10 | Always j I» To serve, hot or cold: delicious for the lunch box; | moderate in price. |i Kmgan's Minced Luncheon \ Be sure you get KINGAN'S I KING AN ! j PROVISION CO. / ;i y,v\ ] | Harrisburg, Pa. t ~ *-*■ <-• i ( v ; ' I r* n 1 | ! | ' - • r- I \ <*, p J < , I ' " J I i JLi Cx L&S Hide Tlicni W illi a Voil: Homove Thorn Willi ilu» Othino Prcsitlirtliin This prescription for the removal of freckles was written by u prominent physician and is usually so successful in removing freckles ami giving a clear, beautiful complexion that it is sold by any druggist under guarantee to refund l lie money if it 'ails. Don't hide your freckles under a veil: get an ounce of othitie and re move tliem. Ev en the first feiv appli cations sin. ild show a wonderful im provement. some of the lighter freck les vanishing entirely. Be sure to ask the druggist for iho double strength othino; it is this that is sold on the money-back guarantee. - Advertisement. THAT OOOD OI.I) CllU't'S HAND In the May American Magazine is a story by Ti nry Wallace Phillips in which he says: "You take a circus band: tliey don't go piking along one, two, three every man with his little note, right there, like a gol-darned steam engine. Xo. sir! The ciicus Nana Is there to make a joyful noise and it does it. If one feller happens to be a trifle late or early with his con tribution, nobody looks scornful at him. He's a good feller, just the same so long as his wind hold out." s r ..is ■ "UMinmmgnjitt :• a iiMiwiißwiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiaiiii'iiiH: MnmiiniMiiiiiniiiiMiiiiii | I H JP H i | easily stops skin-troubles Doctors have prescribed Resir»'l Resin, L ointmert und RMU h for over twent) years in the treat- I ' 1." <.ui ;i'.i t ment of eczema and similar itching, L " "' l *"*' ,m «s »• j I burning, unsightly skin diseases. , | i- They use it regularly because they know that it usually gives instant relief and soon clears away the erup tion. They ktv w, too, tit at it con- I J —■ — tains IK -thing harmful .--r irritating I j to the nv st delicate skin. See if I J 01^ f Resinol does not !*■««»»-- 1 , ggß^lki i step your skin Af'^ t idif^ Z / . ' rIP i : :i::; ' 1 :'■■■■ T 1 , ' . a ■ ► Which I ► You've wondered—asked yourself —where this or that A j ► could be had at a fair pri.-e?—where a 1«»t or house could he A. ► picked up?—where there was work in your line? ► i i ► Your answers are in TELEGRAPH WANT ADS. < You asked the questions—now read the answers! < | FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH APRIL 21. 1016 Insane Landsinimer Kills Nine, fiiounds Many fly Associated Press London, April 21.- Nine* persons wen killed and many wounded in a street in the outskirts of Vienna by ; Leopold Flehtner, a landsfurin infan- ' tryman who bccumt insane while in , charge <d" a police post, says tin Am- ; stei'dam dispatch. Ficlitner lirst be- ' gall firing at those in the house with , him. lie then opened the window and . fired upon the crowd in the streets. i The Vienna firemen, called in un • f- ; fort to subdue the madman, played the ■ liose oil him while he tired sixty more , shots at them before dropping his i weapon. how sii\iii:spi:\K! - . wokkko It is impossible that, within a con- < tury, scholarship will cut away one- • half the mere physical test from ; Shakespeare's literary . wnersMp. Yet i it will bo cutting awav only the tiery i clouds, the Coronal streamers, the ' darker vapors from the sun itself, the photosphere of literature. Shake speare diil not construct a drama if lie could tltid one to renovate; he did:, not make a plot it he could obtain one : in a novel, a poem or an obscure, or | even a popular play. As a literary , man, he set an d to appreciate only his j poems; but of them he spoke with < the confuh net that Shakesp :.ie could • feet. 11l those poems it was fearlessly foretold and repeated that they should \ be immortal.- "William Shak speare." John Metiovern in National Magazine for April. KISSES NEGRESS TO WIN "BIG" BET; ! YOUTH OUT $3.50 Girl Was First lc> Approach Alter Wager; Has Young Man Arrested Special tr the Telegraph Pittsburgh, Pa., April 21. Ray mond Watklns, 20 years old, of Home vilb and his companions were stand ing on a stive; corner In Munhall Terrace last night chatting and jok ing whin one of Watklns' friends Viet liim J1 he did not dare to kiss the tirst girl that came along. Watklns put up the money and soon got his i hance to win a dollar. Kstella Stanton, a negress, IS years old. living in Munhall Terrace, walk ed along an instant later and«Watkitis seized his opportunity, accosted the young woman and kissed her on the cheek. Watklns then turned to his companions and collected the dollar. A few hours later he was taken into custody on a charge of disorderly conduct, preferred by the girl. Wat- Kins paid the costs. $4.~>0 and was freed. Thus he lost s:t.r>o. DIXIE GOES AHEAD By Frederic J. Haskin [Continued I'rom Kililorial Page] \eml.,r, often bringing their families' with them and staying flic whole sea-' son. Some of the clubs have thirty or forty members, and a force of game keepers. The initiation fee is usually five tn utyi thousand dollars, and the annual dues run from seven hundred to a thousand. There are many small er clubs, and some large tracts of hind are kept by individuals as hunting grounds. This eonvi rsion i>f plantations into shooting pr> serves h-.s many advant ages. It I • lis up and improves these ht.-lorh-al homes, brings no inconsider able amount of money to the South, and bun -s the game. Kor all of the clubs have the most strict of game laws and rigorously suppress pouch ing. Perhaps the most famous of the old estates which are thus being reclaim ed are these of the ci --stal islands, ! where once the planters of the famous I Si a isiaii"i cotton lived In baronial style. All that was best in the old Southern regime was to be found in the picturesque life of the island plan tations. Hero mm .v a peculiar cotton of very long staple which brought two dollars a pound in those days, hi ore machinery increased the use fulness < l the shorter staples. The ■ were slaw s. Wealth was abundant and easily won. Hunting and social life were the diversions of the plant ers, who traveled from island to island in great canoes, manned by eight or Ten stalwart negro oarsmen These crews attained great skill and there were frequent regattas at which the canoes from the different planta tions raced for prizes. At night the planters often .iourneved across the bay to fhnrleston, their long boats ■ l-'eil wit h lanterns and their negro boot ment singing as they rowed. ror many years now, the greater part of the sea islands have been a ' 'Cgbal waste. Some few planters still live there and come to town in prosaic niotorboats. but for the most Part the deer and the wild fowl share tlo :n with herds of wild cattle and goats, that are hunted with the rilje. On Hull Island one of these wild herds was long led by a bull thnt was afraid of nothing. When the i ;ard was converted into a shoot ii preserve, a party of hunters were i char.', d by this bovine lord of the "'I even one of them forced to take to 1 lie trees. The bull was then killed by a man who had m m a'-'ed to take bis gun up the tree with him. The head of this fan olts animal ma\ still he -een at Charleston. The favorite game of II the Caro lina hunters ire the deer that abound aM ovAr the coastal plain. The swamps and the deep pine forests • edd d will- broom sedge and under grown with fra riant thickets of myrtle and Uvea!:, make an ideal ovet f. r the deer, and three hundred years of settlement finds them still abundant. They are hunted with bounds nil shot ' "om stands along the v !l-known runways. Christmas and Thanl;s;iving hunts on the plan tations ir> in special favor, and upon these occasion great packs of bunds are grth' red. and large parties incllld ine many women, ride after them. There have been many famous stags in the woods about Charleston. that success u'ly eluded the hunters for years though th-v w re often seen and well knm\n. The Bern Bow buck which was killed last Kali, was known to every hunter in nd about Charles ton, by bis splendid antlers and his h, -d and eunninr tactic wji'-n hunt* ed. lie would alwavs leave the swamps and run straight across the open plantation fields, m f„u View but oit of range of everv cover At • •ne time he almost ran o\. r a darkev gathering sweet potatoes, and is said ' < have frb.htened the man so badly that he became a deacon in the church. IMs. nd \ a Ignominious In one of Ills bold rims he blundered upon a hoc hunting birds with a shot?un ' who killed him One of the most picturesque plan tations In t lie vicinity of Charleston is owned as a coufitrv club bv a cor nonvtion of Charleston folk. \ num ber of others are still h«ld bv t 1,0 fam ilies that lived upon them for gener ations. and are used as country seats In many Instances the vouneer gener ations have bought bock die storied homesteads that the older lost. TEACH von; ( iin.nitrv TO s\\ i- A writer in th- Mav Woman's Home i ompanion snvs: "Parents can put Into the hands of children simple, tables showing the growing power of savings which ai*> kept Invested. It isn t hard to demonstrate, for In-I stance, that bv saving a dollar a year! and k i ning it and its accumulated in terest at the' rate of five per cent in vested thr saver will have: 513.?1 in ten years: SSS.'w; in fifteen years; J"4.T2 in twenty vears. "So on. until the total of the sav ing of a dollar n year and the invest-! ment and reim stmrnt of interest on •he savings, will rise, at the end of fbrty years, to *l2R.B4—more than three titnes the amount actually put aside." KTIAKESPFARTAV STXS To th> May Woman's ITome Com- . nanion WalW Prlchard Katon says: I "'Oh, SbaJ.cspeare, Shakespeare, how' many follies are committed In thy name" 'Sarah Bernhardt has played Hamlet, somebody has counted the verbs the poet used, students are made •o read the dramas before they see •>m acted, and Tiero am T. with no! kjtowle,d;<. of gardening, trying TO convert an acre of burdocks Into Titnnia's bower!''' He might have added the following to his P 1 of offenses: Annotating <>dt tions with obvious comments, naming « i"os and liquors after Shakespearean characters, putting them In the movies ■ and callint; "mashers" "Xlomcos." THE NEW STORE sr ROUSE HHHABH I F*\ ILLUSTRATING 1 I \IS " WESC SODEL EEN Easter H W | The New TTTiyr O'T'DATTCT? J?* PA P I Store of W 111. 51KU U OJC/ OC W. [j f| rPGierii iijfattag ■ M SiHjipy All That's New and Smart in Practical \i _ Easter j-Footwear is Shown Here; and Popularly y Footwear! Priced so that the Values Are Unsurpassed | m Men's English Bals Wcmeil'S Women's English Children's Patent Colt ff/ k/«| I mf Walking Pumps Button Shoes | quality at p.. jjHy 15131 K<Q Patent colt or gun motal; Scuffer ' aßt: &® n d sowed; !| rubber sole and heel; Jf»3 qual- Up to size 8 ,|Q jw $1.98 ! ~yM 198 L Women ' s 9 inch Lace r Fl) ' Women's Women's Paris Point Women's English j*/ ™2 Boots \ : «J ,. v J Pumps • Boots" jf / r&Ka) ! \ ii w!3ZOy Rid Patent colt or dull kid; turn f (s»'• , 1 »i soles, leather Spanish heels; _ 5" i I, n °f white canvas, 1 fe? iSaVnCV $3 style, $4 quality, at Black gun 1; .. J / li ■ r fl covered Louis heels / \ ®1 QQ H | EH .p style to but- cloth tops or I ?■' >W& \NJ\ * "'"? ia * a a Hand sewed, leather Louis ISr /$ |y igjS ' Women's Colonial Women's Patent Colt Patent Colt Peggy Women's Custom f ft. liiw i Pumps Gaby Pumps Colonials Boots ' Neat small button orna- ' ijraCy Cv Turn soles, ments, closely trimmed soles, _ Black or cut steel buckles, |\ jC\ leather Spanish leather Cuban heels, Goodyear welts; $3.50 quality, Of dull mat kid, 9-inch, -~J /L M\ h T''TJ? HQ hand sewed; $5 7 [£ ©fa© •< «n.\ colt or dull kid; (fM nO OJL.VO \1 : / \ ; ;y \ *3 JjJ) 1.98 $ 1 S Women's Bronze Kid Women's Patent Colt High-Cut Glazed Kid Bovs' Tan Calf Eno-- r/> ] Lace Shoes 4 -Bar Fancy Sandals Lace Shoes B , * fiC doth tops- 3350 nuali'tv ÜBht Cuban Louis leather heel; Hand sewed; leather Louis tk#/ same style in 8-bar, mf'.t, dU " kid; Blind e y° lets - Sa]ne »*P/ A r'\\ -V oft auc-ity, btack, far fj 198
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers