14 Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart Remnants of Silks ~T ~~s3 [IJI The Live Problem of In a Special Clearance -HSUf ♦ Preparedness Lengths for dresses, blouses and kimonos, Every American to to he posted bracing crepe de chines, taffetas, crepe meteor, A JHI oil the question of preparedness. As a guide in this con foulards, brocade crepe, crepe serge, satin stripe Masm nection our Book Department has a worthy list of crepe de chine. Plain satin, Shantung and Ro- #1 \ hooks— - B - cof National Defense, by J. W. Muller fi.M llian and plaid fancies. m am l'an Americanism, by Roland Usher $2.00 H Sm m: The Invasion of America, by Roland Usher fi.as Ihe savings range from 20 to 30 per cent. I wk Bj 21 §M nS Empire and Armament, by J. c. wise *1.50 mbV mmm Jr Present Military Situation in tlie U. 8., by P. V. Greene 75c Black Dress Silks Defenseless America, by H. Maxim M „. 4rj.no JT7 O 1 11 1 1 ( 1 * /" West Point in Our Next War. by M. V. Woodhull $1.25 wMt/o are what we make them and much 01 their comrort Are We Ready - b > h d w h «eier ». 11 . , * r * r ■ 1 - American Army, by Major General N. H. Carter $1.50 Gros dc i.ondres, 36 inches wide: yard, $1.50 and hospitality is due to the character of tne furnishings. Tl " ™" " '«"™~ «•» Peau dc Soie, 06 inches wide; yard, $1.25, Our Furniture Section has furnished many homes and ade their interiors permanently attrac- Pebbled crepe meteor; yard $2.00 tive with the high character of the pieces supplied. The service of the grades regularly of" ( 1 epe de chine; yard SI.OO and $1.25 sold has established a reputation for honest value-giving that naturally creates widespread inter- Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart—Street Floor. es t j n SU ch a Special Occasion as the Fehrilflrv Furniture Herman's U.S. Army Shoes ' y "urniture oaie That Came With the JeraMStoCk When reductions from 10 to 50 per cent, are inaugurated. , t . , . . TT o * 1 3 With prices advancing on account of higher materials and increased costs to manufacture, the cnnan ma-cs s iocs 01 ic m e tates>. nny. ic ! mt M/ikh q„.Lin I genuine savings characteristic of tins sale's offerings carry an invitation to at least inspect and ' r,vlk ' sc ° f sucl ' * ™" ,rac ' ""P 1 "* that thc compare when the purchase of furniture is under consideration. . sho<s mu»t g,ve excellent scmce, for no test for wear , s il-MJ x . o- , ~ T , Library and Living Room Furniture f§£ A lIG OIQ.GW3.IK. 1 CSt MHRARY TABLKS | EXTRA SPECIAL! CREX tTHNITIJRK RGUl'qj)ip sizes. Fumed oak library tables, 28x42 inches. Special $0.95 The first time Crex pieces have ever been sold for less than $4, 50 and $5 00 Army Shoes in tan willow calf and run metal KUmed ° ak ta " ,eS Wlth deSk draWer ' ,13 ' 50 ValUe " SpeC^1 , #5 re »B ?s'Crex chairs Special 57.75 ™de over the regulation army last with tips or p.ain toes, A Convincing Demonstration, Clearly Proving mahogany tablks _ s& , 53.85 ¥\ L'l'A Jfi I'M ma J} oßan i library tables sl-1.95 $11.75 Crex rockers. Special $10.50 ' Durability and Quality SiSlo EShSEHJ « I !2'S5 SJHS S l ?* chain. Special SIO.OO J 3 .r,0 ami $4.00 Army Shoes In fan calf, dull calf and black Jj*jß.too library tables SI!.!)«» sl2 75 Crfex ohnlrs Snf»pinl *ll .Ml tut. a a . 1& IV $13.50 mahogany desk tables $11.95 «4.00 Crex settees Special . " laliso klda l<m. made over the regulation army last with tips or plain \* T\ , . 1 . $15.00 mahogany desk tables $13.50 ; $16.75 Crex rockers Special sls 00 ,oea ' heavy oak leather Goodyear welted soles; tf»Q Qg Wnen we arranged with the mahogany desk tables $12.05 J $16.25 Crex chairs. Special $11.50 I broken sizes. Special & ,uv »16.91> tapestry chair $15.25 Crex rockers. Special $13.75 Wklffill TMJIIc *„ l„, r „ ,I • < $16.96 tapestry rocker i $14.75 Crex chairs. Special $13.25 Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart—Street Floor, Rear. nlttall All lls to lftA a \\ Illttall lug 1 on the siclc- . One carload of brown reed and fibre chairs and rockers. .... . $.13.90 value. Special for two pieces $27.50 ! Fibre rockers $2.69 walk ill front of the Store for a week the mill ad- $17.95 leather chair Reed rockers. $5.95, $0.95. $8.95 and higher. With spring $17.95 leather rocker seats and upholstered in l'ancy cretonne and tapestry. vised us that they "hoped it would rain and snow $ 2 V° leather aette e TEA WAGONS and freeze" during the time of the demonstra- H4.»0 value. B p.cai for three piece, , t ,55.00 be ? XeisTnd' L m t a ray Kany . ! ea , wagonß ' $7% b 5 1 auic dliu Ime t j on SOFT. COMFORTABLE AND LUXURIOUS DAVENPORTS BOX SPRINGS AND MATTRESSES $95.00 leather davenports. Special ... SBS 00 Full size box sprtng, covered with heavy ticking, $12.95 value: Q 1 L 4.- r T frion I\J Ck i O A test of Ibis kind docs indeed prove just what use and JSJJ SKSSSSJ dKSJSSS. ;;; "V'SM ZMOIYSJR*"',T 'wm.XX!72.«'pif,iw ; '' l S WUdllfy Linen INapKinS what abuse a really g;ood rue will stand ta pestry covered davenports. Special $09.00 * alue $54.90. Special $39.00 Ijo'sn tapestry covered davenports. Special $59.00 DINING ROOM FURNITURE 50c mercerized table damask, 64 inches; yard .. .f \' >ii tijiHlil ;is well lest j;lass with the blows of a ham- sen.oo eolld mahoaany davenports. Specut'.!!;!!!!;; ».mti!! ehfna cloßetTfi-root extension'ta'tile.' 1 ! cho.Vr ~sc me[eerized table damask, inches, fine finish; n.'er •' °» ordinary r„ B to so great a test. But uwn «JT IX JACOBEAN OAK moun. ,x "".'.""."ifnSS.. SSSa^'n,.Viijn'ch W* r, »* tins is anliere uigs of mdirrerent quality must give way IAPESTRY WITH SPRING SEATS closet, extension table, 5 side and i arm chair with leather slip 89c linen table damask, 70 inches; yard Hiif, to \\ hittall supremacy. • * 'TntlFvHitip of fi'/nWw'in 5n ,1 « 95 f e , ttee $7.95 table $25.00 golden oak buffets *22! so SI.OO table damask, 70 inches; yard B{>(* lotal value or tour pieces, $34.80. Special $25.00 sl9 50 Kolden oak buffets &I 7 vi __ . I'lie $65.00 Saumok rug, now on the sidewalk, will be si9 - 5o tapestry rocker $29.60 golden oak buffets s2«iso $1.25 all-linen table damask, 70 inches; yard .. SI.OO washed with ordinary soap and water at the close of the t „' n n ** 1 $45.m foldln oak buffets !.".!!!!!:!!!!!! *.!!!!!!! ]! * $a»oo $ L5 ° linen table damask, new patterns; yard, $1.25 test. It will then be displayed in one of our windows tW ° * S '" ,,3 " o ° $42 " 5 ° s °' id mahogany dlning room chairs - Speoial - set - » 25 0 « Fine table damask, 72 inches wide— for close examination and will be sold by sealed bid to Fv -J i-JV,'* 1 I CMNA CLOSETS 1 '••'vIMM sl-69 value; yard s!.:{{> the highest bidder. J28.00 golden oak china closets $25.00 'W \ '^ V J 51.89 value; vard $1.69 jf* ; X>:|&/ fiff l $25.00 fumed oak china closets $19.50 DVTMC Place your bid in a box provided for that purpose in 'jMfflS I $29.50 golden oak china closets $26.50 / . ODD NAPKINS the Carpet Department on thc third floor hz&S) *J »» ; 50 golden oak china $35.00 ,0, . ««•. , Linen napkins, 22 inches square— Wf/ • 9-plece Jacobean dining room suits; 48-inch buffet, large Y ,T -—, illlL M/IRK OI Ql/ILITY $265.0n ten-piecV nmhogaiiy' *«EO. X_r. «, OF .„ 60-Jnch buffet. 45x54 oval extension table, china closet, sewing / / V <6? DO vnlnr- <ln7Pti JSI (»•> ewart, Jhiid Moor. ~ <<^^lHa ' aal *>«LX>aii mm Dives. Ponieroy & Stewart—Third Floor. IJives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Street Floor. PRETTY GIRL IS SOLD AT AUCTION [Continued From First Page.] she suffered, ever was related by the police. " , Miss Marie Klein, 18 years old. the daughter of .the Rev. Charles Klein, pastor of Bethany Reformed Church, is in the City Hospital on Blackwell's island in such a serious condition that the charges of grand larceny and white slavery against the pugilist may be changed to one of homicide. Played Part of Hero One night early in last December Miss Klein, who was organist in her lather's church, was hurrying to her home when several young men in Sec ond avenue accosted her. One seized her and she feared she was to be dragged away when her screams at tracted 'Jimmy Naples." He played hero then, whipped several of her annoyers and then escorted the young woman to her home, assuring her that any time she needed aid to call on "Jimmy Naples," that he would de fend her. Miss Klein was so thank ful she invited liim into her home and introduced him to her parents. They thanked him and invited him to call again. He did so,, and called sev eral times in two weeks. Miss Klein said that while return- Bringing Up Father $ # # # # # f " "N J ~ |l S -N " vtLU I SHOOt) _ KOftft-MC <»TT»H* SHE'i> "TICKLED TO *1 f~ FlN£ "svAr'i 1 P DID YOO XE%-IS ) f ij 1 > Corfwrr*. MOW ABOUT Kl0! J "f* COP«> TO CALU COULDN'T I L TO °COOD RlMc -HUM? || | TMtfct tvvr A. TMtNc. LEFT ( \ LITTLE WW^-E M ? f-J FIRE HER NOW 1 A CCOK —»t— J I TSLu-?. i« We HOU« AITAU \c% ' '' L THtL WRE* % TUESDAY EVENING, HARR!SBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 1, 1916 I ing fron* the shop the afternoon of December 16 Neapolttano ("Naples") met her and pulled her into a t doorway. "He placed a pistol at my I heart and told nie we were going away together," she said. "But tirst I nu ' Bt Ko into my home and gather i?i T V° J° wels and money 1 could iind. 7., a '' e d to return, he said, he would I kill me on sight. I .I "Pt so terri fied and hypnotized me that 1 had to obey him. I got the J jewels and the money and returned I to him, thinking he would let me go, but he seized me and marched me to j a surface car, telling me he would shoot if I made an outcry. All the j time he kept the pistol which was in l his pocket pressed against my side. IHe took me to a house in Williams i Bridge, where there is a large Italian ! colony. There I was placed in a room j and my clothes were taken from me." I Here Miss Klein related the indigni ties and tortures to which she had been subjected in that room and told of her change of circumstances that came to her through being placed on | the auction block after one night of I horrors. Sold at Auction That night a Christmas ball was given at the Italian colony. She said she had been taken from the house and placed in a small room attached to the hall in Williams Bridge in which the all-night dance was held. "Jimmy Naples" had been the door keeper of her prison, she said, and had admitted many men. "The dance was breaking tip," she continued. "It was getting dawn and 1 was very ill when my captor called the crowd of men back and said I was to be auctioned off. Without clothes but too ill to know much I was placed upon the stage which the musicians had occupied and held there while the brutes made their bids. In my de lirium I could faintly hear the bids, $25, S3O, $32, $33 and then by one dollar and fifty-cent increases the bid ding went on until I was sold to some one for $35. "I don't know who bought me. I soon became unconscious artd knew nothing until I was awakened per haps days later In the cottage where the detectives found me. There al though too 111 to even protest my new owner brought men and once I heard him say he must have his $55 back. All I could do was pray for death." . Family Terrorized In the meantime the family of the Rev. Charles Klein was subjected to terrorism. A few nights after Miss Klein was stolen "Jimmy Naples" called and is said to have threatened to have his mother and his friends "cut their hearts out" unless the Kleins ceased connecting his name with the disappearance of their daughter. He called again a week later and Is said to have exhibited a knife and a pistol and to have made such dire threats that after that Mr. Klein, his wife and their other daugh ter, Miss Anna Klein, a school teacher remained in their home afraid to venture even to the streets. Detectives Cassetti, Sommers. and Ryan, of the Third Branch Bureau, who have been working on the case ever since the girl disappeared, and who knew "Jimmy Naples" were In formed by the Bronx police, with whom they had been in touch, that a policeman patroling Fordham road had on two njghts heard the moans of a woman from a certain small cot tage which had been under suspicion because of the number of men seen to enter it. But on these two nights the place seemed deserted. Mor Dead Than Alive The three detectives hurried to the Fordliam* road cottage, and, receiving no response to their knocking, broke in the door. In a bare room they found Miss Klein more dead than alive. There was no furniture and the girl's bed was a matting of loose and unclean straw. The place was cold and if the tortures she had un dergone had not killed her soon the exposure would have done so. Miss Klein was sent to her home first and there received the attention of physicians. Then the police decided that as terrorism had been practiced upon the Klein family It would be best to seclude the girl to make cer- tain that no dreaded death threat from her erstwhile captors would terrify her. Therefore, she formally was committed by the Harlem Court to the custody of the Florence Crit tenden House as an invalid was sent to the City Hospital on Blackwell's Island. Detectives also were placed about her to make certain that even no threatening signal or sign would reach her. Then the three detectives resumed their search for "Jimmy Naples." They were watching the small fruit store his mother owns at One Hundred and Eighty-Seventh street and Beaumont avenue, the Bronx, last evening when he appeared and demanded money from his mother. Cassetti, Sommers and Ryan pounced upon him. He fought with the skill of the prize ring, knocking two detectives down and ran. While lying in the street Cassetti fired two shots at him, Ryan fired one. Sommers and his companions soon were pursuing Neapolltano firing as they ran. Suddenly the fugitive, as the detec tives came up, tried the pugilism again. It was then that the police .billies were drawn and when the de tectives were through Neapoll tano he was senseless and a call li'ad been sent for an ambulance surgeon to patch' up ,hls many cuts and bumps. After Neapolitano had been locked in a cell the detectives said his spirit collapsed and that he told them it was true he had met Miss Klein and had compelled her to get the jewels and money from her home, but that he refused to talk on the white slave charges. Other persons on the Neapolltano stamp are being sought by the police, particularly tliofie who participated in the bidding at the auction block and the one who pur chased the girl for $55 and took her to Ford ham Road. At the City Hospital it was said that Miss Klein's condition was critical and that it might not be possible to save her life. RRANDRETH U ,00 oZr PILLS, An Effective Ltxtdvi ■ Purely Vegetable § ■ i Constipation, g | 'lndigestion, Biliousness, ate. P I ©ORO Q•t Night y I unfU relieved Ohoool«t»-Co»tod or Plain Stock Transfer Ledger^ The Pennsylvania Stock Transfer Tax Law (act of June 4, 1915) which Is now In effect, requires all corporations In the State, no matter how large or how small they may be, to keep a Stock Transfer Ledger. We are prepared to supply these Ledgers promptly at a very nominal price. The Telegraph Printing Co. Printing—Binding—Designing Photo Kngraving HARItISBURG - . PA.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers