her* not alone brrasw prices are lower, bat becaaae qualities are b«tt«iIWI*WWWW»W Monday—Ridiculously Low Prices Will Prevail Here On Stylish Millinery Prices Are For the One Day Only SI.OO and $1.25 Actual Values: SI.OO Actual Values: Sport Hats in a variety of fancy /JQ One I°* °* White Hemp Hats. gA ! straws. Monday price ! Monday price wvC SI.OO and $2.00 Actual Values: $2.00 Actual Values: ! Black Hemp Hats. medium and OQ Leghorn Hats. Monday 7Q I large shapes. Monday price pr i ce / %/C f $2.00 to $5.00 Panamas: * ( Trimmings: $2.00 Values. Monday price 89o N. St. il Are Your Papers Insured? "1 You cannot find an Insurance Company that will ' r | I issue a Policy to protect your valuables or documents. itl Therefore, the only way to make certain that these will never be exposed to risk of loss is to place them j | in a private Safe Deposit Box in a fire and burglar !Such Boxes are rented by this institution for the small sum of $1.50 per annum, and the most perfect J' form safety for papers and other valuables is thus j N f That face on a cigar box, and the name on a cigar— King Oscar 5c Cigars have the same assurance of value and satisfaction for your nickel that the "Ster ling" mark gives to silver. Regularly Good For 24 Yearg SATURDAY EVENING, BUREAU HEAD ARRESTED By Associated Press i Washington, July 17. Frank X. Welnschenk, who for some time has been conducting what he calls an In ternational Information Bureau and sending out pro-German literature to newspapers, was arrested here last night on complaint that he had sent certain letters to officials. He was committed to the government hospital for the insane for observation. BUNT TO ERECT TENTH WARD SCHOOL Harrisburg Contractor Is Lowest of Dozen Bidders For New "W. S. Steele" Building i With the return Monday of ex- I Judge Jacobs, attorney for the school ; board, the legal preliminaries incident • to the closing of the contract for the erection of the new Tenth ward school •building to Contractor John F. Barn hart of this city, will be completed. The board last evening awarded the | Job to Barnhart at his bid of $64,790, j the lowest of a dozen bidders. Work j may be started on Tuesday. Heating, plumbing and electrical ! fixture contracts were also awarded j last evening and these with the eosi j of the building alone, ran the cost up ; to only $86,485. Bonds in the sum of j $90,000 have been authorized to pay j for the new school. It will be erected lin the center of a big plot at Fifth ! and Mahantongo streets and will be j called the "William Sherman Steele," ; after the former principal of Central i High school. ! Just what will be done with the sur j plus $4,000 which will be left in the | building fund will be discussed by the directors at the August session of the t board. The money may be used to ] erect a fountain on the school grounds. The bids for the building follow: John F. Barnhart, $64,790: D. S. War j fel, $65,776; P. W. Finn, $68,000; Adam I Stuckey, $69,080; Herman Voigt, s6y,- ! 262; Stapf and Benfer, $70,662; Augustus Wildman, $67,500; Fink and Seldel, $71,622; Steinbach Sons, $77,- i 467, and James H. Wells, $77,703. The | heating bids were let some time ago but the bids for electrical and plumb ing work awarded last evening follow: Herre Brothers, $5,512; Eugene J. ! Fogarty, $5,523; X. R. Lyme, $5,984; i electrical work, E. Blumenstein, sl,- ' 499.45; West End Electric, $1,701.20; I Yingst Electric, $1,923; Dauphin Elec tric, $2,150; Reading Electric, $2,204. All the contractors bid $63,800 on the building alone without the trim mings. William D. Fritz was elected janitor I of the new Shimmel building and he ! will begin his new duties August 1. ; Besides authorizing the payment of | repair contract bills, some min6r con ! tracts for inside painting were award | ed. The board decided to furnish the j new county House of Detention along; ! the Lucknow road as soon as the house jis renovated. Daniel T. Fackler who j had charge of the detention house at i the almshouse will be the teacher at the new institution. ! I^AMUSE^MENTSjIjI "THE MELTING POT" TO-DAI AT THE VICTORIA It Is doubtful If any Gentile could , have written "The Melting Pot." It is : the work not only of a matter of lit- 1 erature. but of a man whose birth and breeding fitted him to understand to the utmost the tragedy of the average j Hebrew's life in Russia, and the op portunity offered the flouted Jaw of new life and boundless liberty in the i land beyond the seas. Also Zangwill shows with an unerring skill how I inevitably the traditions and beliefs iof the past must be eliminated or , modified to keep pace with the growth of the younger Hebrew generation in this country. ! No mere stage production of "The Melting Pot" could drive home the lesson of the evils of race prejudices as the picture play does where It was possible to show the charging Cos sacks and brutal soldiery hunting down and slaying the hapless Jews. The furious charges. the wrecked homes, the silent bodies of the muti lated victims lying prostrate in the streets of Klshlneff, under the red glow of their burning houses, furnish ed a mass of horrible details destined to live long in the memory of the spec tators. The photo production is not only a work of art, but a moral lesson of terrible significance, throbbing with i human interest and alive with thrilling action.—Adv. PAXTANG PARK I For next week's vaudeville bill at fho Paxtang Park theater, Manager Davis I has booked what looks to be a particu larly classy headliner. The act will be ,the "Colonial Girls," a group of per forming young ladies who sing and play various musical Instruments in a manner that has won tljem an envi able reputation on the best vaudeville circuits. Four other acts of recognrzea abMHy |Will make up the balance of the T °-n'Brht will be your last chance to see Willard and Bond In their laugh able travesty, "Detectivism." .This act has been one of the big comedy suc cesses of the park season and is well worth a special trip to the park Another fireworksdisplayis scheduled for next Thursday evening, and the management promises their park patrons a few more of the latest novel ties in pyrotechnic*.—Advertisement. '•BARTERED I.IVES" AT THE RE GENT TODAY "Bartered Lives" fs the title of an un usually strong, dramatlo subject fea turing tb*t very attractive and highly 1 talented young woman, Marie Hesperia In the dual role of herself and her sis ter at the Regent this evening, in five parts. "Bartered Lives" Is the story of two sisters who resemble each other so closely in face and form that thev can not be told apart, even by their most , Intimate friends. Marie Hesperia is an h artist's model, while her sister, Pterette is a singer of some reputation. ' < J HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Story No. 8— Installment No 8. WH(MIYS? Today an