12 PICTORIAL PATTERN We recommend them because we know they are authentic, far in advance of any other pattern, and never (ail to give complete satisfaction. / / _yf orfun> " Cmtmim CM U Wtkt MIS CHHHM64O Costume Mt „ , .... ' » Skin 6373 'sc for each of the tbm numbers. The FALL .FASHION BOOK and OCTOBER PATTERNS WOW ON ML£ First Showing of Fall Hats For Boys We are ready to outfit boys with school and dress hats, our showing including a large variety of styles in the popular Rah Rah and Alpine shapes and novelties. At 50c and 69c is a representative line of all that's new this Fall in boys' headwear. These include Rah Rahs in checks, stripes, mixtures and serges and one of the novelties at 69c is a velvet brimmed Rah Rah with soft leather crown. Many other styles are shown in corduroy, velveteen, vel vet, plush, beaver and fine imported velours, 98C, *1.23. $1.49, $1.98 to $4.9.> Dive*. Porneroy * Stewart, Second Floor, Front. $3.95 and $4.50 New Specials Dress Skirts TL F „ or Thursd " y in T Q 1 * <KO Oft Bargain Basement 111 a. oale at shelf oil cloth, in five One of the best values we distinct patterns. Special, yard, have ever seen in dress skirts is now on sale in the outer- SI.OO tan blankets with pink garment department on the or blue border, size 68x76 in second floor. ches. Special 7St Made of fine-qualitv crepc or $1.25 grey blankets with pink serge, in navy and black. All or blue border: size 72x80 in sjzes $2.98 ches. Special 9T£ Dives. Pomeroy & Stewart. Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart. V Millersburg Newspaper Boosts Lentz's Candidacy The Millersburg Herald has this to pays of the candidacy of James E. Lentz. of Elizabethvilie, for county re corder: "James E. Lentz, of Elizabethvilie, ; who announces his candidacy for the | Republican nomination for recorder of j deeds and clerk of the orphans' court : of Dauphin county, in the Herald this j ■week, has been an ardent worker for j the party for years, and as vice-chair man of the county committee has done i more work in the upper end to re-unite the disrupted ranks and bring- harmony in the grand old party than any other i member. He was loyal in defeat and j victory and has earned the unqualified support of every true Republican re gardless of former faction or division ' in the party. He never wavered under \ any circumstances, in his own personal j i ijn.j The Philadelphia , turning He&ger will be one year old tomorrow j SEPTEMBER 14th, 1915 To fittingly mark its first birthday, a BIG ANNIVERSARY NUMBER j will be issued. This special issue will con tain a four-page Intaglio Section, showing p pictures of the Philadelphia Mayoralty candidates and U. S. battleships. These photographs are of more than usual in terest, and this anniversary number will be a unique event in newspaperdom. No other evening paper has ever celebrated its first birthday in such a striking and prac -1 tical manner. I "The Broad Highway" | By Jeffrey Farnol This great new serial will begin in this special issue. It is a good, rollicking, full flavored tale of the brave men and worthy deeds of olden days. The story deals with the old broad high ways of England which bred so many his toric characters. Remember— Evening Ledger's Anniversary Day— SEPTEMBER 14th, 1915 MONDAY EVENING, disappointment or whan his party went dov'n to defeat through dissension. Mr. ! Lentz is a self-made man and rose to | prominence in business and pu.itics bv ! dint of his own exertions. His father ! died when James was a mere bov, and he was the mainstay of his mother in conducting the farm and bringing up a lario family of small children. "Mr. Lentz is weel qualified for the duties of recorder, and will bring to the office the same care and business ! methods that have been so successful in | his private affairs. Genial, courteous ! and obliging, and withal dignified and : tactful, he will make a popular official | with the court as well as v.-ith the peo ple. His nomination and election will be a credit to the upper end of the county which has never been favored I with the office. Local pride should ; guarantee him a unanimous vote from this end of the county." WILLIAM BYERLY ILL j William Byerly, aged 72. proprietor lof the Lochiel Hotel, was admitted to ; the Harrisburg hospital Saturday suf j fering from a complication of diseases. TURKEY'S POSITION VERY UNFAVORABLE American Intimates That Forces at Dardanelles Will Soon Give Up Athens. Sunday. Sept. 12. via Paris. Sept. 13, 11 a. m An American citi zen of standin.; in Athens h.is received advices from ConytantinoDle which ho says arc trustworthy, '.hat the situa tion of the Turkish army and govern ment is untax orabie- According to this informatloi. vnc position of the Turkish forces defending the Dardan elles is precarious. It is said the Turkish front, thinned by the heavy lesses which the lighting- had entailed on both sides, is finding it increasingly difficult to hold the lines against the French and British. Turkey's position at sea is described as disadvantageous. The former Ger man cruisers Goeben and Breslau, re named the Sultan St Hm and Medullu are said to have been incapacitated, while the Russian fleet preys upon Turkey's shipping. According to this information Turk ish affairs are under the control of a triumvirate with autocratic powers, consisting of Enver Pasha, minister of v ,r; Taalat Bey. minister of the in terior and Bedri Boy, chief of police of Constantinople. Dissatisfaction among the Moslems is reported and it Is said Slilek I*l Islam was dismissed because he did not approve of meas ures taken against the Armenians. The committee of Union and Progress is reported to have been virtually su perseded by a secret committee which is responsive to the wishes of the tri umvirate. The American's informant states that Armenians are being shipped to concentration camps at various points, being driven afoot or forwarded in box cars. He adds that the earlier massacres of Christians in Asia Minor are being duplicated in the present instance and that in some cases only a comparatively small part of the ex pelled Armenians reach the concen tration camps alive. Wilson Expresses His Views on Situation By .Associated Fress Washington. D. C., Sept. 13.—Presi dent Wilson expressed his view of the gravity of the International situation which confronts the United States to a delegation of Virginians who asked him to-day to visit the Manassas bat tlefield late this month. The President was reminded that some time ago he had promised to go to Manassas to dedicate a tablet. "When I made that promise," the President told the delegation, "things were just beginning and a great many things have happened since which have affected not only the aspect o£ our own affairs but the uspect of affairs of the world. My experience here day by day is that questions turn up so suddenly and have to be handled so promptly and sometimes with so much thoughtful discretion that I really dare not let my thoughts go out to other matters. "I could not come to Mansassas without having something to say. It would not be worthy of the occasion if I did not make preparations that would be worth while, and that Is out of the question. My thoughts are mortgaged beyond recall for the present . James J. Hill to Confer With Foreign Bankers By Associated Press New York. Sept. 13.—Financiers of the West and Xorthwest came to New York to-day to lend a helping hand to the Anglo-French financial commis sioners in their task of arranging a way by which ureat Britain and France can pay for the hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of imports already shipped abroad and other vast amounts contracted for and conteni- I lated. The first of these arrivals was James J. Hill, railroad builder and financier, of St. Paul. Mr. Hill was said to be provided with data upon which he based his belief that the flotation of a mammoth credit loan here to Great Britain and France is of more vital interest, perhaps to the United States than to the two countries seeking the loan. Woman Driver Knocks Down Man on Road AVhile walking down the road, south o' Enola this morning Curtin Crumlic. West Fairview, a laborer, employed bv the Pennsylvania railroad, was struck by an automobile driven by Mrs. Charles Prince, 324 Chestnut' street. Crumlic sustained a dislocated shoul der, a compound fracture of the left leg and bruises of the body. Mrs. Prince claims that Crumlic was on the wrong side of the road and stepped "in front of the machine when she sounded her horn. Crumlic was brought to the Harrisburg hospital for treatment. BURIAL/ OF MRS. MONTGOMERY Funeral services for Mrs. Enneta Gross Montgomery, wife of Walter L. Montgomery, were held this afternoon at 2 o'clock from her late home. 700 North Third street, the Rev. William B. Cooke, pastor in charge of Market Square Presbyterian Church, officiat ing. Burial was made in the Harris l.urg Cemetery. The pallbearers were J. Rowe Fletcher, Richard Fox. Jo seph H. Wallazz. Harry Hursh. Au gustus Lutz and R. A. Warner. R. B. CARPENTER DIES Romanus B. Carpenter, aged 61, died at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Elsie M. Watson, 2101 Greenwood street. The survivors are tive sons, Edward, Curtis, Samuel, Benjamin and George; and one daughter, Mrs. Elsie M. Watson. The funeral will be held Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the home of the daughter by the Rev. J. D. W. Deavor, pastor of the Ep worth M. E. church. Burial will be made in Paxtang cemetery. MRS. MARY EMERICK Mrs. Mary Emerick, aged 74, of 118 Dock street, died at her home yester day morning. She is survived by her daughter, Mrs. Carrie Marsili, of New ark, N. J., and four grandchildren, Charles, Wilmer and Edyth Marsili and Mrs. Mary Dwyer. Funeral serv ices will be held Thursday afternoon from her home, the Rev. William B. j Cooke, officiating. Burial will lie made in the Paxtang cemetery. MRS. MARY A. HARRIS Funeral services for Mrs. Mary A. Harris, aged 72, will be held to-mor row afternoon at 1 o'clock from her late home, 314 Clinton street, the Rev. Ellis N. Kremer, pastor of the Reformed Salem church officiating. Burial will be made in the Harrisburg cemetery. Mrs. Harris is survived by one son, James, and two daughters. Mrs. Emma Wiley, of Elizabethtown and Miss Jessie M. Harris. HAKEUSBURG TELEGRAPH PRICE OF PORK TO 60 AWAY DOWN Brelsford Manager Predicts Un heard of Low Level This Winter From present indications pork and "pork products" will drop in price to a level unheard of in recent years be cause of the difficulty of exporting hogs to foreign countries on account; of the war, according to C. A. Hibler, ; general manager of the Brelsford | Packing and Storage Company. The production of hogs this Fall is ; expected to soar far above normal. j They will have to be disposed of in \ this country and the large number is | expected to knock the bottom out of the market. "Germany and Austria are large consumers of American pork product, especially lard," said Mr. Hibler this morning. "Probably thirty to forty per cent of lard made in this country is used by these countries under nor mal conditions. Newspaper and gov ernment reports indicate a large crop of hogs this coming season. There is also reported very little sickness in this class of stock." "If the outlet to European countries remains shut off during this coming winter season, the prospects are that live hogs and pork products will be lower than they have been for some seasons past: just how much so would depend largely on conditions cited above." "By this coming winter season, we mean probably after January 1. Right now during the month of September, we are undergoing a period of very high priced live hogs, with prices cor responding accordingly for fresh pork cuts." "As far as the beef situation is con cerned. foreign conditions efTect this class of product very little, and nor mal supplies and normal prices are what might be expected. VON BERNSTORFF AND LANSING CONFER [Continued From First l'age.] sinking of the Lusitania it will be nec essary first to confirm Germany's as surances of the cessation of attack by submarines on liners. The declaration that the United States would not discuss the Lusitania case until it had been established whether the sinking of the Arabic was a justified act inceases the importance of the decision on the Arabic note. Government officials awaited news from Ambassador Penfield on Aus tria's reception of the request that Ambassador Dumba be recalled. Press dispatches had «»->ted the Vienna for eign office would accede without pre cipitating an issue. Conference Short Ambassador Bernstorff's conference with Secretary Lansing lasted just half an hour. At its conclusion as he left the State Department he told in quirers: "I really cannot say anything about what 1 said to the secretary or about what he said to me. That rests with Secretary Lansing. The ambassador made it clear, how ever, that tlie situation had not come to an impasse. From his manner some of his questioners inferred that his conference with the Secretary fore cast a favorable outcome and that probably arbitration might be agreed | upon. Dumba Prepares to I/eave Lenox, Mass., Sept. 13.—The Am bassador of Austria-Hungary, Dr. Constantin Theodor Dumba, whose re call was requested by President Wtl j son, was preparing to-day to leave his summer home here within a very short time. He has engaged a furniture packer to prepare his personal effects [for shipment and has also notified his I chauffeur that he would not require | his services after the end of the week. Archibald to Be Met by Government Agents By Associated Press Washington, Sept. 13. Acting un der restrictions from the White House agents of the Department of Justice will meet James K. J. Archibald, the American correspondent involved in the case of Dumba, the Austrian Am bassador. when he lands at New York ion the steamer Rotterdam from Hol land. Archibald carried Dr. Dumba's letter to the Vienna Foreign Office dis closing plans to cause strikes in Amer ican munitions plants. All officials here are maintaining strictest silence regarding Archibald's case. | Aliens in West Resent Charges of Dr. Dumba Chicago, Sept 13. Ambassador Dumba's performances and the noti fication by this Government that he is no longer wanted in the United States seem likely to do much good in the line of harmonizing opinion and senti ment among the American people and in stimulating patriotism. Even bit ter German partisans condemn Dumba and praise President Wilson. But the j most striking thing is the utterances from Austro-Hungarians in this coun try, who. through their societies and individually, have declared that they will work for anybody they please in the manufacture of war munitions or anything else. War After Break Belief of German Ambassador By Associated Press New York, Sept. 13. Count von Bernstorff, the German Ambassador, believes that breaking diplomatic rela tions between this country and Ger many over the Arabic case means war. This belief he has communicated to his close friends. The ambassador believes that a hreak can be averted. He hopes it will be averted. In the hope that by bringing Americans to a realization of the seriousness of such a move and to conserve peace, he has not ob jected to these friends letting his views became public. Publicly Count von Bernstorff has nothing to say. Privately he believes Germany is abused and maligned, her concessions to the United States min imized and misrepresented, and him self held up to public ridicule as a trickster, whose pledged word is worthless. This state of affairs the ambassador feels is due entirely to the English propaganda and the activities of the English-printed newspapers, particularly of the East. I)OG CATCHER LOCATED Aaron Martin, erstwhile dog catcher who disappeared August 30 was heard from to-day when a letter came to the police from Nazareth. CASTORiA Forlnf'jntsandChililreß. Bears the "f**' The Kinl You Have Always Bought Sign £ ture FIRE A! RUIN IN WAKE OF BIG STORM Simon Hershey's Barn Burned at Middletown; Lights Out Throughout City During the electrical and wind storm which swept over the city and surrounding country, Saturday even ing-, the barn of Simon Hershey, near Middletown, was burned to the ground, sewers and cellars flooded and train and trolley scheduled disar ranged. The barn was struck twice. The fire from the first bolt had hardly been extinguished when another en veloped the barn. All the livestock ■with the exception of three hogs was saved. Farming implements and the entire season's crops were burned. The loss is placed at $2,600, partly covered by insurance. Roads were washed bare out in the country and scores of automobilists were drenched. Many rural • tele phones were put out of commission and, the city and surrounding towns ■were thrown into darkness when the power plants went bad. Hope Tower Struck Soon after the beginning of the storm, the tower of the Hope engine house was struck, but it did not take fire. A bolt of lightning entered the bathroom of W. E. Balsbaugh. at 1711 Fulton street. A fire alarm was sounded, but the room had not caught fire. A panic was narrowly averted in Kesher Israel synagogue when two fuse plugs in the lighting system were burned out. The downpour of 1.36 inches of rain was too much for the sewers and a number of the cellars of houses on the Hill and in the West End were flooded. Mulberry street bridge ran full of water. Front street was also flooded. As usual the Market street subway filled up and Hill cars were compelled to travel over the State street bridge. Dirt was washed over the tracks in Cameron street, near Hanover, to a depth of three feet. Front street, Steelton, was washed full of dirt from the intersecting streets. Busers run went on a ram page and held up traffic from the lower end of the county. The storm was purely local. It started back of Duncannon and swept through this section into Cumberland county. NEWSPAPER ATTACK PROMPTED BY REVENGE [Continued From First Page.] for the place. There were can didates. I put the whole matter up to Staples. Staples said the young wo man he eventually chose was far and away superior to any of the others and I told him to make the appoint ment accordinßly. It was all a matter ot merit. The young girl who got the place had absolutely no political back ing. "Ever since that day I have been the subject of attack by Kuhn through his newspaper and by his business partner, Harry L. Hershey. Because I considered merit first without re- Kard to politics, when it was the wel fare of our children which was en trusted to me, I am attacked in this uncalled for and unscrupulous man ner. "Of course the whole list of charges he makes are lies from beginning to end. To the person who cares to in vestigate the truth or falsity of this assertion the records of my office are open at any time. "If Kuhn could be truthful he would come out and say that he is op posed to my re-election because I would not let him dictate the payroll of my office for his personal or politi cal benefit and that he wants me de feated in order that he can get some body at the head of the playgrounds and parks who will be his tool and 1o his bidding. Anybody who knows Kuhn knows what that would mean." HofTcrt Explains Specifications The parkways specifications which were made the subject of the attack on Mr. Taylor which called forth the foregoing comment, were drawn by Assistant Superintendent J. R. Hoffert. who to-day made the following state ment concerning them: "My attention has been called to an article in an evening paper concern ing a paragraph in the specifications for the parkway road. "Inasmuch as Mr. Taylor had noth ing whatever to do with the writing of these specifications, that duty being as usual in such cases entrusted to the engineer in charge, in this case myself. I desire in fairness to him, to make the following statement. "The specifications in question were prepared after considerable thought and solely with the idea of being as fair as possible to both parties to the contract. For the past ten or fifteen years there has been a growing con viction among engineers that the old type of contract was very unfair, and by placing all the responsibility upon the contractor simply resulted in much higher bids to cover uncertainties. "It is now recognized by the best en gineers that the contractor should not be made to assume responsibility for the accuracy of estimates and quanti ties. These can only be determined by an engineering corps and the party asking for bids should assume respon sibility for this part of the work. "To anyone taking the time to look at the ground over which the new parkway road will be built, it will be very evident that it is impossible to determine, on preliminary estimates, closer than within ten per cent, of the actual yardage of the finished work. This Department therefore is assum ing responsibility for the estimates guaranteed that if the quantities dif fered by more than ten per cent, the contractor would pay the city the dif ference, vice versa, according to whether the amount were less or more than the estimate. "The statement that any contractor did not know how to bid is maliciously false. Every contractor desiring to bid was given an opportunity to walk over the entire line of the proposed road with one of our engineers who explained In full, all details. He was also told that barring unexpected con tingencies, which might occur during the construction of the road, there would be no cliange whatever from the plans and that the quantities as given we believe were accurate but that instead of making them assume entire responsibility for the accuracy of the estimates, we guaranteed the accuracy to be within ten per cent. "The contractors were treated equally and fairly. It seems strange this supposed 'snake' was discovered just about election time. Every con tractor when asked at the time, said eveythlng was clear to him. I hate sophistry and I hate a poor loser." ANOTHER AIR RAID REPORTED By Associated Press London. Sept. 13, 2:55 p. m.—An other Zeppelin raid was made over the east coast of England last night. There were no casualties. SEPTEMBER 13, 1915. Law Should Stop Sale Of Elastic and Spring Trusses Such Misery-Causing Makeshift* Are the Ruptured Man's Worst Enemies Depending on elas- | tic or spring trusses ■ ;y, like shown above is \<. . little less than slow \ suicide. Such con- II s traptlons are almost sure to shorten your life. It's hard to make them hold, even when drawn so tight that they scarce ly give a minute's peace. They are simply a curse to wear. And because they nearly always let their victims get worse all the time, they are yearly forcing thousands of people into risking their lives by un dergoing operation. These unscientific makeshifts cause so much misery and such a shameful waste of money that the law should put a stop to their sale. Don't Buy Anything For Rupture Without (ilvlnir It a Thorough Test There's only one reason in the world why you or any one else ever gets sad dled up with good-for-nothing make shifts— It's simply because you trust to a mere try-on or hasty examination in stead of first making a thorough test. A truss or so-called "appliance" may seem alright when you first trv it on and afterward prove utterly worthless. The only way you can make sure of exactly what you are getting is by sixty days trial —a thorough day-after day test. And there's only on© thing: of any kind whatever for rupture that you can net on such a lorn? trial— Only one thing tc<>od rnounh to iitnnd such a long: and thorough test— That's our itunrniiteed rupture holder. Only Thluyjc (aood KuouKh To Stand A <IO-Dny Toi»t "We'll make you u guaranteed rupture holder—make It to your measure—and let you give it a thorough 60-day test without nuking; you to rink a cent If It doesn't keep your rupture from coming out or bothering you in any way, no matter how hard you work or strain if it doesn't prove every claim we make ther. you can send U back and it won't cost you a single penny. S«*e What It DOOM This guaranteed rupture holder—the famous Cluthe Automatic Massaging Truss is made on an absolutely new principle. It is far more than Just a truss. Instantly and automatically protect* you against every ntraln. so your rup- OPEX SEWER BIDS Bids for the construction of sewers In fifth street between Schuylkill and Mahantongo streets, in an alley, north of Mahantongo from Lexington fifty feet eastward, and In Green street from Granite to near Maclay were opened to-day by Commissioner W. H. Lynch. Bidders on the respective jobs were Stucker Bros., SBBS, $92 and $3,140; William H. Opperman, $849, SB9 and $3,179: Henry Opperman, SBB3, sllO and $3,193; G. W. Ensign, inc.. $937, $129.70 and $3,267: H. W. Johnson, SBB9 and S7O. makes sick r3i skins well No matter how long you have been tortured \ and disfigured by itching, burning, raw or scaly fy 1 skin humors, just put a little of that soothing, 1 I antiseptic Resinol Ointment on the sores and / U the suffering stops right there! Healing begins li - 11.-?!';"I 1 .-?!';" B ml that very minute, and in almost every case your M J wl skin gets well so quickly you feel ashamed of A/ II the money you threw away on J j S J useless treatments. \ f. U/ f Resinol Ointment contains nothing that V— I could injure or irritate the tenderest skin. It clears away pimples and blackheads, C and is a most reliable household dressing ji . for sores, chafinga, cuts, burns, etc. Soid 11 RußMi by all druggists. 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Will Save You Prom Operation The Cluthe Truss has such a remark ably strengthening and beneficial ef fect that it has completely cured hun dreds and hundreds of people whose cases seemed almost hopeless. It has so thoroughly proved its mer its that many physicians in ail parts of the country now recommend it in stead of advising operation. Mo Belts—.\o I.eg-Strnp*—Xo Springs Does away entirely with the curse of belts, leg-straps, and springs. Peo ple say it is as comfortable as their clothing. It is water-proof will hold in the bath. Also perspiration-proof and easily kept clean. f»et World's Greatest Rupture Book There are so many wrong ideas about rupture that we have taken the tin-.e to sum up in a book all we hav? learn ed during forty years of experience. This remarkable book—cloth-bound, 96 pages—is full of facts never before put in print. It shows why depending on elastic or spring trusses is about the worst thing you can do. It exposes the humbug "appliances," "methods," "plasters," etc. It explains the dangers of operation. And shows you why, if you manage to live through it, you may have to keep on wearing a truss. And it tells all about the famous Clute Automatic Massaging Truss—how simple It is—how it ends constant ex pense—how you can test it on sixty days' trial without having to risk a penny, and how little it costs if you keep it. Also gives voluntary endorsements from over 5,000 benefited and cured peo ple. The minute it takes to write for this book may make a big difference in the rest of your life. Don't fail to get It —Just use the coupon or sfmply say in a letter or postal "Send me your book." THIS IIRIXR!) IT* Bo* <IO2—CLUTHE COMPANY 125 Bast 23rd St., NEW YORK CITY Send me your Free Book and Trial Offer. Name Address Drawings Made For Colonial Golf Tourney Match play in the annual golf tour nament at the Colonial Country Club started to-day. The drawings are as follows: First sixteen—Holmes vs. Gourley, Hunter vs. Prizer, Pavord vs. For sythe, Seely vs. Harry, H. Ogelsby vs. Owery, Nissley vs. Sauers, J. Walker vs. Sweeney, Denniston vs. C. B. Miller. Second sixteen—Hoffman vs. llor gan, Dare vs. Motter, Horting vs. Watt, Balsey vs. Seel, F. Walker vs. Trout, Watson vs. Devine. Dean vs W. Ogels by, Kinter vs. Care.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers