Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, June 02, 1916, Page 8, Image 8
8 MANY WONDERFUL VALUES §FOR TOMORROW 50 Suits, values up to $30.00; to- d»0 CQ morrow 50 Palm Beach Suits, A values up to QQ $10.98; to-morrow "O 500 Voile Waists in all colors, values up to QCp $1.50; to-morrow.... P&C XTRA! XT R A ! One hundred White Cotton Poplin Skirts, values up CQ to 51.50; to-morrow (limit, two to a buyer) FIRST FLOOR White and Fancy Dresses for Sample Night Gowns, Envelope W omen Chemises and Combinations at re s3.9B, $4.95, $5.85, $6.75 duced prices. and $10.75 silk coats. $9 90, $11.50 and Wonderful values. Tailored and $18.50. dress models developed of linen _ ~ _ . ,""""" ™~™" lingerie fabric, and net. They're " k f op,ln Coats ' va,u *» lip t0 beautiful. Second Floor. $,.88; to-morrow $3 gg Please note that our Store is the third door coming from Market street and the number Is SIX and is (lie First Ladies' Outergarment Store on Fourth street. Jumper priced srom^j BUT THIS IS HOW HE DID IT /NOW THAT I'M oar OF WORK.MR.POUTTCAL eoss, I VOL) OOGHT 10 GIVE ME A 30BAS RQAP IN^PECTOR^ > OUST THINK OF ALL W REARING I USED TO DO Hoy HE DID I'T, HONOR STUDENTS CARRY OFF PRIZES Awards Made at Academy Commencement; Tate, Long and Bent Get Double Honors Scholastic honors for students of the Harrlsburg Academy were announced at the commencement exercises yester day morning and book prizes were pre sented as follows The Ed. S. Herman prize book for the best examination in elementary al gebra and plane geometry, won by Vincent Reiff; Ed. S. Herman prize for b«et advanced algebra, solid geometry and trigonometry examination, won by Francis G. Hickman. The John Y. Boyd prizes for excel lence In English were awarded as fol lows Third form, Nelson Shrelner and Frank Stineman; Fourth form, Robert Stew-art and Joslah Dunkle; Fifth form. Paul Zimmerman and Percy Boughrey; Sixth form, Carroll Craig and Mercer B. Tate, Jr. The Marlin E. Olmsted prizes for excellence in I.tin were won as follows: Third form, Charles Gilmer and Wil bur Morse; Fourth form, Earle Bor tell and William B. McCaleb; Fifth form, Edwin Hobart and Gilbert Bail ey; Sixth form, George S. Jeffers and Dunbar A. Eberts. Mercer B. Tate, Jr., was awarded the J. P. Lawson short story prize and George A. Shrelner, Jr., received hon orable mention. James Fo:rtlercerau, of the second form and Thomas Wlck ershani of the first form were each awarded books for having the highest general average In their respective forms. Prizes for general excellence in the lower school were won by Frank Lud ington and Wayne Willis Long, and Wayne also won the spelling prize. John Peale Bent likewise car ried off two prizes, one for spelling and the other for general excellence. W. C. Dismukes won the prize for not being tardy throughout the year. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Rind You Have Always Bought FRIDAY EVENING, How William McKinley Won His Partnership McKinley rented an office in a build ing which is still standing, with an entrance a few yards from Market street. In the same building was the office of Judge George W. Belden, a Breckinridge Democrat and one of the | most prominent lawyers in Canton, i who as United Stages District Attor ney had prosecuted some 80 profes sors and students or Oberlin College and put them in jail for assisting the escape to Canada of a fugitive slave. I There was not much in this to com mend him to a man of McKinley's ideas, but Judge Belden's attention ! was attracted by the busy young law | >'er, whose Industry was due to the j zealous reading of law books rather than the preparation of cases. One | evening Belden walked into McKln. i ley's office and handed him some pa pers, saying that he was not feeling j well, and that he had a case that must be tried the next morning and wished McKinley to take it. The latter pro ! tested that he had never tried a case and could not prepare to do so on | such short notice. Belden insistec 1 i that he should take it, however, and j iinally remarked bluntly, as he laid | down the papers und left the room; "If | you don't try this case, it won't be ; tried." " McKinley sat up all night j preparing his argument and the next I day appeared in court and won the . case. While he was speaking, MrcKinley was astonished to discover Judge Bel den sitting under the balcony in the rear of the room. Several days aft erward the judge again walked into McKinley's office and this time smil ingly extended his hand with $25 in bills. The inexperienced attorney hesitated. "I can't take so much," said he; "what I did wasn't worth it, and besides, I only took the case be cause you Insisted." After some fur ther parley, during which the judge, with the money in his hand, was fol lowing the young lawyer around the room, Belden remarked, with a quiet chuckle, "It's all right, Mac, I got a hundred." "Now, the fact of the matter ig," he continued, "Frease has Just been elected to the bench and I'm looking for another partner." The flattering offer was promptly accepted, and from that moment McKinley made r eady progress at the bar —From "The i Ufe of William McKinley" by Charles S. Olcott. Bears the /f UNPAID PROPERTY TAX SALES AUG. 7 County Treasurer Mumma Will Place 1913-14 Delinquents Under Hammer 7. has been fixed by County Treasurer jg? Mark Mumma for courthouse steps of iVflk city and county for i|U delinquent taxes for IB 1913 and 1914 un- SO-- der the law which permits him to place unseated lands under the ham mer for unpaid taxes. Twenty-seven of the properties are in the city, including one In the Third, I twenty-two In the Seventh, two in the i Twelfth and Thirteenth wards. The j other 318 are scattered through the I county as follows: ! Six each in Berrysburg, Derry and I Jackson townships, eight in East Han ; overt five in Londonderry; three each in Halifax, Rush and Williams town i ships and Highspire; one each in Ly- I kens, Penbrook and Wayne townships, | two in Washington, sixteen each In | Lower Swatara and Lykens townships, ! fifteen in Middletown, thirteen in Mif flin; twenty-two in Upper Paxton; j nine in Wiconisco, eighty-three in j Lower Paxton, thirty-one in Middle j Paxton, sixty-one in Susquehanna and I four in Reed. Install Safety Gates. Collapsible Wrought iron safety gates have been Installed at the front elevator of the courthouse. The gates are a. part of the renovations which have just been finished by the county commissioners. Special Audit Soon Ready. Attor ney W. B. Boyd, special auditor ap pointed by the Dauphin county court to examine all accounts of the pro thonotary, recorder and sheriff will submit his report on or before next Monday to the court for approval. The audit is made each year. SeU Real Estate. Sale of the fol lowing properties will be conducted at 10 o'clock Saturday morning, June 17, by District Attorney Michael E. Stroup executor for the estate of Leah M. Donner, Pear and Sixth street, 430 Herr, and a 118-acre farm in Jackson township. Ready to Build Bridge. Plans are being completed by the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad company for the construction of the proposed new bridge across the company's tracks at the poorhouse lane. Necessary per t mission from all the authorities inter, ested has been obtained. The bridge will be built in connection with the proposed 4-track way improvement on that section. News Items of Interest in Central Pennsylvania Special to th* Teiigiafk Mahanoy City. Caught under fall ing timber at St. Nicholas Colliery, Charles Cort, 18, sustained a broken back. He is in the hospital. Cort was only at work an hour, and it was his first day in the mines. Mauch Chunk. Frank Krebs, a stonemason in the employ of the New Jersey Central railroad, saved the life of an Austrian who was swimming in the Lehigh canal. Mauch Chunk S. E. Miller] of this place, has been appointed district real estate agent for the Lehigh Coal and Navigation company and subsidiaries, with oißce at Mauch Chunk. He suc ceeds John C. Losier, who resigned. liazlctou. Dudley Malone, collec tor of the port of New York, will be the speaker at a preparedness mass meeting, to be held at Hazleton by the local branch of the National Security- League. Mahanoy City. The new $10,500 Greek Catholic Church at Frackville was dedicated yesterday with impres sive ceremony and a big parade. Mahanoy City. The drivers' strike which has tied up Primrose Mine for weeks has been settled. The drivers will receive an extra hour's pay for taking mules to and from the stables. Allentowii.—At bankruptcy sale the Alburtis Silk Ribbon Mills, capitalized at $50,000, were sold to Attorney Cal vin E. Arner, of Allentown, for $21,- 000. Allentown. Wedged for hours in a hay chute, which had to be destroyed to release him, Daniel Klingman, of AUentown, has become a raving: man iac from his terrible experience, lie has been removed to the Rittersville hospital. Ate Corn, Felt Like Horse, Had the Blind Staggers Chicago.—"l feel like a horse, I guess," said Michael Dezich, when they brought him before Judge Flan agan in the South Chicago police court, whereupon he gave an imita tion of one of the genus equs having the blind staggers. Michael had been living on shelled corn for nine days and was so weak he could hardly stand. Michael hails from Steubenvllle, 0., where he works for the Carnegie Steel Company, lie drank some corn whis ky, was locked in a grain car. and was found when the car arrived here. MARK TWAIN'S I'APER SUSPENDS By .Associated Press Virginia City, Nev.; June 2. The Territorial Enterprise, the first news paper to be published in Nevada and at one time the leading newspaper on the Pacific coast, has suspended publi cation and merged with the Virginia City Chronicle, It was announced to day. The Enterprise was started in Genoa in 1858, was moved to Carson City in 1859 and to Virginia City in 1860. Several famous writers had their first newspaper experience on the Enterprise, among them being Mark Twain. WEDDING AT PIKETOWN Special to the Telegraph Piketown, Pa., June 2.—On Monday evening at 5.30 o'clock at the Church of God parsonage Conrad E. Velter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Velter, of this place, and Miss Anna M. Eshle man, daughter of Mrs. De Graw, of Manada Gap, were married by the Rev. Jonas Martin. Both young people are well known and quite prominent among the younger oct here. DENOUNCES BHACKLETON TRIP By Associated Press London, June 2.—A1l the mornlnK papers publish the sto>y of Sir Ernest Shackleton's antarctic expedition in full with the exception of the Morn ing Post. The Post devotes two para graphs to an account of the expedi tion and In an adicortal denounces the undertaking as iU-advlsed in war time. HARRIS BURG TELEGRAPH Ladies' BOOK'S j£> SHOES ~ a | Ivery. Champasne, Grays. White Novelty Boots Colonial Pumps * > | ;\ "''^lp chic style* In all leath- Ojj £■ OXFORDS, SANDALS, SBOES IS!".^.^.. ' * white canvas shoes on sale Sat in I IIH .. _ urday at f1.50 a pair. All sizes. Laceßoats $? Bra „.« "!L,„„ UlvJ# 3 J Girls' Sport Shoes with rubber s °l es and heels. White canvas tops with the high heV \utton° <M f|C * wonderful . W of pretty *prln* and .n.mer .tries st tw. Tery R u % d b|r "S Teelif^AU models All sizes li I *IT prices. Ckirmia K pump* and shoes, clever oxfords and sandals, sizes. Special. 12 50 values J/ | bwO ncvT Colonials, rmhraclnK tkr new Metropolitan styles and novelties. Made CA ■ In popular leathers, fabric* and combinations. All alsea. JpAs*}" Misses & Children's BOY'S DRESS SHOESI MEN S \ SHOES, PUMPS & SANDALS »-<« • Saturday—offer- J 110 r ing boys' 12.50 dress shoes at d OIHILO m/ and go o d wearing ?1,®5 a pair. Good solid makes R "Gil a Still m * % f TT^ e, . vet ' , W S U ,? in patent and dull. Button or IWI \ ,M I 'VI I A*r MB canvas, patent and dull M SJI AlirnnitA ft VI . yf\ I | "vlyi leather. All sizes to 2. blucher. Sizes to SH. Special. M yftl • UX| IIKiIN ■ V?_, / jRVf# f® $1.95 jjr \ SHOES & PUMPS Boys' Sturdy Calfskin Shoes I * B c h e or ln En * n J I Durable, stronK calfskin tops Rnd solid tizes. 11 111 l 11l mi i I 1 Jsne arid uvo* ,oleß ' 3izeß to 11 50 value «- '' alue »- , " B ' L ' " L / C 7 J strap sandals. Good- 4kl OO *H| wearing white canvas. _______ All sizes to 1. $1.50 77YV ValUeS at Boys' Scouting Shoes ToJgh'tan" an* b""® veal- CI QC / I Fj/. Tan or black elkskin. Sizes to 13%. Reg- skin. Double full soles. All J) I.Du >X f KBr-* Cm 1/A ular $1 values. Special at sizes. $3.00 values. t BARGAIN SPECIALS BARGAIN SPECIALS CHILD'S SCI'FFEH OXFORDS Bjg IS)(jR 1 . jfi) TENNIS OXFORDS Tail leuther. models. A reg- Baf Black and white canvas with rub ular $1.50 value at BSe H {■§) n _ . . TTTL— ~ JaH =5®J ber soles, for men. women and chH- "feafher °good A T,lvy uSUF REAL SHOE MAKERS lk»J "" '" ' 'i ADIES' PIMPS Strong tan leather—good hea\ y Five hundred pairs of pumps and soles. Sizes to 2. 75c values 40c strap sandals on bargain table. $3.00 CHILD S DONGOLA SHOES Of 7 RJSV* F U Q*f OPP#SitO ""MKSV'CASVAS SHOES si °° Button models. Sizes to oV4. A regu- M M Iff Uf ft C? L WLm Pfllirt Hmicb Good quality canvas with black and ■ lar 75c grade, special 6»c " *w m -m~mm mm w UHUfI nOUSB unstraps. Sizes 6to 10. Special 08c HURRAH, KIDDIES! THE CIRCUS IS COMING SOON —————— . Jw - » . ,*t ;', • • BIG BINGO" LARGEST OF THE 41 ELEPHAXTS TRAVELED WITH RIXGLIXG BROTHERS All aboard for Spangleland! Ringling Brother*' wonderful circus trains are loaded with more juvenile joys than ever before. There are monkeys by the cage full, ponies by the scoi*. does by the dozens, clowns by the carload and peanuts by the peck. Led by Big Bingo, are whole herds of elephants with heads full of knowledge and trunks full of tricks, and more strange animals than one sees in th*> picture books. There are four bands of knowing Shetlands, captained by Glngei\ Rober\ Bunting and Ben, the most famous of all ponies. There are little black hears that have learned to skate, run races on bicycles and travel across great stages on gaily painted globes. There are monkeys that ride the spotted ponies or tease the funny old bears. Some of them such as Jocko, Jitney or Toodles are expert acrobats and turn somersaults backward or for ward, from the backs of galloping Shetlands. One of them has learned to skip the rope, .find the dogs! The}' Message on Egg Costs Merchant $5.78 Postage Bellefontalne, Ohio.—"l will be up Saturday," written on one egg In a crate of eight dozen, caused the Ur bana merchant to pay $5.78 for postage stamps. The eggs were sent him by a Sard Is huckster by parcel post. The pack age was opened in the Wheeling post offlce for Inspection and the message on the egg was found. The package was weighed and was charged for at first class postage rates. RECOVERING FROM OPERATION Annvllle, Pa., June 2. Mrs. Gid eon Kreider, Jr., who recently had a serious operation performed is now able to be around. She was operated on at the Good Samaritan Hospital at Lebanon. where she had been con fined until a few days ago. UNUSUALLY COM) IN RUSSIA Petrograd, June 2. Phenomenal cold for this time of the year, prevails throughout Russia. The streets cars at Kazan have been stopped by snow. The temperature at Nizhni-Novgorod is at the freezing point. walk on their front legs and they prance on their hind legs. They leap over horses and hurdles, do double somersaults and describe figure eights through the legs of the ponies and the baby elephants. Twenty stlken-coated setterspose like statues with snowy white horses, and there are marvelous collies that are as much at home riding bareback as are the pretty ladies who jump through the hoops In the three big rings. These, of course, are hut a few of the hundreds of wondrous things that will come with the circus. Biggest of the many great features is the fairyland spectacle. "Cinderella." More than 1,000 persons take part In It. Tnere are carloads of magnificent scen ery and gorgeous costumes. No one can afford to miss seeing the enchanting "Dance of the Fairies." The great me nageries, "Cinderella" and more than two hours of marvelous circus acts are all to be seen here on Wednesday, June 14.—Advertisement. Motor Club-Members Will Meet at Carlisle Tonight Chicken-and waffles at the Mansion House and a meeting of the Board o'f Governors at the courthouse In Car lisle this evening, will feature the regular monthly meeting of the Board of Governors of the Motor Club of Harrlaburg. Secretary Myton express es the belief that this will prove to be the largest In attendance of any Board of Governors meeting. The cars will leave the motor dub headquarters at 6 o'clock. Supper will be served at the Mansion House at 7, and after sup per the melting will be held in the courthouse, because the hotel has no room large enough to accommodate the crowd that is expected. All mem bers of the motor cluh are Invited and all motor car owners' In the Cumber land Valley district who are not mem bers are also Invited to be present. Many of the members will be accom panied by their wives, as It a delight ful run to Carlisle and return during the evening house. JUNE 2, 1916. Fear That Even Wildcats Are Afflicted With Rabies Redding. Cal. Southern Modlc | and northwestern Lassen counties were further alarmed recently by re ports of rabid animals running at HI uiu village of Adin, in Mo doc county, Dale Davis, 3-year-old son of James Davis, wus attacked uy <«. i wildcat while playing in the dooryard aiiu • iiion ui iii«, face una i>ouy. The boy's screams attracted his father iroiii tne house and the cat tied. Eater It was killed. A physician recommended that tho child be taken at once to the State laboratory in Berkeley for the Pas teur treatment. "DON'T USE FACE CREAMS," SAYS BEAUT V DOCTOR, "IF YOU WANT 10 BE GOOD.LOOKING" English Beauty Specialist (lives Some (iood Ailrice To American Women Many women seen} to think that the use ot an ordinary face cream is an aid to good-looks and beauty, said a noted English Ueauty Specialist, when, as a matter ot tact, a greivt majority ot the grease creams sold now-a-uays con tain animal tats which are positively injurious. Greaseless creams are equal ly bad tor they are made generally trom Stearic acid which dries, chaps and wrinkles the skin. Creams of this kind drive the blood away from the surface of the skin, giving It a pale sallow look and often clogs the pores, producing pimples and blackheads. Every woman realizes these days that beauty is her greatest asset and it is her duty to enhance her beauty by every means at her command, however, common sense must be her guide. Mo woman would think of eating stearic acid or common lard to nourish her body, yet thousands of women apply them to their laces daily. They Know their skin requires nourishment of some kind, but few peo ple know what to use. If you have facial blemishes of any kind, are pale or sallow, freckled or wrinkled, or If your skin has a tendency to be dry and llabby, you owe It to yourself to make the following test which will require no special skill or expensive toilet re qulslties. Take your hand mirror to the window and examine your face closely, noticing carefully the size of your pores, the depth of your wrinkles and your natural tendency to freckle or facial blemishes. Next, apply a gener ous amount of Am-o-nized Cocoa over the entire face and neck, leave on for live or ten minutes and then remove by wiping with a soft dry cloth. A de lightful surprise will await you. X have seen hundreds of women with dry. sai low. wrinkled and llabby skin and those with enlarged pores and freckled, pale faces entirely remove these blemishes and more than double the beauty of their complexions, simply by using a i : \ Stock Transfer Ledger The Pennsylvania Stock Transfer Ta* Law (Act of Tan* j 4, 1916) which la BOW In effect requires all corporations In the State, no mattar how larva they may be to keep a Stock Transfer Ledger. We are prepared to supply thee* Ledgers promptly at a vary nominal price. a& ati - i The Telegraph Printing Co Printing—Binding—Designing—Photo Kngravtng HAHRISBUHG, PA. < Burned Himself on Pyre as a Sacrifice to Lord Denver.—Abraham's attempted sac-' rifice of his son Isaac is believed to' have caused Thomas Sawyer to burn himself to death near here. The body was discovered near Castle Rock. It I was resting on a pile of stones and | charred wood. Nearby was found Saw i yer's Bible. Opening the charred Bible, Mrs. Sawyer lound heavily marked with a pencil the verses in the twenty-second chapter of Genesis describing Abra ham's attempted sacrifice. Relatives believe Sawyer built a pile of wood and stones and offered him self as a sacrifice to the Lord. I little Am-o-nized Cocoa once or twice daily ns 1 have explained above, and this, alter they had in some cases been treated by expensive Beauty Special | ists without obtaining any bonent. in : many instances women can make them j selves look from 10 to -0 years younger, j Many a woman has obtained high social | position or secured advancement in Business ahead of her unfortunate ! rival who did not understand the power of beauty. | Again, the woman who neglects her ] self must continually tight an unequal I battle with her younger and better looking sister. I Beauty may be only skin deep, but the woman who has improved her com plexion and kept her lace soft, white and free from wrinkles by the use of Am-o-nized Cocoa has an attractive skin that suggests a refinement which places her In a higher rlass than that occupied by the careless woman who has been indifferent to the development of her personal charms. Beauty is Wo man's birth-right and nature's greatest gift to enhance this charm is Am-o- I nized Cocoa Cream. ! Note:—Ani-o-nlzed Cocoa recommend ed above by Winifred Grace Forrest, the noted English Beauty Specialist, is one of the newer forms of cocoa cream. Unlike the older products it is pleasant to use, has a soft, fragrant odor and is used almost exclusively for massage and facial treatment in the English Beauty Parlors. Other forms of cocoa cream are invariably Inferior and often harmful, therofore you should insist on having only Am-o-nized Cocoa cream. Don't take a "Cocoa this" or "Cocoa that" unless is is Am-o-nlxe<l ( neon. American women who are treated by Beauty Specialists should insist that no other emollient be used on their face for massage. Superlluous hair and ruined complexions too often result from the use of cheap massage croams. Am-o nized Cocoa can always be obtained from any first class Druggist and Is so easy to apply that the average woman has no need for the services of a Beauty Sneclalist. —Advertisement.