10 i Keep Your Eye on Your target! H Aim For a Home in the Suburbs—the Ideal Way to Live |1 Bf- ® ur p ' an ma^es possible for you to attain your ideal. We want you to come out to see and you'll be convinced that Park Place is ideally situated for a ||| If, f suburban home, away from the hot pavements, the dirt and the noise of city strife, but easily accessible from your work or business, and at a healthful eleva- raj rjjjh 0n w^ere you may rest content or cultivate the garden or orchard after business hours to produce sufficient fruit and garden truck to supply your table, and ||j ¥p I tl» ere by pay for your home with the savings. Make no other appointments for to-morrow afternoon or Saturday. Two hundred and fifty people will be supplied i| L.|* garden plots when this sale closes. Will you be among the fortunate ones! , ' I 1 fyXl V*! ' BIG SALE OF GARDEN PLOTS AND BUNGALOW SITES >1 j Begins To-morrow 1:30 P. M. Continues All Day Saturday h Orchard, Woodland or Meadow ill I Best Road Fine Neighborhood Terms to Suit No Free Lots l>J \V ,h, L °" p ng^ S .l oWn tr r" ey ' a '° n ? N«r the Colonial Country Club, with Payments arranged to meet indi- No premiums. No Balloon Ascensions. ijl x. *r/*f the Jonestown Road, the newly improved scores of beautiful bungalows in the lm- K MJK * your toward Place o j; j TEACHING POOR 10 PRESERVE BERRIES Salvation Army Already Taking Steps to Keep Wolf From Door of Many Homes In the opinion of Captain Neilsen of the Salvation Army, the conditions which prevail among the poor at present in this city are just as bad as those which had to be contended with in the most severe part of the win. ter. Captain Neilsen stated this morning that he expected conditions to be just as bad if not worse next winter and he said that the measure of success which the Salvation Army meets with in providing for the poor will depend largely upon the hearty co-operation of the people. He said that every ef fort was being made to show the poor how to provide for the coming winter and that they were taught how to put up berries in useful and appetizing ways. Captain Neilsen is busily making preparations for an outing at Reser voir Park and is getting the neces sary plans completed. The outing will be "held in August. S2OO FOUND IN OLD LETTER Wilmington, Del., July 22. When the old Clayton House ceased to be a hotel recently about 250 letters which were watting there for various per sons were sent to the local postoffice. One of the letters chanced to be open, and inside S2OO was found. The name on the letter was that of a man- in Cuba, and he was communicated with. He described the letter, gave the name of the man to whom it had been sent and what It contained. The money was forwarded to him. Jerry on the Job By Hoban ■» ITI ~ I~ If AU.vuswt pvu_okWrl f -mou -Go uA / Mou"ce avew «* WwfWWyl OAOH-I (3US2SI GOTTA Awuotnow AND GET a \ I "TO 6Arvw.\OOTH StJ COMPETED ESCOSETP 0 f, A /< \ V » unwobm —Moo cam \ auo aoan£-to \ Nounwavi-WCST A j » ' ./ • THURSDAY EVENING, Thaw's Wife Will Visit New Home at Mt. Lebanon Pittsburgh, Pa., July 22. Harry! Kendall Thaw, slayer of Stanford j White, has decided that he will not I leave for the Panama Exposition in! I San Francisco until some time next ; week—probabjy the latter end. This 1 announcement was made by him . through his mother to-day. At the request of Thaw, the police i : who were guarding the Beechwood l ! home since his arrival from New York i were withdrawn to-day. According to a well-authenticated 1 report in Mount Lebanon, where j Evelyn Nesbit Thaw's new home is lo- j ; cated, the dancer is expected there' I shortly. Mrs. C. J. Holman, mother of | Mrs. Thaw, who occupies the new Mt. Lebanon mansion, admitted this after noon that her daughter was likely to j visit her at any time. I Turks Reported to Be Seeking Separate Peace Geneva, July 22. Nedjemkden j Effendi, the Turkish Minister of Jus i tice, and Fassun Effendi are expected I j here to-day from Vienna for the pur- j ; pose, it is reported, of opening separate peace negotiations with the Quadruple Entente. I It is stated that the delegates are invested with official powers. Recent dispatches have stated that the Turkish Minister of Justice, With j a fellow delegate, was on his way to | Switzerland to meet representatives of ■ the Entente Powers. They were re- : j ported on July 14 as having passed! I through Sofia, Bulgaria. | OFFER PRAYERS FOR VICTORY j I London, July 22, 12 noon.—While i prayers for victory were being said' to-day throughout Russia the Aus-; trians and Germans continued their j I drive at Warsaw from the north, the j I west and the south. Meanwhile they i were reaching further north toward I I Riga, on the Baltic, from which their] I advance guard is not more than twen- [ ty miles distant. )jCi lii, jgaJ MACCABEES AT PAXTANG I With the Maccabees' picnic and the big fireworks display this evening there | should be a record-breaking crowd at j ! Faxtang Park to-day. The Maccabees anticipate a crowd of at least 2,000 to I ! attend their picnic, while a fireworks j i display at Paxtang Is perhaps the best I guarantee of a big crowd that the j park has. Special effort has been made ! by the park management to make this j 1 evening 8 display one of the most elabo- I ! rate fireworks shows of the season. An | unusually large supply of fireworks J | will be used and some of the special j pyrotechnical features are said to be J most striking in beauty, brilliancy and I ! design. "SCANDAL" TODAY AND TOMORROW AT THE VICTORIA | A picture play you 11 never forget, j ' entitled "Scandal," will be preiented at this popular theater to-day and to- I morrow. "Scandal was v.rltten by Lois j Weber, who also was the author of thav ! remarkable picture play, "Hypocrites." j 1 The story of "Scandal" deals with the ; tragedy of idle gossip, the idea having I been taken from a newspaper editorial I based on everyday newspaper Items, j RITA JOLIVET IN "THE UNAFRAID- j AT THE REGEXT Jesse L. Lasky presents the plcturlzi«- tion of Rita Jolivet in "The Unafraid" , with House Peters at the Regent to i day. It is the story of an American ! girl who runs away from her guardi ans to marry a picturesque Montenegrin nobleman, and who, on arriving in Mon tenegro, is immediatelv kidnaped by the brother of her fiance. The American girl ! is Torced to marry the man who kidnaps 1 her The astonishing conclusion of tn*. ! story is that the girl is thankful for I being kidnaped, for it develops that In I this manner she has married a worthy man. To-day and to-morrow "Travel i ing Series." j The home of the Moller pipeorgan.— 1 Advertisement. WILL HOLD FESTIVAL ' St. Mary's Catholic Church will hold a ' festival on the church lawn at Fifth j and Maclay streets, this evening. The , lawn fete will be under the direction ! lof the Young Ladies' Sodality, which ' will have refreshments on sale. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH TWO MEN DEAD AT TWO OIL PLANTS [Continued From First Page.] der. In a statement regarding his call for troops Sheriff Kinkead said: "I telephoned to the governor that it was necessary to call out the mili tia. The men are not amenable to reason. They don't seem able to dis tinguish between my men and the men paid as guards. The situation is be yond my control, and I have asked the governor to send men at once." Of the wounded in to-day's fighting John Surgen. said to be a former Austrian soldier, who led the fighting in the first attack, which was made early to-day on the Standard Oil | plan, is probably mortally wounded. | He was shot through the abdomen. Until the men got out of hand to day Sheriff Kinkead had every hope that he would bring about a settle ment of the differences of the Stand ard Oil strikers, who went out late last week and Monday following a de mand for a IS per cent, increase in wages. The Tidewater plant was shut down because of the disorder. The sheriff, with a committee, had con sulted with Standard Oil officials and expected to have another conference with them late to-day. He also tele phoned to Washington for concilia tors and two were on their way to Bayonne when the disorder was re sumed and the sheriff defied. Scores of strikers and other? gath ered at the works of the Sta id d Oil Company this morning. in- the yard a fire broke out in a watc ' ,lan's house, but it was quickly extinguish ed. The strikers say that the trouble started whfn Tony Bednank was shot while walking near the company's works. The crowd, led by John Sur gen, a former Austrian soldier, charg ed up the bank to attack the com pany's guards who were stationed be hind the oil tanks. Surgen fell at the ! first fire and rolled down the bank. I The crowd pressed on and the next I exchange of shots Steve Fvohle, a 16- I year-old boy, was wounded. Then the crowd fell back and withdrew from the neighborhood. Shortly before noon, after several hours of comparative peace, a crowd of 500 assembled near the barrel works of the Standard Oil Company end began an attack on the guards there. Sticks, stones and revolvers were used and the guards replied with Winchesters. During the fighting fire broke out in one corner of the barrel yard where staves and other lumber is stored. Two men were killed and three wounded by the Tidewater guards be fore the attack was quelled. A heavy rainstorm which came up at the time helped to drive the rioters under cover. A street rumor was current after the early morning fighting that two of the guards in the Standard Oil plant had been wounded by pistol shots and some color was lent to the report when an ambulance from the Bayonne hos pital entered the works. It bore no injured men, however, when it left the plant and the surgeon in charge said he had been unable to find any injured inside needing attention. Sheriff ICinkead, .who was on the scene, said he would make another effort later in the day to bring about arbitration or settle differences in some other way. Tannenbaum Howled Down After the early attack the strikers and their sympathizers gathered in groups all along the streets leading to the Standard Oil works. They dis cussed conditions in an excited man ner but made no threatening move to wards the plant. Among several ora tors who addressed them was Frank Tannenbaum. an Industrial Workers of the World leader. At one gather ing, however, the men did not take kindly to his utterances and he was howled down. The plant of the Tidewater Com pany. within half a mile of the Stand ard Oil works, remained closed to day. Its officials issued another state ment, reiterating that there was no strike at the works; that the men are loyal and left only when they were driven out by a mob and that the plant was now shut down because the management, "did not deem it safe f ou buy. From $<1.25 to $35 \Ofc2 7 E. BLUMENSTINE /02$Sfy>, 14 South Court St., «UW»-■ Harrisburg, Pa. Try Telegraph Want Ads