Going-Out-of-Business Sale Ladies' High Grade Seasonable Ready-to-wear at Prices Averaging X A Actual Value Coats, Suits, Dresses, Skirts, Waists, Petticoats, Etc., at Price Re ductions Ranging From to 60 Per Cent. Extraordinary Tuesday Specials $6.00 House <l*l A A sl6.soLinendJO QO $3.50 Waists, /I A- Dresses, . . «pI*UU # # # j 0 -morrow . House Dresses in linen, ging- Balance of a lot of linen Balance of a special lot of ham, percales, etc., plain and suits in Copen, natural, white l' nen lingerie waists, in neat figures, stripes, checks and brown and gray, worth up to eluding a wide variety of mod , M . & ■" " els, some slightly soiled from plaids, worth up to $6.00; $16.50; choice, to-morrow, handling, worth to $3.50, choice to-morrow £I.OO #2.98 j choice 400 MARKS ®, COPELIN 31 N. Second St., Harrisburg, Pa. Vjlflk NO GOODS CHARGED, SENT C. O. D., JBag ON APPROVAL OR EXCHANGED **3 Your Exposition Trip Will Be Incomplete unless you take advantage of the oppor tunities to see for very small cost the Glorious Pacific Northwest For approximately $17.50 more than via direct routes to Cali fornia you can see this country that even the pens of poets fail k to describe adequately. 200 miles along the scenic Columbia River by daylight. Spokane, Seattle. Tacoma end Portland, with all the rugged grandeur enroute, with choice of rail or Portland & San Francisco Steamship Company's steamers, Portland to San Francisco, berth and meals on ship included. This trip includes stopover at Denver, Colorado Springs, Ogden (Ogden Canyon) and Salt Lake City, and for slight additional expense you may visit Rocky Mountain, Yellowstone, Mt. Rainier, H Crater Lake and Yosemite National Parks. Connections at Seattle with Alaska Steamship Company, making four different tours to Alaska. Union Pacific System | J Standard Routt of the IVest Let us help you plan your trip to include all these wonderful U \ places. This assistance costs you nothing and it will help you I X to spend your money wisely and see "most for the J1 1 f I \ least. Just fill out coupon and mail today. t jf II I \ S. C. MiI.BOURNE, Visit Old Faithful Inn ■ . X G - Agt., Union Pa- Yellowstone National JH ■ «ndm.\cific R. R. 841 Park Exhibit I without \ Chestnut St.. At Panama. Pacific P 'M- *»'■ ■ Philadelphia, Expos.fon. 1, •■ , ,|| ifc"i?fE"i.\ x *"> K H and the Exposi- X i tiorg and the Great x. '• St I •1I * I J \ MRS. KATHERINE ESHEI,MAX DIES Special to The Telegraph Lenioyne, Pa., July 26.—Mrs. Kath erine Eshelman. aped 63. wife of Da vid Eshelman. died at her home here Saturday night after a lingering ill ness. Besides her widower, she is survived by three sons,Morris,of Pitts burgh; Ross and Mervin, of Lemoyne; a daughter, Mrs. Hattie Fessler, of I.emoyne; two sisters. Mrs. Elizabeth £pong, of Wormleysburg, and Miss Mary Hamilton, of Carlisle, and a brother. William Hamilton, of New Cumberland. Funeral services will be held to-morrow morning at 10 o'clock Bringing Up Father $ # # # # # —7,/1/ > 1 * ■ HOV DO YOO I ° H - 1 JOST COURSE 'YOU ( —HOW DARE. YOU AbK ME Like SAn FRANCIfeCO- l Ove <o\n< to haont j ma//1 . *>UCH an IGNORANT I V/ONDEI? I CALIFORNIA "THE BEAUTIFUL THOUGHT Q.UESTVON - <CO YO YOUR. V/UCCkC , Irfi^ ■ ——■— 1 • " * * ■ • , , t ii, .. I. 11 _ MONDAY EVENING, conducted by the Rev. H. T. Searle, of the United Evangelical Church. Bur ial will be made at Slate Hill. AUTOISTS XAHROWI.Y ESCAPE Special to The Telegraph Gettysburg, Pa., July 26.—Throw ing on his emergency brake and bring ing his automobile to a sudden stop, Ezra E. Rice, Wenksville, saved his family and friends from probable fa tal injury when a Philadelphia and Reading freight train rushed past them on the track near Bendersville Saturday evening, the car going with in a few inches of the rail. SUB IKE ICE BOX ID THEN SCALD IT That Is the Only Way to Keep It in Proper Con dition Ice and a box to keep it in and the foods that must be kept at a low temperature are a necessity during the present hot weather, but getting the ice and the box is not the end of the matter. Unless the box is kept scrupulously clekn there is danger that it will become a serious menace to the health of the family. According to Health Commissioner Dixon who discusses the ice problem in his weekly health and hygiene let ter the cleaning of the icebox must be frequent and at regular intervals. The interior should be washed first with cold water and soap then rinsed with scalding water. The drainage pipes should be kept free from slime. Where a rubber tube is used to carry off the waste water this can be boiled without damaging it. The ice itself should be thoroughly washed always before !t is put into the box. Unless there is absolute cer tainty that the ice Is made from filter ed water or obtained from a source free of sewage pollution it should not be placed directly on rood or in the drinking water. Economy and health will both be served by placing the drinking water in a receptacle next to the ice. This will bring it to as low a temperature as is healthful. Iced drinks interfere with digestion and are a menace to health. They often arrest digestion and not infrequently produce death. Red meats should never ra frozen or placed in contact wi>h ice. Scrupulous cleanlinet.-j will lie re paid by the saving in foodstuffs and the maintaining of their quality. DEATH OF MRS. EMAS SMITH Special to The Telegraph Union Deposit, Pa., July 26.—Mrs. Elias Smith died on Saturday night at the home of her son, Levi Smith, after a week's illness. She was 7G years old. She is survived by three children. Mrs. Samuel Shirk, if Leb anon; Mrs. Isaac Winters, of Eliza - bethtown, and Levi, of town. Funeral services will be held at the house on Wednesday morning at 9:30 o'clock the Rev. Thomas Patrick officiating Burl >1 will be made in the Union De posit Cemetery. CITIZEN'S HUV RAILROAD Special to The Telegraph Gettysburg. Pa., July 26.—After ex isting as a matter or conjecture as to its outcome nearly a year, the East Berlin railroad question was settled Friday, when the citizens of East Ber line and Abbottstown purchased the equipment of the railroad, save for the rolling stock, from William D. Himes, New Oxford, the receiver, for about SB.OPO. The road will be put into op eration. HARRISBURG *£&&& TELEGRAPH 'M DAMAGE DONE WHEN BUILDINGS BURN ■ Spontaneous Combustion Is Be lieved to Have Been Cause at Shippensburg Special to The Telegraph ' Shippensburg, Pa., July 26.—An I early morning flr© destroyed three | residences and a restaurant to-day. en -1 tailing: a loss estimated at 15.000. Oc j cu pants of the homes escaped in their ! nig v * -lothes. The buildings were all frame and were located in East King I street. | The fire started in the restaurant bt i J. K. Irvln, It is the belief, from spon : taneous combustion in a package of fireworks, stored away for next year, j The restaurant is a total loss. The | flames spread to the home of Henry | Dukes, a retired merchant, and from | there to the homes of Harry Bechtel and William Tarner, in the same row. : All the houses, which are owned by Mr. Dukes.were burned to the ground. Much of the furniture was saved. Mr. Dukes estimates his loss at $2,000 on his private residence and $2,000 on the other buildinKS. The loss is partly covered by insurance. The furniture taken from the other homes is scattered over town, and the | personal losses of the occupants are | believed to be SI,OOO. Song Service Held on Stoverdale Cottage Porch i I Special to '1 he Telegraph I Stoverdale, Pa., July 26.—Twenty-1 '• live persons attended sung services last I night on the Chelsea cottage porch. | Mrs. Marlon F. Sourbecr, of Harris- ! burg led the singing, assisted by N. I M. Johnson and Mrs. C. C. Groff of! Harrisburg. Mrs. H. C. Runyon, of; Jonestown and Miss Violet Albright o£ j Harrisburg. were the guests. Edward Habbyshaw, Jr., of Detroit, j Mich., is spending his vacation at ( Hap's Inn. Edward Habbyshaw, Sr., of Campbelstown has arrived and will stay until campmeeting closes. Mr. j and Mrs. Daniel Baker and children. J I Hilda and Edward, spent several days | at Kap's Inn. | Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Welders, of Har risburg, and daughters, Margaret and, Kathryn; Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Zeiders. of Lemoyne, are spending several weeks at Sunnyside Cottage. Mrs. S. H. Albright of Harrisburg and daughter, Violet, have opened their cottage, the Buena Vista. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hamilton and son. Donald, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Sheaffer and son, Mr. and Mrs. A. D. I Calhoun, Mr. S. Daniels and Miss { Mary Shaub. all of Harrisburg, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. Flndlay. Miss Pearl Allen, of Hlghspire, is visiting Miss Kvrtena Allen at the Edgewood Cottage. Mrs. W. Wetzel of Harrisburg and daughter, Alesann«, have opened | their cottage, the Squirrel Dodge, for the summer. Howard Ross Holsberg and Howard Goodman, of Hummelstowh* have re turned from a trip to Buffalo, Niagara Falls and Toronto, Can. Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Trimmer and j Mr. and Mrs. Stauffer. of Palmyra, were guests Sunday of Miss E. Homer, at Rajah Cottage. Mrs. E. S. Musser or Marietta and grandson, Stanton Blacksmith, of Har risburg, are spending a week at the Marietta. EVE INJURIES FROM ALKALIES The daily papers and magazines of the past two years, at home and abroad, have contained numerous Instances of I more <or less serious injuries to the eyes from the explosion of the central | rubber bags of some sorts of golf balls, 1 tilled with strong solutions of alkalies, i Popular attention being in this wa> 1 drawn to the dangers from alkalies in golf balls, it is well worth recalling ♦he possibility of Injuries to the eyes from other forms of alkalies. A boy was busy whitewashing his father's fence when another boy came along and tliey began to talk together as boys will talk; from talk it was not far to guying and sport, then came pulling and hauling. In the final strug gle fr<r the control of the brush, the ' friendly boy flapped the brush into the working boy's face, in so abundant a fashion that the lime in the whitewash entered one of the eyes and injured it for life, leaving a scar which neither ' medicine, operation nor treatment can get rid of. . Another injury recently reported is one not so likely to happen to any boy. 1 A boy was so anxious to have his fact clean and presentable at dinner that 1 he made un a thick lather and then ' so completely enveloped his neck, head i and face with it that some entered the i eyes, burning the eyeballs so that the i boy was hardl- - able to see at all. This bov is Injured for life owing to his own thoughtlessness. If he or hfs i narents had attended any public health lectures on the care of the eyes, thev would have understood the risks of : using strong alkalies near the eyes in any fashion. MT. JOY BOYS ACTIVE Sfecial to The Telegraph Stoverdale, Pa., July 26.—Forty-five members of the Bovs' Brigade and Boy Scouts of Mt. Joy were guided through the cave near here by Cap tain Joseph Shesler 'of Harrisburg. A hike will be made this afternoon to IBrownstone quarries. The signal 'corps will operate during the trip. + V_+_*J*_9 JSjoamcMti ► CAIiL 1991—ANV PHONE FOUNDED 1871 \ ► '4 ; Two Months More to \ : Enjoy Porch Comfort • ► Why not take "inventory" of your porch needs; or look around for certain >" ► articles that need replacement. * ► You'll profit! 4 For during this Final Clearance of Porch and Summer Furniture, suites * ► and separate pieces may be purchased, with a saving, an illustration of which ► will be seen in: < Four-Piece Baronial Suites, sl4.7s—regularly $19.25; consisting of set- " tee, armchair, rocker and table; continuous reed seat and back. Three-Piece Suites, sl4.Bs—regularly $19.75; finished Scotch gray and 4 white, with woven reed seat and back. Suite consists of settee, armchair and 4 y rocker. •< Three-Piece Suites, s6.49—regularly $9.25; finished green, with woven ' reed seat. Settee, armchair and rocker in suite. Large Jumbo Porch Rockers, s4.4B—regularly $6.50; finished green, with \ double reed seat and back. . \ Large High Back Rockers, s3.2B—regularly $4.50; finished French srrav ' and white. *• v High Back Porch Rockers, sl.B7—regularly $2.49. A y Porch Chairs, 95 f—regularly $1.65. " BOWMAN'S—VIfth Floor. ► 4 : I WOMEN with a I DOMESTIC ECONOMIES \ , W kindness for the ~ Tubing, 10<, Yd. f , ~, . . . 4 ~ and 45 inches wide. No seams at side, and wears • eautitul in kl- much better than ordinary casing as it is reversible. Regu- * irionos will welcome ' ar 'y 15c and 18c yd. 4 this new showng Sheeting B7 inches She eti n g 63 inches ► wide; unbleached; washes . 4 ► nicely and bleaches easily. wide, seamlessj bleachedj ► Crepe Yard regularly 24c. Yard, 180 „ ► . 12% c Cretonnes, Yd. 4 ► Remnants of sufficient size for comforts, box cov«r- 4 ► Feather Ticking rem- Remnants of challies, L Practical garments nant lengths; blue, with J ' in smart Empire effect white stripes Regularly g-nghams and calicoes, reg- < and dainty floral pat- "° C and 22c ' Y "« " 13 f " larl >' j c '° 7c ' Yard ' ***■ T , . , 65c Seamless Sheets, 4o<! ► terns; trimmed with Made for largest double beds; slight soil spots. y pretty shirred ribbon Pequot or Utica Sheets— Sheets seamed; 72x90 * ► of a plain shade. large sizes, run of mill; reg- inch * s '' , wi J 3 " in s h Ji e ™ ; ' ► v:. i ° & regularly 4oc. 3 for 81.00, 4 Kimonos also come ularly SI.OO. Each .. or, each 35$ 4 ► in plain shade crepe. 10c White Shaker Flannel, 6Yd. 4 ► Priced' at SI.OO, Full pieces; good weight. \ ► $1.25, $1.50 and Pillow Casing _4B in- Pill o w Cases - large '< ► Oil 7% es vv,de ; heavy quality; sizes, 50x36 and 54x36 in- „ unbleached; regularly 16c. ches; Salem quality. Reg- < BOWMAN'S— second Floor Yard ularly 25c. Each ... 100 y > -J BOWMAN'S—Main Floor. 4 * || 4 DIET UNDER WAR CONDITIONS The European war has changed the supply of readily available foods, and brought about an enforced movement toward a partial vegetarian diet, in place of the more extensive use of meats, eggs, butter and wheat pro ducts. These changes, being the sub ject of governmental regulation and en forcement, place new restrictions on the dietary of the sick. It sounds strange to our ears to hear that patients are actually required to have a prescrip tion or permit to enable them to pro cure wheat flour or wheat bread for the preparation of toast. The reftne- I ments of cookery, along with the mod- | ern milling of the various grains and ; the preparation of dried vegetables, are I likely to eliminate in part the wide dls- i tinctions between animal and vegetable 1 products. This is in harmony with the j success of numerous sanatoriums con- I ducted on vegetarian principles in mat ters of diet. _ The various devices of the German | armv for furnishing suitable food to > the troops in action are responsible for i the unimpaired health of many per- j sons Fresh meats, potatoes and vege tables poorly cooked by the individual soldier under stress of army conditions are certain to lead to dyspeptic diar rheas and irritations, the forerunners of infectious invasion. Experience In former wars abundantly verifies this statement, says The Journal of the American Medical Association. But the present field kitchens of the German army, the "Gulaschkanonen" as they have been fancifully called, have fur nished foods that are cooked with great thoroughness, so that they are readily comminuted and then easily digested. The lessons of this diet service may well appeal to us. JULY 26, 1915 A SPEEDY TRIP Roy Light, of Harrisburg, returned home Wednesday on his Indian motorcycle from Chicago. Enroute home he encountered the heavy rain storms which made some roads impassible, the wheels going Into water up to the hubs. This made It necessary to cover fifteen miles over railroad ties, and through wheat ahd cornfields. Mr. Light made tne trip in two days and two hours, twenty-six hours of riding. 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers