be shown in the new store^Tomorrow's pa£ers w you announce to you the date on which we start this BIG SALE. VETERAN FALLS DEAD Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa.. July 15. John Wesley Powers, Mansfield. 0.. who GARNER SIGN & ADV. CO. SIGNS, SHOW CARDS, SALE CONDUCTORS SIfiXS \*D SHOW CARDS FOR SPECIAL, SAI.BS A SPECIALTY Metropolitan Annex, Cowden and Market. BeU «*>»«■»,. 152RJ. H To indicate you are a regular reader you must present ONE Coupon like this one, with 68 cents. THE WORLD FAMOUS EMBROIDERY OUTFIT > SUA* snteed to be the best collection and biggs* bargain in pattens ever offered. It consists of more than 450 of the very latest designs, for any one of which you would gl.dly pay 10 cents, best hardwood em broidery hoops, set of foghest grade needles (assorted sizes), gold-tipped bodkni. highly polished bone stiletto and fascinating booklet of instroc bon. gmng al the fancy stitches so clearly fflustrated and explained that any school girl can readily become expert SEVERAL TRANSFERS FROM EACH DESIGN ONLY SAFE METHOD - AD old-fashioned methods wing water, benzine or injurious fluids are oude and out-of-date. This u the only safe method. Others often injure expensive materials. N. B. Out of Town Readers will add 7 cents extra for postage and expense of mailing. THURSDAY EVENING, ■was the (tuest of his son-in-law, Harry C. Crilly, at Pen-Mar park, fell over dead Tuesday evening, at the entrance to Mr. Crilly's restdence on the moun tain. Mr. Powers was a veteran of I the Civil War and had been at the park since April. DESTRUCTIVE HAILSTORM Special to The Telegraph Dillsburgr. Pa., July 16.—Hail stones as large as hens' eggs fell during a destructive storm over a small area lying between Clear Springs and York Springs or, Tuesday evening. Corn stalks wei-e stripped of their leaves and nothing but the heavy center stem left standing. Wheat in shocks in the fields on several farms was badly threshed out by the hail. Hundreds of window panes were broken in dwell ings and in some places the hall cov ered the ground more than two inches. LS&j / S&QL "imply pour a coating-of melted ,'/ r —Parowax (pure, refined paraf ■ i f ~~— fine) over the contents of each gla**. This does away with Kit 11 I, i."i,iii. ji old-fashioned tying and cover ■;l P [1 : .1] I ing with tin lids. Four big mfc j| —lr~"v cakes of Parowax, 10 oents, K |p| J The. Atlantic Refining Company Buy Ceal Now—Cheapest I This Is the month to order next winter's supply at coal. There's a material aavlng to be effected, and the wise folk are taking advantage of present low prices. Buy before the advance comes, and buy Mont gomery coal tbua Insuring the moat quality for your money. J. B, MONTGOMERY Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets 1 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH HURT OX TRIP TO COAST Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., July 15. Frank Shope, a former businessman of Waynesboro, returned home yesterday with a broken arm as the result of an accident he met with near Denver, Colorado. Mr. Shope left here three weeks ago In his automobile, accom> panled by his dog, for the Panama- Pacific Exposition in San Francisco and was traveling from Denver to Colorado Springs, when the front axle of his machine broke as he was as cending the mountain. He and his dog were thrown out. Mr. Shope's right arm was fractured at the elbow. The dog was unhurt. Will Contribute $50,000 For Baltimore Pike i So anxious are the citizens of Dela ware and Chester counties to have that portion of the old Baltimore pike running south from Wawa Improved that they have agreed to contribute $50,000 to the State Highway Depart ment if this road is recon»tructed next year. A delegation consisting of T. Larry Eyre, A. P. Irwin, Chadd's Ford, and Representative Richard Baldwin, of Delaware county, called upon State Highway Commissioner Cunningham to-day and made this offer. After considerable discussion, in the course of which it was brought out that Chief Engineer Uhler had esti mated that approximately $300,000 would be necessary to construct this road, Mr. Eyre suggested that he would endeavor to persuade the county commissioners of Chester county to contribute SIO,OOO In addition to this if Mr. Baldwin would make a similar suggestion to the county commission ers of Delaware county. This was agreed to and Commissioner Cunning ham assured the delegation that the State would undertake the reconstruc tion of this highway next year If the $70,000 promised was secured. MECHANICS INSTALL OFFICERS Special to The Telegraph Dlllsburg, Pa., July 15.—At a meet ing of Dlllsburg Council, No. 324, Or der United American Mechanics, on Tuesday evening these officers were installed: Councilor, Bennett Karns vice-councilor, George M. Martin; re cording secretary. S. E. Wagner; as sistant recording secretary, Niles A. Cook; financial secretary, W. H. Shrlver; treasurer, Charles Coulsin; inductor, Earnest Bucher; examiner, Mervin Smith; inside protector, W. H Baker; outside protector, H. J. Eurich; Junior ex-councilor. S. E. Gross; senior ex-councilor. J. Peroy Heisey; trustee. F. W. Gallatin. PRISONER ATTEMPTS TO ESCAPE IN GARBAGE CAN (Correspondence of Associated Press) London—An attempt by a German prisoner to escape by concealing him self In a can of garbage was discovered at the camp at Leigh this week. A farmer who buys all the food re fuse of the camp was carting away a number of cans. The unusual weight of one of them roused his suspicions. He removed a quantity of cabbage Ifeaves and found a German soldier beneath. A German named Bchmldt was shot and killed at Letgh a week ago while trying to escape. JULY 15, 1915, >A2o(V)er) menes v& Why I Married By DOROTHY DIX "Every marriage," Bald the Middle- Aged Man, reflectively, "Is a profound mystery to the bystanders, but a sec ond marriage Is an Insoluble enigma that they do not even try to solve. Romance and the foolhardy daring of youth account for people getting mar ried the first time, but why should those who have ascertained from ex perience the perils of matrimony tempt its dangers again? "It looks, to the outsider, as if the man or woman who had been happily married the first time would be afraid to marry again on ihe principle that lightning does not strike in the same place, and that he or she could not hope to find again a mate equal to the first, and that he or she would refuse "a lesser love," as the poet puts It. "Aleo It looks as if those who had been unhappily married, and who had their fingers in the matrimonial fires couldn't be dragged by wild horses within telephoning distance of the al tar again. "But nothing of the kind happens Experience seems to cut no ice In matrimony. Those who have been happily married, and those who have been unhappily married, rush blithely back Into the holy estate and leave us wondering why. "In my own case It was necessity. It was because a wife was the only answer to a tragic domestic problem. It was because only a woman's hands, and the hands of a lady, were strong enough and gentle enough to save for me all that X held of worth in the world. His Deop Gratitude "And whatever else I have given to my second wife, I have given to her a passionate gratitude whose depths she does not even guess, be cause I dare not tell her how des perate was my need of her. "When I was a young chap I mar ried a nice girl, and we lived con tentedly and happily enough together. I was no saint and she was no angel, and we had our little ups and downs, but we were building up together, too, and were absorbed in that and in our home and little boy. "Then, after ten years of this pleas ant Darbey and Joan existence, my wife died suddenly— in that most tragic of all deaths, when she gave her life for that of a little daughter. "At her death, all the old tenderness and romance rushed back upon me, and X was heartbroken, and then in the midst of my grief I was con fronted with the appalling domestic situation that her loss had created. Lancaster Church People Hold Picnic at Mt. Gretna Mt. Gretna, Pa., July 15. —Yester- day the Reformed churches of Lan caster combined in a union picnic and 1500 spent the day here. Mrs. Samuel Slegelbaum gave a house party in honor of Mrs. Walter Stewart of Carlisle. Those present were Mrs. Walter Stewart, Mrs. E. L. Rlnltenbaugh, Mrs. Samuel Shultz, Mrs. Emma Selbert, Mrs. Anna Bacon, Mrs. Frank Strock, Mrs. E. E. Ewing, Mrs. Eugene Hutton, Mrs. C. Day Rudy, Mrs. Annie Hubley, Mrs. A. 1. Miller and Mrs. Heims. Miss Florence Rlnkenbaugh and Miss Margaret Bell spent the day at Lebanon. Roy Strock spent several days with his parents at the Mountain Home. Miss Jane Whitman returned to her home at Harrisburg after spending a week as the guest of Miss Mary Hut man at the Chestnut Knob. Mrs. Joseph Wallazz returned to her home in Philadelphia after spend ing the past week with Mrs. Frank Strock at the Mountain Home. The Ladies Auxiliary of the Pennsyl vania Chautauqua gave a reception last evening in honor of the new chancellor, E. M. Balsbaugh, of Lebanon. A program was arranged which included a solo by Miss Karch, accompanied by Miss Ella Yost of Harrisburg on the piano. Those in the receiving line were Miss Ruth and Miss Louise McCaully, Miss Martha Goodenough, Mrs. N. C. Schaefer, Mrs. E. M. Balsbaugh, Mrs. Heritage, Mrs. Capp, Mrs. David Beuhler, Mrs. Hannah Richardson, Mrs. Anna Miller and Miss Garagues. Miss Katherine Beidleman and Miss Louise Fisher have arrived and will spend some time at their cottage, the Evergreen, in the Chautauqua grounds. Mrs. A. S. Vadakin and Miss Emma Stewart of Harrisburg, are the guests of Mrs. John K. Hummel. Charles Cleckner is spending some time at the Burke cottage in Sixth The Summer Guest is not always a welcome guest where the housewife must wrestle with the, servant question and otherjfvexatious problems of household management. The Summer guest is generally a wel come guest when you have Shredded Wheat in the home. V All the goodness of the whole wheat made digestible and deli ciously palatable by steam - cooking, shredding and baking. We have done the baking and saved you the bother. So easy to prepare a deliciously wholesome and nourishing meal "in a jiffy" by crisping a few of these biscuits in the oven and serving with berries or other fresh fruits and cream —and the cost is only a few cents. At your grocer's. The Shredded Wheat Company, Niagara Falls, N.Y. wmmmm a Second Time Both Mary's mother and mine had long passed away, neither one of us had any convenient women relatives that could be called upon to fill the gap In my household and so there I was left with my two motherless children and my mistressless house to take care of. "And I didn't know how to do It. I had no more Idea of what to do for a tiny baby than I had of how to per form a surgical operation. I could figure out to the last ounce how much steel it. would take to build a mill ion-dollar skyscraper, but I sat down baffled and helpless before the grocery book. I could manage a thousand workmen, but not a cook or a nurse. A High-priced Xurse. "I did the best I could. I hired a high-priced baby expert to take caro of the little ones, and a housekeeper to run the house, and thereafter .1 lived in a state or perpetual squab bles between the two, coming home, time after time, to find out that tho drawn battle between them had re sulted In one or the other leaving tho house. Sometimes the baby was wall ing with hunger because the nurie had gone. Sometimes I went hungry because the cook had departed. "And the bills were something frightful. There was waste, and ex travagance, and thievery in every de partment, with no comfort anywhere in spite of the large expenditure. Worst still, with no one but hire lings to look after him, with no an chor to hold him to home, my llttio boy soon began to run the streets, and to become an uncouth little hood lum. "I stood this pandemonium of a home for two years, and then, wfyen my little girl began to talk, and her first lisped words were the replica of the dialect of a Swedish nurse I hap pened to have at that time, I realized that the only salvation for me and my children was for me to marry again. "And I did. I found a noble woman who must have felt called to the mis sionary field, for she togk me and my disordered household In her beneficent care, and brought order out of chaos. She has been a real mother to my children, who love her as well as they could have loved their own mother, and I have repaid her for all her goodness to me and mine by striving to do everything in my power to maka her happy, and, as I said, by a pas sionate gratitude, whose depths I would not like her to know, for I should not have married again had I not been driven to It by necessity." avenue. Mrs. David A. Buehler fs visiting her* mother. Mrs. Nelman in the Chautauqua grounds. Mrs. Charles Crist and family of Harrisburg are the guests of Mrs. George A. Hutman at the Chestnut- Knob. William Richardson spent yester day at Lebanon. Miss Ruth Dare, Joseph Dare and Lester E. Dare are spending some tima at the Dorothy cottage. Miss Edith Bentzell and Miss Grace Rhoades of Harrisburg are spending several days with Miss Flora Bentzell In the grove. Ed. Culp of Harrisburg visited among friends at the grove recently. Miss Caroline Patterson of Harris burg is the guest of Mrs. Andrew Pat terson. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Rettew and family and the Misses Hanna anil Emily Vanderloo were guests of Cap« tain Owen M. Copelin. The Mt. Gretna Embroidery Cluli was entertained at the cottage of the Misses Eves yesterday morning. Billboard Segregation Urged by McFarland J. Horace McFarland, president of the American Civic Improvement Asso ciation, yesterday urged the co-opera tion of the billposters of the United States In solving the unsightly bill board problem. "Segregation of billboards, purity rn advertising and co-operation to im prove appearance," was the subject of Mr. McFarland's paper delivered at the closing session of the National Bill posters at Atlantic City. The Harris burg man referred to the great help In the work that can be added by the bill posters themselves, and he asked tha convention to continue to work with the American Civic Improvement Asso ciation to bring about the best results to the mutual advantage of both or ganizations. Officers elected for the vear included the following: E. L. Ruddy. Toronto, Can., president; J. E. Cassidy, Knox vlll®, vice-president; P. B. Heber, Fon du-Lac. Wis., treasurer; John H. Loge man, Chicago, secretary. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers