'THE QUALITY STORE" Unequalled Bargains For Friday's Selling Only EXCEPTION Ladles' and BOc and 78c plain and seeded Misses' White and Croani Sorgo voiles, SO Inches wide, with neat Suit#*—plain white and black and embroidered designs In colors on white stripes— a bit passe 111 white ground*—Friday— style hut woarahhv—were values to 50c quality for, per yd., 1 QIS th 825.00 —while they last. Special _ for Friday *SO quality *<*. P« 25$ at, each One table of White Dress, Waist Rummage Sale of one of a kind a nd Skirt Materials that libtc sold in the ready-to-wear department— U p to S7}so—will be sold "1 Linen Suits, Ratine Coats, Misses' Friday for, per yard lvfC White Dresses in Voiles and Crepes and other garments, worth from $5.00 to SIO.OO. Special QQ _ 10c Crepes in light grounds with for Friday at, each OC >«'« t printed floral patterns of dlf- ferent colors. Special /_ _ Friday, yard ' Misses' and Small Ladles' Dresses In Figured lawn In blue and pink —remarkable values at 9tm. Spc- lOc Hue* Ttnvetn with neat rod cial for JQ. borders, size 18*36—slight lmper- Frlday, at , fections. Special 25 C Friday, 4 for Crepe de Chine Waists—new ar- ' ~ . rivals —white and riesh color — 10c Longcloth, 36 inches wide, worth $3.50. Special 1 Q soft clihmols finish for hand or 111 - Fridav at A J chine sewing—put up in 10-yard pieces. Special 7Qf* _ Friday, piece ' Ladies' and Misses' Tailored and lingerie Waists—some mussed— values to $2.00. Special OQ _ Men's Fibre Silk Hose—high for Friday at each spliced heel—double sole—Mack, white, navy and gray—regularly _ 25c-. Special for 1 7/> Ruffled Swiss, Voile and Net Cur- i-Yidav. at tains —2 Vi and 3 yards long—only <> s Uc _ 1, 2 or 3 pairs of a kind—regularly SI.OO to $5.00 pair. Special for Friday at, ng to (1 ft ft Men's Wide Lisle Suspenders— nor rmir ' uOC "Pioneer" make—neat patterns— were 50c. Special Fri- 35 C , . . day at, per pair Curtain Traces, Madras and Swiss —in white only—some slijshtly • soiled on edges—regularly 25c to Men's Balbriggau Underwear— -35c. Special for 1 ft- long or short sleeve Shirts—ankle Friday at per yard length—double seat drawers. Spe ' • • • r j a l for Friday— -39c quality, at igU oxl2 Best Body Brussels Rug— only one of these le«—regularly 25c quality, at J 827.50. Special tIQ QC for Friday, af 10,170 . 8.3x10.0 Axminster Rug—only ladies Fine Lisle ests—high one left—worth $25.00. tlO QC neck—long sletres—just the thing Special for Friday, at. for they cool days—wcuih oOc. * Special for Friday, C 1 ftft at 35c; or, 3 for «Pi.UU Genuine Cowhide Suit Cases—24 Inches—linen lined—extra heavy ... . ... _ corners—handles sewn on—excep- Ladies' Night Gowns tional values at $5.00. ttO QQ —low neck—short sleeves—lace Special for Friday, at... &O.VO and embroidery trimmed—were 75c —slightly soiled. Spe- KK cial for Friday UxMK, 6Vic Unbleached Domet Flannel. 27 inches wide good medium weight cloth. Special for /(1> „ Indies Summer Union Suits- Friday at, per yard /2C low neck—no sleeves—knee length 7c Bleached Mnslln, 36 Inches Pr,,ln y' at wide, splendid medium weight cloth, soft finish. Special C _ Ladies' Fancy Silk Hose—regu- Friday, per yard larly SI.OO. Special for *7 C_ Friday at, per pair ' " Large size Aprons, made of a splendid quality gingham, fast col- . , , , ... ors, with one poc ket—regu- -I Q _ Brassieres of pink longcloth Inrlv 25c Snecial Friday 1"C —trimmed with good quality tor jany j.tc. special rrtciay.. ehon lno<l Special 35c Light and Dark Flannelettes for Flr l < l a >'- at with pretty stripes and figures In all the best colors—value *7l / p Small lot of Ladles' Silk Lisle 10c. Special Friday, per vd. * /2C Hose hi colors—regularly 50c. S|>e- cial for Friday nq„ To-morrow will be clean-up day a L P° r P°'r AS7C on all wash fabrics—all our voiles. silk tissues and suitings that have Palm Olive Soap—regular size sold up to 25c yard will he 1 ft-, cake. Special for *] closed Friday at, per yard.. Friday at, per cake • C L. W. COOK Newsies to Hold Outing at Good Hope Mills The Harrishurg Newsboys' Associa tion has completed arrangements for its first annual outing, to be held on Labor Day, at Good Hope Mills. Everything known to cause fun and a good time has been included In the program for the newsboys' first, big outing. The crowd will meet at 9 i o'clock in the morning at the rooms ol the association, 304 North Second stret. and will leave on motor trucks for Good Hope Mills, where they will! spend the day. ' Prizes and "eats" to make the affair a success have been furnished by the merchants of the city. Although all the. tiokots ha\ - Q_ r.at been turned, in yesterday, the omcers expect To nave a neat balance for the treasury when expenses have been paid. The com mittee in charge for the outing in cludes Michael Klawansky. chairman. Park Weaver, the Rev. E. P. Robin- 1 son, David Klawansky, Philip Bloom, J. Sharp and Arthur Koplovitz. FRIENDSHIP BRING* HIM lito/100 Special to The Telegraph Bouth Bethlehem. Pa.. S«pt. I.—Rolin ! Bonner. steward of the fashionable Northampton Club, is heir to SIO,OOO. Some yearß ago. while on a hunting i trip to the Pocono Mountains, near t'anadenels, Mr. Brenner befriended a man named Turner, who owned 600 acres of woodland, well stocked with game. He died recently and bequeath ed his estate to Mr. Benner. The Best Remedy For All Ages and proven so by thousands upon thousands of tests the whole world over, is the famous family medicine,— Beecham's Pills. The ailments of the digestive organs i. to which all are subject,—from which come so " many serious sicknesses, are corrected or prevented by BEEUUNShUS' Try a few doses now, and you will KNOW what it means to have better digestion, sounder sleep, brighter eyes and greater cheerfulness after your system has been cleared of poisonous impurities. For children, parents, grand parents, Beecham's Pills are matchless as a remedy For Indigestion and Biliousness Sold oyerywhero. In box**, 10c., 28c. The directions with every box are very valuable—especially to women. • THURSDAY EVENING, Good Catches on First Day of Oyster Season Special to The 1 elegraph Port Norrls, N. J., Sept. 2. With the oyster season once more here, the great fleet of oyster boats hurried into Bivalve, Maurice River and Greenwich Piers yesterday afternoon with their big deck-loads. A few of the captains, who had rush orders for their product, got in earlier than the rest and shipped by train Immediately, but the great ma ! Jority of the oysters brought in have ' been put on the floats to get out of them and will be shipped to-d&y to all the i big markets of the Kast. Fully fifty [ carloads, probably more, will leave Bivalve and Maurice River to-day. The oysters have not made remark able growth during the Spring and > I summer, but they are fat and white and I) in excellent condition. Planters and II shippers are looking forward to the best year they have had for a long time. The parasite known as the bore does not' seem to have done as much damage to the oysters as usual, and those whose planting have escaped the ravages of the drumflsh have cause to rejoice. I MrAItOO NOT A (il'IUCRtf ATOHUI, CANDIDATE Special to The Telegraph I Washington, D. C., Sept. 2. Secre tary McAdoo of the Treasury, has no thought of becoming a candidate for I the Democratic nomination for Gover j nor of New Tork. A published report that he was sympathetically watching a movement with this punpose In view caused amusement at the Treasury De partment yesterday. Mr. McAdoo's friends said the report was "pure bun oorobe." Mr. McA<\oo Is Understood to be perfectly content with his present position. k SMART COAT WITH WIDE BELT I New Design With PUit« to Give th« Fashionable Flare. By MAY MANTON 8743 Child's Coat, 4 to 8 years* The newest coats for little girls follow the general trend and are made with skirt portions full and flaring. This is a very charming one with a wide belt that Is ar» ranged in a distinctly new way. In the picture, the coat is made of gabardine and the trimming is velvet, while the bands and the belt are of white broad cloth and the combination of materials is as interesting as the design, but as a matter of course, this coat can be made of many different materials. Broadcloth is to be fashionable for the autumn and poplin weaves will be worn, velvet is always handsome for the later season and if something very dressy is wanted for between seasons, the model would be charming developed In white broadcloth or in white gabardine, whereas the blue coat is good for harder usage. For im mediate wear, taffeta would be pretty made in this way with the collar and cuffs of the same, scalloped and, per haps, with the belt of white broadcloth. For the 6 year size will be required 4% yds. of material 27 in. wide, yds. 36, 3 yds. 44 and % yd. 20 in. wide for the collar and cuffs and yd. 50 for the belt and banding. The pattern No. 8743 is cut in sizes from 4to 8 years, It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Deaprtment of this paper, on receipt of ten cent*. Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. CITIES BUILT TO ORDER; BY FREDERIC J. HASKIN [Continued from Page 6.] fact that the highest efficiency of the worker can only he expected under the hest living conditions. Gary, ind., built in the open on a prearranged plan, generally looked upon as the most efficiently organized industrial city in the world, is still less than ten years old. The first shacks for Its construction gangs were thrown up in 1906. The founders wished to avoid the paternalism which had proved so detrimental to the civic development of Pullman, one of the earliest preconceived industrial cities of the country, without falling to the haphazard methods which have bred so many inconveniences In all cities of the past. The homes for the employes were built with a proper consideration for the health and comfort of the occu pants. They could he purchased upon easy terms if desired. The parks, streets, recreation centers and other adjuncts were well outlined. The pub lic schools have recognized as the best in the cou'ntry, as Is evidenced by the fact that New York city ar ranged last month for the construc tion of twelve schools after the Gary pattern. They are to bo built, and I organized under the supervision of the Gary school superintendent, Tlr. Wil liam Wirt. Town planning has received so much attention within the past ten years that It is developing into a new pro fession and one that promises to he most remunerative. The obvious ad vantage of a brand new city, built up from the ground on a plan in har mony with modern developments, over the city which was evolved from a small .village In which sanitation, convenience and civic beauty were unthought of, has been recognized by a number of corporations in the selee. tion of sites for manufacturing plants. The need of persons competent to plan new cities as well as to remodel old ones led the University of Penn sylvania to establish a course of city planning this year In connection with Its slimmer school. The instruction for the present season will close next week. It has been under the direc tion of P. Antrim Haldeman, city en gineer of Philadelphia; Carol Arono vlcl and Bernard Newman, of the Philadelphia Housing Commission, and Professor James P. Dtchten berger, of the university. A number of cities are now es tablishing commissions for the pur pose of securing a definite plan suited to Individual municipal need. New Tork recently established such a com mission and the group of public build ings which are adding so materially to the efficiency and beauty of Cleve land were built from plans which rec ognized the peculiar and distinctive conditions of that city. Dallas and Galveston. Texas, Birmingham, Ala., and Reading, Pa., are among other cities which have recently adopted a definite plan upon which future Im provements will be based. The well organized plan provides for Ailing each municipal need with the greatest possible efficiency. Streets, parks, schools, hospitals, lighting, water supply and, In some cities, even heating, are considered as service which the municipality must supply uniformly for Its people. It must administer to their esthetic as well as their physical nature by giving them at all times an attractive environment. All of this service must be rendered at o minimum cost. At a recent gathering of world renowned architects Eduard Henard, architect for the city of Paris, pre sented a paper which Included a num ber of novel suggestions as to the re quirements In the city plan of the future. He prophesied that public service within the next quarter of a century will Include many details not yet even under consideration. Most of these are to be supplied by tube and provisions for a perfect network of service tubes must be made In city planning. They would seriously inter fere with present arrangements. Vacuum cleaning may be one of these, and It will require a pipe from even- house for the nn«um»tln dust HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH ) The Center of Interest to the Public of 1 SHarrisburg Will Be ' I |The Largest Ready-to-Wear Department Store 1 [ln This Section of Pennsylvania] j Complete Stores of Dress Accessories < Form Large Important Parts of the New, Bigger J and Better Kaufman Store- With the Famous Kaufman Underselling Prices Always in Force \ » Important factors in the A All these departments will * 1 New and Bigger Kaufman j, rtf pS be under the direction of Mr. i J Store will be the departments -» ffj ™ J. E. Gutman, who will be 1 # Corsets, Muslin Under- [ J§ enced co-workers. Mr. Gut- I wear, ShirtWaists,Girls' - ™ an is J well r with' /0ro««o« InfanU' Woar - the needs of Harnsburg peo | uresses, inianis fYear, pie and welcomes his hosts (Hosiery, Knit Under- r of friends to the New and f i wear, Coat Sweaters, 1 B Bigger Kaufman store. I Gloves and Men's W I These departments will be yj PVll - r these departments satisfac -4 complete stores in themselves *° r^~~^°r w^a * ever * s wor^ I everything in varieties to C Everything Ready-to-wear s I meet the requirements of all jln at Kaufman's at an Under- j | You and Your Family Will Be Able to Buy j | Complete Wardrobes Under One Roof --- j j Saving Time andMMoneyy y Getting Complete j c Satisfaction With Every Purchase or Your II Money Back For the Asking. t Cr\ppi o 1 We Are Pleased to Announce That the! J.XUUtC Opening of Our New Store Will Take Place on Next Tuesday Evening, Sept. 7, From 7.15 to 9.30 O'clock. NoGoodsWill be Sold, j For Further Particulars Watch Our Announcements in Daily Papers. removal which will ho regarded as an «ssential part of public health work. AH the uses of cold air increase, other tubes will siipply it to lower the tem perature as desired, and for the dis tribution of fresh air from the sea or the mountains. Mr. Henard empha sized the feasibility of this fresh air supply as a health measure because of the fact that a meter of fresh air from a nearby street contained 6,000 dis ease perms while the samo amount from the mountains or sea need con tain almost none. As coal oil Is largely used for fuel purposes in Paris and is productive of less smoke and dust than other fuels, he sug-i posts the possibility of an oil pipe service for all residences similar to the gas pipes now in use. The old idea that the street should be level with the ground may in future be considered erroneous. It should ho sufficiently above the surface, it is hold, to give room for all these service utilities between It and the ground. The adjacent houses should have base ment floors. The sidewalk and road ways should be built like continuous I substantial bridges which, after proper construction, would not need to be meddled with except for repairs. They should bo supported by walls of ma sonry parallel to the adjacent houses and on a level with the second story. Such a plan would make the mod ern city street two-storied, the upper part for pedestrians and light weight vehicles, the lower for service and heavy traffic. This arrangement has already been Introduced in Chicago for traffic between the railway sta tions and certain private warehouses. Reinforced concrete roofs. Mr. He nard holds, will provide gardens and also landing places for the aeroplanes which will come into more general I use. Oarages and hangars will be available below the surface and great elevators will lift these machines from their subterranean quarters as de sired. The beginning of these Innovations is said to be already in sight. At least one large American hotel has already provided a roof landing for aeroplanes. New York has now a pub lic playground and garden built upon bridge trestllng fifty feet from the ground. Although only opened a few weeks ago, it contains some large trees which it Is believed will flourish as well as if planted directly in the ground. Fullam to Be Dropped as Annapolis Superintendent Washington, D. C., Sept. 2. The United States Naval Academy at An napolis Is to have a new superinten dent as a result of the halter of Rear Admiral William F. Fuilam that the manner In which he had handled the examination "cribbing" episode was not endorsed by the administration when It approved the findings of the court of Inquiry which investigated the situation at that institution. Announcement was made by the Navy Department yesterday, through Acting i Secretary Franklin £>. Roosevelt, that Rear Admiral Fullam would be relieved • from duty at the Institution September I 20. He will be succeeded by Captain j Edward W. Eberle, now commandant of the Washington Navy Tard and su- I Derlntoiuiuit at tha aa.val jcua tuxitarv. Roosevelt Is Pleased, but He Has His Doubts Special to The Telegraph Oyster Bay, N. Y., Sept. 2. Colonel Roosevelt, when seen at his home at Sagamore Hill, said he was pleased to learn of recent developments regard ing the attitude of Germany. He made this statement: "On its face, this appears to be most gratifying, and If the acts of the Ger mans bear it Ottt and suitable amends are made for the lives lost in the Lusl tania, Kalaba and similar cases, and If there Is no provision expressed or Im plied as to action on our part such as was requested by Germany before —as regards Kngland and France—the result will bo in every way satisfactory. "I wish to call attention, however, to the fact that this is in no sense a con cession from Germany, as it has been styled in some of the newspapers. It Is an announcement that she Intends to stop the policy of assassination. "To stop such a policy establshes no claim for gratitude. I take It for grant ed there will be most ample amends, so far as such amends are possible, not only for the property loss, but for the lives of American men. women and children who have been assassinated during the four months and oyer while the policy has been carried out." Overland-Harrisburg Co. Has Leased Display Room The storeroom at 212 North Second street has been leased by the Overland- Harrisburg Company and will be used as a salesroom in which to display the various models and as a headquarters for this district. The room is 160x21 feet, the rear door of which leads directly into the Overland service sta tion. which fronts on Cranberry street. This makes a convenient arrangement, as cars may be run direct from the display room Into the service station and permits all mechanical facilities directly adjoining the main office and showroom. The service station has I HEINZ 8 1 Tomato i 1. Ketchup 1 H Free from floryoato ofSodm l|| Pure as it is good. With \p| gsj|l the delicate flavor of g&LfresK ripe every Wof th» food with which it is hdfi! The kieal^pp SEPTEMBER 2, 1915. two floors, 40x80, which permits ample storage for new cars a,nd such me chanical equipment as is essential to pioperly care for the cars of this terri tory and SIO,OOO in mechanical parts for Overland cars. The Overland-Harrisburg Company Is a $50,000 corporation, owned by Carl Hanson and J. R. W! Hunter. It Is the distributing headquarters for ten counties and has the exclusive sale of Overlands in the Harrishurg dis trict. A large electric sign 13x6 feet will be suspended, having 208 lamps for illumination. The local agency hap an allotment of 1,000 to 1,200 care for this season, 200 of which have been delivered. Mr. Hanson reports an allotment of 3,000 for next year. The factory capacity Is now 500 each day, with expectations of 1,000 each day before the tlrst of January, when the new additions to the factory are complete. This week the company is making a complete show of models at the Grangers' Picnic. y THERE is a NEW-ARK Shoe for your boy, Madam, that will give him all the comfort wished for by your motherly love—All the style to gratify your motherly pride, and just enough of that sturdy mannish ness that will make your boy feel himself dressed for any occasion. And hen you consider how Institution 7n<g , SHOE STORES COMPANY HARRISBURG BRANCH 315 MARKET STREET, Near Dewberry Newark Storm Nearbji York* Reading, Altoona, Baltimore. Lapraater. "Open Saturday nights until 10.80 o'clock to accommodate our customers." Mall Order. Filled by Parcels Poet. 137 Stores in 97 Cities Von Tirpitz Reported III; Will Suspend His Activity Special to The Telegraph I»ndon. Sept. 2. A dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph from Amsterdam Rays reports received there from Berlin are to the effect that Admiral von Tir pitz. the German Minister of Marine, Is ill from overwork and exhaustion, and on the advice of hie physician Intends to leave Berlin for a holiday, which will extend over several weeks. AwiijdfldOold Medai Rui Franoiaco Expoiltlo: —th» hlghett honor on Imported Olive Oil 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers