8 OF INTEREST T |( "THEIR MARRIED LIFE" 1 CctrrlcM br lattrMtloial Rm» In llfi J Helen had arranged a ptxrty of •leven little girls for Winifred and the afternoon of the affair waa clear and bright. Winifred waa as nearly craay with excitement as any little girl could be. All Spring she had begged for a party. "What kind of a party, dearT" Helen had asked. "Oh, a regular party, any kind," Winifred had responded seriously, "where we have ice cream and cake." And she had jumped up and down In her eagerness. "Warren," Helen had said finally, "I really think that we ought to give Winifred a party. She has kept ask ing me for a party for ever so long and there are several nice children we might ask." Winifred's list of small friends had embraced all of eleven little girls. Some of the children Helen did not know. They were from the private kindergarten that Winifred had at tended all Winter. Little Joan Rich ards was Invited. She and Winifred had always been devoted playmates, although Joan was some years older. "I do hope everything will go off all right," Helen said to Louise, who had been helping to get the apart ment In readiness all morning. "Of course it will," Louise assured her. "Now, Helen, why don't you lie down for a few minutes? You'll have yourself worked up into one of your nervous headaches if you're not careful." "Of course I won't lie down," Helen had responded indignantly. "Why, I haven't done as much as you have and there are hundreds of things to attend to. These children's affairs are Just as elaborate as any other kind of party, and I never rea lized It." "Of course, they are; I have told you that. Really, Helen, in spite of the fact that you are a mother you don't seem to have any Idea at all about children." Louise said this half playfully and Helen smiled a little wearily. She did feel tired and half, wished that It was all over. Not Very Well Helen had not felt particularly well of late. The sultriness of the few hot days had tired her out, and Ned Burns still kept coming to the house, much to her annoyance. His aations since that one time had been entirely circumspect and she could hardly forbid him to come and see them when he acted as herself. Yet his presence In the apartment vaguely annoyed her. Winifred had conceived a great fancy for him and he brought her candy and called her his little sweet heart until it got on Helen's nerves. She hardly understood Ned Burns at times. His attitude toward her was entirely friendly. She believed that he was genuinely attached to Winifred, although she was careful not to allow the child to bore him. Warren, too, seemed to like Ned, and always welcomed him when he came for dinner. Af terward Helen would often be dragged into a game of poker or dummy bridge, and Ned was pleas antly agreeable to everyone. He was Just the kind of a man to attract other men and It was no wonder that Warren liked him. Helen thought to herself, laugh ingly, that if there had been an at tachment of any kind between Ned and herself that Ned was certainly capable of pulling the wool over any one's eyes. There were hundreds of little things to attend to. Sandwiches to be cut, the table to arrange. It had taken all morning to get the room In order with fresh flowers all about, and the afternoon's games to be ar ranged. Winifred gave many valu able suggestions herself, as the games they played at school were very popu lar and she described minutely how they were done. Winifred had a new frock, a lovely t Y°p ,RE taking no chances jars in generously—it's as pure as the food you eat and as cleanly handled. 4 ■ _ Absolutely No Pain Mr latest Improved appU- " <*- ances. locludlas an oiryjfn- Vl»ed air apparatus, makea v J *1 extracting aad all deatal \V k work positively palmleav Ai «ad la perfectly barm leaa. EXAMINATION rn " 0 4L teeth .. . *5.00 FREE ««»■» Fllllau la sliver boo Registered A Gold orowaa aad Graduate a * bridge work S3, M. 95 Aaalataata T Of Ilea open dally 8180 A 1 V to fl p. in. 1 Hon, Wed. Bad Sat., till I p. m. | Sua days. 10 a. a. to 1 p. m. T BELL PHONE a32a-R. if • EASY TERMS OF PAYMENT'S j Market St. p Harrlaburg, Ra. u knrt . TUESDAY EVENING, little mull affair smocked at the top and quite short. It was a delight to dress Winifred, and Helen often felt for mothers who had to fuss with unruly hair and bony little legs. Winifred was so beautifully formed and her hair curled dlatractingly about her temples. When she was young they had thought that she would be dark like Warren, but her I hair was a dark molasses color now, with surprising reddish tints In It, and it was Helen's constant fear that the child might lose the fascinating color of it before she grew old enough to appreciate it. The party was a great success. The children brought small gifts, though Helen had carefully explained that jit was not a birthday party. The 1 table looked attractive and the ice cream in the form of cats and dogs 1 and chickens was hailed with delight. Each child received a favor of some \ kind, and there were two games in which prizes figured. Helen, who had never given a child's party and but faintly recol lected having attended any herself, was told by her own small daughter that the games with prizes were the most popular of all. Helen and Louise worked with a vengeance, and with Mary's help served the twelve children and en tered into their games with wild en thusiasm. Louise was enjoying it to her heart's content, and Helen's hair had pulled loose about her face and her cheeks were faintly flushed with the excitement of playing "Going to Jerusalem," when Ned Burns ar rived. Ned Burns Arrives "Is the party all over?" he said i gaily, coming into the gay crowd and waving a bouquet of flowers over his head. He had several mysterious packages under his arm, and the chil dren swarmed around him. Winifred liked the flowers, but was not enthusiastic. "Suppose you give them to your mother, then," Ned had suggested, and Winifred, obeying, had brought them to Helen and laid them in her lap. They were not flowers that one might select for a child —long stem med red roses—and Helen raised her eyes to meet a sudden strange fleet ing expression in Ned's face before he turned it away. It made her vaguely uncomfortable. • "And I have some more presents," he said, beginning to unwrap another | small bundle. j "This is a present for my little l wife-to-be." Winifred laughed glee i fully. Ned always said that he was | going to wait for her, and 6he enjoyed it hugely. In the little package were i two little boxes with two little rings —a tiny little chip diamond and a i very tiny ring of plain gold. "To seal our bargain," Ned said gravely, with mock homage, slipping the two rings on Winifred's small I finger. "Now, you see, you can't get away from me." "Ned, you idiot,' 1 Louise said re • monstratingly, "you're too extrava gant; you'll turn the child's head." "And here's another present," Xed went on, unwrapping two gorgeously colored pencils. Winifred seized them with a whoop of delight, and | the party went on, with the fun wax- I ing fast and furious. | Afterward, when Winifred proudly I displayed her rings to her father, she 1 said confidingly: "And he gave me two pencils, and don't you tell, but f I like them best." Warren turned to Helen laugh ; ingly. The day might come when ; Winifred would not be so easily pleased. ni RVED BY ACID Special to the Telegraph Halifax. Pa.. July 25. James B. Neitz, superintendent of the Halifax Rubber Company, was painfully burned , on the right foot yesterday, when he j spilled a bottle of acid. JAUNTY POCKETS FOR THIS SKIRT Excellent Model For Sports or All Around Wear With a Suit By MAY MANTON 9"6 i (With BastinrLins and Added Sec.m A Uerwr.me) Thrqe-Piece Skirt, 34 to 34 waist. This 5s one of the latest variations o! the three-piece skirt and one that is sun to be liked. It is very simple and easy t« make, it gives the smartest lines it ii available for sports and for morning weai and also for tne coat suit and for uses oi such sort. There is a belt finished with lapped ends that is joined to the skirt when it is finished at the natural waist liny. When It is lifted above the line, it is arranged over belting. A choice is allowed of Inserted pocket a with laps and patch pockets. Whether the design is utilized for wool jersey of the earnest goll player or of the silk jersey of the dilet tante or for the light weight serge that is so excellent for tie coat-suit or for the linen and cotton materials of general morning wear, it is sure to give satis faction. For the medium size will be needed, 4 1 /& yards of material 36 inches wide or 3 H yards 44, yards 54; width at lower edge is 3 yards and 12 inches. The pattern No. 9061 is cut In sizes from 24 to 34 inches waist measure. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper, o» receipt of ten cents. Urge Revision of Laws Pertaining to Bankruptcy Special to the Telegraph Atlantic City, July 25. —Between 800 and 3 000 lawyers, who specialize in commercial practice, nearly one-fourth of the membership of the Commercial Law League of America, are here for one ot the important conventions of the year. The western delegates ar rived in style in a special train of seven sleepers and two restaurant cars, which ran through from Chicago. Philadelphia is well represented. Geo. Wentworth Carr will present the re port ot a committee on the confer -1 euce with the National Association of Credit Men at Thursday's session. "During the past year efforts have been made to obtain the passage of laws redefining the practice of law so as to exclude and therefore put out of business collection agencies and law list publishers," President Earle W. Evans, of Kansas, announced in his address last night, in leading up to a vigorous declaration on the subject of bankruptcy practice. "It has been the policy of the administration to com bat such legislation, because collection agencies and list men have become members of our organization. Pope Intercedes to Save Roger Casement Rome, July 25. Pope Benedict has interceded in favor of Roger Case ment. endeavoring to obtain grace for him from the British Government. Influential Irish Nationalists have urged the Pope to do all in his power to save Casement, saying they do not consider him a traitor to the British cause, but inspired in his actions by Irish patriotism. The Pontiff, In addition to the In fluence he is exercising in London, has interested Sir Henry Howard, the British Minister to the Vatican, In the case. The Pope already has obtained from Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria grace for Cranak, leader of the Bohemian patriots, who was made a prisoner while fighting against Austria and condemned to be hanged. ROAD 100 PER CENT. PERFECT Philadelphia, July 25. lt Is sur prising that the people of the eastern part of the United States do not ap preciate the beauties and advantages of their own section. In a recent in spection trip over the Lincoln High way from New York to Pittsburgh in the official Lincoln Highway Stutz, made by officers of tne Lincoln High way Association, Including A. F. Bement, secretary; H. C. Ostermann, field secretary, and C. M. Reiling, Lancaster county counsel for the asso ciation, It was brought out that the Lincoln Highway's eastern section, at least that part from Trenton, N. J., for 400 miles to Pittsburgh, Pa., is virtually 100 per cent perfect, and is as efficient a road as can possibly be laid out between the two points. kfpQWDER j ftliaßuUlUU iflMlfflM HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH He Sooklfksies Story No. 14 THE MUSIC SWINDLER Plot by 0««rg« Branson Howard. Novolization by Hugh C. Woir. Copyright Kalena Company. (Centluaed from Yesterday.) "Marvelousl Marvelous!" ho crrled. ••Permit me to congratulate you, my dear young lady! Assuredly you have a tremendous future before you! I can ■ee great credit to us from your en rollment ae a student! Yes. I can see that you have done wisely, very wise ly In coming to us!" After the necessary arrangements regarding money, etc.. Mary departed. Several days after she toad been given her first lesson, Mary felt It safe enough to venture a more lntl mate footing with Herrman. As they wore concluding their "lessons," she said In a sudden burst of oonfldence, I "If I only had the money I had a! year a.go, I could organise my own 1 opera company, and win fame es«llyr| As the professor expressed his iym* pathy. she explained that her father' pad been swindled of a large fortune 1 by two unscrupulous speculators, who had visit* d her home town, and that ■he had suddenly found herself thrown on the world, with the necessity of making her own living Instead of looking) forward to a life of ease and The Girl» Meet the Smooth Protestor. luxury. She dropped the subject abruptly, as though unable to endure the bitter memories which it called up. Two days later, however, she re turned tc It excitedly. "What do you think has happened today, professor?" she asked. "I am sure X have no Idea," was the syn.pathetic answer. "Tell me!" "You remember the story I was tell ing you of the two swlndlero who had stolen my father's fortune?" "Certainly! They ought to be put behind the bare!" "Well, they are In town now. and thay hive brought with them a girl, who used to be my dearest friend, Hattie Gordon. Hattie thinks she can glna - . and they seem to think so, too, for they have' told her that they will finance a theatrical company, and star her! When she telephoned me thl® morning, and told me of whjt they were doing, I could hardly hold my self! Of course, they are using my father's money, the money which ought to be mine, to do It with! The sc >JI drtls!" Mary saw the professor's eyes glisten, ti.d even before he spoke, she knew that he had fallen Into her trap. He dre*r closer to her. and lowered his voice confidentially. "Do you want to get back your ' money—and at the same time give your father's swindlers a sample of their own metheds?" Miry nod-iel excitedly. "Oh. if I only could- -but that is impossible!" "Net at all—if you go about it the right way! I think that I can be of real assistance to you. if you want to Join forces with me." "Of oouise. I do! I think you are the most wonderful man I have ever known!" Mary looked up at him ad miringly, and the professor drew even cl ser. "Let me tell you what to do then. Oet your girl friend on the telephone, ana her that you have found a r-.ana.ier, who is much interested in her plans, and that you will Introduoe her to him. Tell her she can bring her friends with her, if she wishes." "But I don't know any manager," protested Mary. "Of course, you don't, but I do—and he is Just the man for our purpose." The girl studied his words for a mo ment in a pretended puzzled silence, and then looked up with a smile of understanding. "I think I see now what you mean!" Bhe drew a long breath. "I'll do it. I'll get Hattie on the 'phone now." A meeting was arranged for the morrow. At 2 o'clock, Mona, in company with Casper Carson and Rodney Grant, who were to act the roles of the two clever swindlers, stopped before the apart ment building, where the Vocal Acad emy had established Itself, and a few minutes later the trio were ushered Into the private office of the principal, j Herrman was awaiting them with his blandest, most professional smile, and with him was a etrangeri whom he duly presented as "Mr. James Peters, of whom you have heard, of course''" "And now," began the professor, plunging into the object of the busi ness without delay." I understand that Mis* Gordon poit esses much ability ai a singer and actress, and that she is desirous of obtaining an opportu nity to be brought before the publto in the right way. and under the right management." Carson nodded. "Any suggestion which my friend, M- Peters may maike, will be wortn listening to," answered the professor gravely. The theatrical "manager" removed his black olgar. and surveyed Mona deliberately, as though studying her face and figure reflectively. *T» Be C—ttnm A Toaorrom) Visitors Spend Week-end at Pleasant Cove Cottages Special to the Telegraph Cove, Pa., July 25.—Miss Edith Zim merman. of New Cumberland, spent Sunday at Utopia Cottage. Mr. and Mrs. George Burd and daugh ter, Dorothy, are guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. ,H. Curry. Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Yocum and daughter, Elizabeth, are guests at Helena Cottage. Mrs. Spooner and Miss Margaretta Spooner spent Monday as guests of Dr. and Mrs. C. B. Fager. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Shrenk and Paul B. Shrenk spent Sunday here. Mr. and Mrs. of State street, Harrlsburg. visited Nabob Cottage yes terday. Dr. C. B. Fager and John Snyder spent Monday at Harrisburg. Mrs. Hanson Graeblll and children spent Sunday at Duncannon. Mr. and Mrs. A. L D'err. who have been spending some time at their cot tage here have returned to their home at Harrlsburg. Miss Jessie Dressier, of Duncannon, spent Sunday with Miss Ruth Shaver. Mrs. Aaron B. Keener and children, of Colebrook, spent the week-end with the former's sister, Mrs. John Aikens. BOY DROWNED IN RIVER Special to the Telegraph Columbia, Pa., July 25. Oscar, a 10-year-<sld son of Mrs. Mary Sheetz, was drowned In the Susquehanna river on Sunday evening while bathing. About ten years ago, or % short time before the boy's birth, his father, Os car Sheetz, was killed by a fall from a pole on which he was adjusting a flag. , This Is the Birthday Anniversary of— «■ ARTHUR D. BACON One of Harrisburg S most prominent business men. Mr. Bacon is an ex-president of the Harrisburg Rotary Club and Select Council, and is promi nent In Masonic circles. He has olways been interested in public improve ment plans and is a widely known wholesale candy manufacturer. f TRAVELETTE By NIKSAH CHAM IT A V ) Chamita was old when the Dutch bought Manhattan island from the Indians for the price of a four-eyM 1 *- ■ der runabout. So Chamita can ic a way look down on New York; but it must be admitted that while Manhat tan got a later start she has been making the better progress for the last century or two. At the time the Dutch were clos ing their famous real estate deal. Chamita was a little mud Indian vil lage on the Rio Grande, whose peo ple tilled their corn and cut their hay in constant fear of the warlike Apaches. To-day the Apaches are go ing to school and selling moccasins to touiists; Chamita has a postorflce and a church and a store; but the little mud pueblo is just what it was in those other times, and the simple, peaceable people are just as amiable as in the days when the Apaches chas ' ed them. You come to Chamita on a little red railroad that clacks over its narrow gauge track at all of ten miles an hour. The Rio Grande rolls sluggish ly along beside you. its winding ser pent trail green behind it and before it. for miles in either direction, like a green snake stretched across the tawny desert. It is a pleasant belt of peach and apple orchards, of wheat j and of blue-flowered alfalfa, whose ; leaves are the most exquisite green of | any plant that grows. The little engine pulls up panting | after its steady climb before a ten-by j twelve station built like a summer - ! garden pavilion and labeled Chamita. ! A dozen lounging Indians stare at ! Progress, represented by the little red j cars, with the same far-reaching un | seeing gaze that their fathers used to peer over the desert for the coming Apache. They yield to progressive in stitutions however, in the shape of a I silver dollar to drive you over to the ' pueblo. All these pueblos r.re much alike, j They are built of mud, and filled with j r.ieormies. dogs and children. Swart. • squat women grin and make incompre \ hensible remarks to each other con ] cerning your personal appearance. Im- I rassive bucks pass you by with the [gravity of a whole beech-full of Judg ! es. A hot sun beats down on the flar llng reds and greens of the people's i clothing; and the whole crowded bee ! hive is full of many smells and a great j content. CAUGHT IN TORN SHEMER Special to the Telegraph Wrightsville. Pa , July 25. George Sowers, 14 tf-ears old, is in a critical condition from being caught in a corn shellerr Every part of his body show.v results of the accident, and his skull , may be fractured. Resorts ATLANTIC - CITY, N. J. NEW CLARION HOTEL ; Kentucky Ave., 2nd house from Beach. )pen all year. Garage attached. Book i let. S. K. BONIFACE. THE MACDONALD 37 So. North Carolina Ave. Central. I Near Beach. $2.00 up daily. $9 up weekly. Mrs. W. G. Macdonald, forra , erly of 25 So. Arkansas Ave. ; » 9.JSN.GEORGIAAV f.ATLCITY.N. Scrupulously clean; electric lighted throughout. White service. Hot and cold water baths. $1.50 up dally, $8 up I weekly. Established 37 years. Book let. JvjONTOLEO .ear.*; M « h Kentucky ave., near beacb and all uitrnc tloof. 200 choice rooms; private baths; run ning water. Attrn- tlve public room« and veranda*. Exo ptlonally fine table; good lUU ■ic: bathing from liouao. S2 up dnllv. $lO up weekly: an*< ial wrok-ond rates. Booklet. Auto coach. 12th season. A C. LkliOl.M HOTEL TENNESSEE TraneiH Avenue and Beach. Ocean view. Bathing from hotel. Show ers. $8 to (12.50 weekly; $1.50 up daily. A HEALY. Beat l.ocut .'it Popular Price Family Hotel In Atlantic Clry, J. NETHERLANDS New York Ave., 50 yards from Board walk. Overlooking lawn and ocean; capacity 400; elevator; private batha Over 60 outside rooms have hot and cold running water. D ATFS TO 517.n0 WEEKLY, SA Ito 42 TO M DAILY. SPECIAL FKEE FEATURES BATHING PRIVILEGE FROM HOTEL LAWN TENNIS COURT n a\rir wi nnn BOOKLET WITH POINTS OP INTER. EST IN ATLANTIC CITY AUGUST HUHWADEL. Proprietor. HOTEL KENTUCKY WITH FIRRPROOF ADDITION Kentucky Ave., Near Beach. Capacity 400. 50 rooms with hot and cold run ning water; 35 with private bath. Tel ephone and electric llghtß In every rooni. Elevator from street level. Fine dance door, and table unexcelled. Send for booklet and points of Interest. $2 TO $4 DAILY; $lO TO $17.60 WEEKLY. AMERICAN PLAN. ti. B. KENNADY. Proprietor. JULY 25, 1916. Children Cry for Fletcher's The Kind You Have Always Bought has borne the signa ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and i •* Just-as-good " are but experiments, and endanger tha health of Children—Experience against Experiment. c What is CASTORIA Oastorla is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare* gorlc, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It de stroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more thai* thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief o1 Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Trou. bles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowelt assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep' The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years THC CTNT4UH COMPANY, NCW y O''K CITY «Ivum RJ—ll-.' !M|giiL. u . -i . ,i mm Modern Science Finds a New Method How Xcne Insulation Stops Inflammation and Eczema, Sunburn and All Skin Diseases Yield to Rcmarkablo New Discovery The nerves of your body are like electric wires. They carry the nerve energy (neuro-electricity) which is generated in the brain, to all the cells and tissues. The nerve sheaths are insulated to resist a current of about 4/1000 of a volt as has been proven with the aid of Lord Kelvin's galvanometer, an Instrument so sen sitive and accurate that for the first time it is now possible to measure the strength of nerve currents. It has been found that wherever acute inflammation occurs the in sulation of the nerves is broken down, making it difficult, and often impossible, for nature to heal the ■surrounding cells. Germs cannot live In healthy tissue; it Is only through damaged cells that they thrive and spread. Obviously there fore. the right way to successfully FAT FOLKS WHO WOULD REDUCE WEIGHT A Safe, Reliable Method That Galls For No Drastic Diets, Weakening Purgatives or Tiresome Exercises. j People who are over-burdened with f superfluous fat, know only too well the discomfort and ridicule that over-stout ] people have to bear, i If you are carrying around five or ten pounds of unhealthv fat you are | unnecessarily weakening your vital organs and are carrying a burden which | destroys the beauty or your figure, i There is no need of anyone suffering from superfluous fat. If you want to | reduce your weight in a simple, safe and reliable way, without starvation I diet or tiresome exercise, here is a test ; worth trying. Spend as much time as you can in the open air, breathe deeply and get from any good druggist a box I of oil of korein capsules: take one after Resorts Resorts ATI.ANTIC CITY. X. J. ATLANTIC CITY. X. J. ~ $2 nn linilT. 110 «p WwKlr. Am. Plan. iiri | ■ ia: w\\j Virginia av. Zd housa ETB IS ST Dungy NtLLUwDYgsg.. 8" H HfS, OBf BnS JKIW Excellent cuisine; white service; prl« L_|-U|LH IW| vate baths; running water; elevator to T? r»T level. Cap., 250. Special 112.60 up Wkly. Jt ► iri-i»r«K»f Annux. rem esisee Av. nr. Beach. -. rinilv E H LI'NDY Cap. 400. Centnl;open surrounding; opp. Cat ho- "P Pany. "• W"'. lie and Protestant churchea Private baths. gmr —' RUNNING WATER IN ALL ROOMS HOTEL KINGSTON PROOF Excellent table; fresh vtiretables. Windows Ocean Ave., Ist hotel (100 feet) front, screened. White service. Booklet. 8. B. IIDY. M.D. Beach. Cap. 250; elevator; bathing from | hotel; distinctive table and service:, lUC tf.ll T'vUiyP Virginia av. and $2.50 up dally; sl2 up weekly. Special ■ nil *? IL, 1 onilVEi Beach. Ocean family rates. Garage. Booklet, view. Capacity 350; private baths, ele- ' M. A. LEYRER. vator. porches, etc. Special rates. sl6 i up weekly. $2.50 up daily. American iiATCI MAIECTir Virginia ave. A plan. Every convenience. Open ail nVM £Li iTlrtJLj i IV_ Beach. Renovat year. Auto meets trains. Booklet. Ed 'throughout; centre of attractions; SAMUEL ELLIS. I ocean view; capacity 300; elevator, I private baths, white service, &c.; su- 1 Perlor table. Special $12.50 up weekly; iJUITIC,I\iSEi 1 12 U p daily. Booklet. M. A. SMITH. Mississippi Ave. Fourth house from | , I beach. 26th year same management T Tri7T»Torr./-MT : $1.25 day up. Bathing from house. L/ii,XllNtjl UN RUTH ALEX. STEE& Pacific and Ark. avs. Grounds adjoin ! *1.50 up Dally. SS.OO up Wkly. Am. Plan, beach and boardwalk. Only hotel -i— - Ml _ where guests may go to surf In bath- If" ing attire without using streets, whlcti ■ 11. l| Bl BRI |VS 9 Running water In rooms. Private baths. Mill bl Special rates. $1.50 up daily; $8 to $17.59 Pacific and Arkansas Aves.. near Bench. El» weekly. Including choice table. sup vator. Ilotnnd coldrannirip-xvater in rooms. PH plied from own farm. White service, feS'-wi!!? orchostra. ballroom, tennis courts, gar. Capacity 300. Booklet MECKLY & FETTER age Booklet mailed. Resorts Resorts ATLANTIC CITY. X. J. ATI.A JfTIC CITY. I*. J. , Speaking of tA« eonermU construction oj UU UUnhtitm. Thomas A. Edison sa id. It it ths riming eonstruotion far all great building*. It won't bend, it won't brsak, and you covldn't burn it if you triad." flDarlborougfcßlenbcim, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. THE LEADING RESORT HOUSE OF THE WORLD . Capacity 1100 Anacrioan and Euvopean Plan* The great essential of a retort hotel, aa distinguished from a city hotel, » ample public (pace devoted to the use of its guests, in the form of bright and airy Ex changes, Lobbies, Parlors, Cilleries and Solariums, affording pleasing vistas and beautiful promenades, the whole combining into a harmonious vision of grandeur and beauty, while replete with the cozy group seclusions of home, and yet afford ing full view of the pleasing panorama of the resort life. In this essential the Aarlbnrnu{il)-Blritf)rtm stands without an equal in Atlantic City or elsewhere. Its "Ownership Management," while accounting for its unique reputation, is a guarantee of the high character of its patronage and the unexcelled quality of its service and cuisine. It employs only white service in both its American and a la carte dining rooms. It makes a ipecialty of high-class music every evening throughout the year, with special Sunday night solo features. At Inn tin City. • Ith its only real competitor (Europe) this year impossible. Is offering unil ual attraction* and entertainments. Two ftyinr boats are daily sources of inter-sU T*o trolf courses, the Yacht Club, the finhine fleet and the wo-id rrul bathinp each attract their respective devotees, while the pier amuse ments. numerous theatres, the Boardwalk the fine motor roads and ihe splendid hotels and restaurants, afford enjoyment to all. There ia only one Atlantic City, and thia summer it la particularly say and attractive. Write for illustrated booklet and rates. JOSIAH WHITK * MINS COMPANY treat Inflammatory disease is to quickly repair the damaged Insula 'ion and enable nature to ref'ore tha diseased tissue to a healthy condi tion. lon-o-lex Unguent does this. lon-o-lex Unguent is not a drug. It does not contain opiates or nar cotics. Its action is entirely mechan ical. Applied externally, it pene trates the tissues and surrounds tha injured nerve sheaths with an In sulating bath. Then the Inflamma tion subsides and nature quickly re pairs the nerve lesion—you are well. Don't suffer another minute, Just go to H. C. Kennedy and get a large Jar of lon-o-lex Unguent, it costs lit tle, use as directed and if you can not say that it is the greatest means ever devised for conquering inflam mation wherever It exists, your money will be cheerfully returned without a question. each meal and one before retiring at night. Weigh yourself once a week so as to know Just how fast you are losing weight and don't leave off the treatment or even skip a single dose until you are down to normal. . Oil of korein is absolutely harmless,! is pleasant to take, and helps diges tion. Even a few days' treatment has been reported to show a noticeable re duction in weight, footsteps become lighter, your work seems easier and a. lighter and more buoyant feeling takes possession of your whole being. Every person who suffers from su perfluous fat should give this treatment a trial.—Advertisement.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers