12 — sojm—w————^| ?Tl 411 I* 'i i Jlly jj tXPi JoNUKIHn^^^Uj Mf" Near the Young Women's Christian Association Our Entire Stock of Summer Dresses to Be Sacrificed Regardless of Former Prices We have divided our entire stock of Women's and Misses' Summer Washable Dresses into three lots and will sacrifice them regardless of former selling prices. Not one dress re served, white dresses included. V DRESSES A T .... A AIT „M- I Former selling prices up to SI.BB J | ■IT I Made of pretty washable ma- I B J1 W t terials. last-minute styles; neat ly trimmed. All regular sizes. ™ DRESSES A T .... f\r* _ 1 M Former selling prices up to 55.88 r^r) |IF f Charming one-piece Dresses, p M Ijl II w m in a variety of pretty styles and j m w W materials. Splendid colors, and ■■■ color combinations. All regular sizes. i W a a dresses at j QC aAi J Former gelling priori up to V12.8S Jn fm 111 Choose now the best washable it #■ I ■■ IK m, W dress in our shop at this un- JBml w usual low price. Embroidered Jl white voiles, pure linens and stunning colored voiles. Nothing higher. All regular sizes. UT _ « Owing to the many requests that we remain open Iml I.- _ on Saturdays as heretofore, we wish to announce !11 |9 t ■ tliat we will he open Saturdays, a- usual, and have * * \J arranged with our salesforcc w hereby they will have one day off each week with pay. 3MT ALTERATIONS FREE AS USUAL ANNOUNCE RIRTH OF SON Dauphin, Pa., Aug. 10. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Veatch announce the birth of a son Saturday, August 5. Mrs. Veatch was formerly Miss Mary Meyers. Anticipates A Serious Coal Shortage "It is not our policy to advise coal dealers to stock up. We prefer to permit them to use their own judgment. We are, however, advising all con sumers and manufactur ers who buy coal direct from us, to accumulate a substantial reserve sup ply, as we anticipate a very serious shortage of Anthracite coal next Fall and Winter." Williams and Peters, N. Y. City. There seems to be no doubt that An thracite coal will be scarce next winter. The coal mines at the present time have only half enough men and under the new mining agreement they are working eight hours a day instead of nine. Prices are 30c per ton lower than will be charged after Sept. 1. United Ice & Coal Co., Forster & Cowden Sts. Third & Boas M Also Steelton. Pa. SEASHORE EXCURSIONS Via Reading Railway SATURDAYS July 29, August 12 and 26. from fare. Harrlsburg $4.50 Middletown 4.50 Hummelstown 4*50 Hershey 4^o Sixteen-day tickets, good on any train. Stop-ufT allowed at Philadel phia. going and returning within time limit of ticket. One Day Excursions SUNDAYS July 30, August 13 and 27 I-v. FROM Fare. A.M. Harrlsburg 12.75 4.40 Hummelstown 2.75 4.56 Hershey .. 2.70 5.0S OCEAN~GROVE Sixteen Day Excursion Wednesday, August 23. Lv. FROM Fare. A.M. ■ Harrlsburg $4.50 6.15 Hummelstown 4.50 6.30 Hershey 4.50 6.38 THURSDAY EVENING, RKSCTE TWO BOYS Special to the Telegraph Dauphin, Pa.. Aug. 10. Ralph Feasor. 11 years old. narrowly escaped drowning: in the Susquehanna near Elm Park on Tuesday afternoon. Samuel Lyter wont to his assistance and he also got into trouble, going under water twice. Both boys were rescued by Wilmer Rroughner. i— . Purify the Complexion Do not be troubled with jD complexion ills. Keep all blemishes concealed tyW ' ry while you are treating /X: them. You can do thil instantly without detection by using M;-_ Gouraud's 13 Oriental Cream It will also assist you to overcome "those ills'' at the same time if they do not orig inate internally. Renders to the skin a soft, pearly-white appearance. Non-greasy. Sond 1 00. for trial six* FEPD. T. HOPKINS A SON. Ntw York City AMrSKMIJNTS / Come "nil enjoy n day of iiiumlc nml tun nith tIK MUNICIPAL BAND or HARItISHI lie, PA., IT BOILING SPRINGS PARK Friday, August 11, 1916. Onaclac afternoon noil evt-nliiK. Bnml concert 7.110 I". M. I'rizeft Kiven for tarlous i-unti-NtN. Special rnr« leave Square S.OO A. M„ and hourly thereafter. TICKETS, Ssc anil 40c ran hp neeureil from poiumltt Square or nt Itolton llou.p Harbpr Shon. -f —— " —' -v fgillik'li;ma sfiBCHXMHFSCSDC fooler Than the (ountry FIRST GPISODG OF "The Grip of Evil" which m||| hp ihnnii earli Wcdaes <lay ami Thlimilay for 14 «prk», also VI RGINIA PEARSON In thp Fox Feature "HYPOCRISV" FtMDAV A\n SATIKDtV WII.I.IAM H. THOMPSON in "THE KVE OF THK MfcllT" Always Km.l ami Komfortable To-day. MARGt'KRITR ri,ARK la "SILKS AND SATINS" EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION To-morrow and Saturday, CII VItME t'HAI'I.IV, la lilm irreateat Iniich lirovnkliiu eoineily, "ONE A. M. M A Rcrram from mart to Hnloli. A Ino Klxhth Chapter of "GLORIA'S ROMANCE" f v-ci PiCTunr* |/»« aoonC9-iS«Jgtn ffjgMOPE-JONES UNITMM iy wuALor bo Piecec*CHiStw( Mm TO-DAY OM.V fl FRANCIS X. BUSHMAN W "the sovereign of the f screen" in "A BROTHER'S I.OVAI.TY" also KATHLYX WILLIAMS In a flve-act drama "THE VALIANTS OF VIRGINIA" To-morrow i » EDITH STOREY WOMEN'S INTERESTS A GIRL AND A MAN A New and Vital Romance of City Life by Virginia Terhune Van de Water CHAPTER XIII. AGXES MORLEY ate little lunch eon that noon. She had thought that she was hungry before she left the office, but when she reached the street she appreciated that she had sone past the time when she was in the habit of eating and really was : conscious of no desire for food. Yet j she knew it would be foolish to at tempt to get through the afternoon j without any nourishment. She paused in the doorway of the j great office building and looked down the sunlit street. She remembered that the restaurant to which she and , Annie Roonev had gone together was 1 some eight blocks away. It was now half past one, and the | new employe did not want to return ! to her post later than the other girls. She decided that it would be well for her to seek an eating-place near at hand. 'ls there a decent restaurant any-! where in this neighborhood?" she t queried one of the elevator "starters," who was just returning from his own | luncheon. ■ "Sure there Is," he replied. "Go up i to the next corner, then turn to the left and walk half a block." She followed his directions and en- ' tered a place displaying heaps of grape-fruit and several boxes of with ered strawberries in the window. Externally it resembled many other lunch rooms bearing names in huge white letters across their glass fronts, i Inside the door the resemblance! ceased. The tables were covered with ] worn oilcloth, much splashed with) coffee and other beverages. Waitresses in soiled dresses and \ spotted aprons called out their orders ! in stentorian tones to a "chef" on j the other side of the open slide at ! the end of the room. Smells of cook- J ing now going on mingled with odors of the dead and gone lunches of many yesterdays. Agnes seated herself at a table and ordered a chicken sandwich. This at least might look clean, she hoped. It looked clean enough, but was made of stale bread and dry, tasteless chicken. A Poor ileal. "What'll you have to drink?" the j I waitress asked. "Only a glass of water." the girl j said. Somehow the idea of drinking milk here was not pleasant, and she I did not want such tea or coffee as , this establishment might afford. The water was brought in a thick 5 glass with a generous lump of ice in it. She regarded it gratefully. It looked clear and refreshing. But as she lifted the glass toward tier lips her glance fell upon the rim. , This bore the distinct outline of num- j erons greasy lips. She realized sud- 1 i denly that the tumbler had only been I refilled, not washed, after each using j to-day. She set it down with a sick ' j qualm. "Give me my check, please," she i told the waitress faintly. Reaching the street again, she ■ smiled at her own disgust. "It cost j me 10 cents to learn t». ovoid that j kind of a place hereafter," she mused, j j "I would rather go without food than BAN ON POOR SON IN LAW By DOROTHY DIX | Probably the most unpleasant ciuar-! jter of an hour that a man ever spends is that in which he faces a cold and unromantic father ar.d asks him for his daughter's hand in marriage. Of. course, if there are extenuating cir-! eumstances in the way of money or position —if he can offer the girl a [country place and automobiles—the > I situation is robbed of much o fits ter- < i rors. and the parental blessing is aj I foregone conclusion. If, however, he is an impecunious j youth with nothing to give his wife | but the love of his heart, and the work j of his hands, he would face a gatling j gun with less trepidation than the old I man's stern inquiry: "Young man, can you support my daughter in the \ style in which she has been accus- I tomed to live'.'" | Of course, a father is doing no more jthan his duty, and is strictly within! 'his rights, when he tries to protect j his daughter from grinding poverty, I but when he goes further than thatj Sand objects to a worthy man simply I 1 because he can't offer a girl all thei I luxuries to which she has been acpus- j | tomed he is going too far. He is demanding that the young i j man start in where he is leaving off. i j It has taken him many years of hard ! | work to be able to give his family the! luxury in which they now live, and it THE TRUTH ABOUT ECZEMA AND PILES Thousands and thousands of people, f says Peterson, are learning every week ! that one 25-cent box of Peterson's Oint- ! mi lit will abolish Eczema and banish piles, and the grateful letters 1 receive) every day arc worth more to me than I money. j 1 had Eczema for many years on my ! head and could nr.t get anything to do ! it anv good. 1 saw your ad and got one box and I owe you many thanks j for the good it has done me, There isn't a blotch on my head now and I couldn't help but thank Peterson for the cure is great. Mrs. Mary Hill, 420 Third avenue, Pittsburgh. Pa. I have had itching piles tor 15 years and Peterson's is the only ointment that relieves me, besides the piles seem to have gone. A. B. Ruger, 112" Wash ington avenue. Itaclne. wis. t'se Peterson's Ointment for old , sores, salt rheum and all skin diseases. Druggists recommend it. Peterson's Ointment takes the burn j out of sunburn in 10 minutes. Mail or ders filled, charges prepaid by Peter- | son Bros.. Buffalo, N. Y. WONDEROIL For Itelilng. Irritation or Pain There Is Nothing More Reliable For cuts, scalds, bruises, burns, lum- [ hago. rheumatic pains, stiff joints, itch- ! ing, irritation or pain anywhere. Won- I deroil the antiseptic healing balm has been successfully used for the last halt I century. Like the rock of Gibraltar. this i greatest of healers has stood the test of time and as the years go by it is more and more extensively used and relied unon in thousands of homes. Scores of mothers would no more think of going to bed at night without Wonderoil on the shelf than they would without a lock on the front door. It is safe, sure and pure and always i ready. Put up from a physicians pre- i scriotlon and endorsed everywhere. Wonderoil is sold In this city by Geo. < A. Gorgas and by reliable druggists i everywhere. Due to a popular demand Wonderoil can now be obtained in both ! 25 and 50-cent boxes. The 50-cent size will he found most economical. If for any reason you have never used Wonderoil, send to-day to M. E. Ray mond. Inc.. Rallston Spa. N. Y.. for a srenerous free sample. You will be glad you did. Advertisement. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH risk a repetition of that experience." It would have been better, she re flected, to have gone to a drugstore ! and taken an egg-and-milk shake, yet there was no drugstore any nearer than was the restaurant she and Annie Rooney had visited. Miss Rooney was already in the outer office and at her desk when Agnes entered. Agnes, going to the closet to hang up her coat and hat. noticed that Mr. Bainbrldge's own stenographer was not In her usual place and that the door of his office stood open. As the newcomer passed Annie the latter commented on this I fact. "Old hard-face isn't coming back this afternoon, I guess," she observed. "She had a headache and asked the boss to let her off. He told Larry just now that he'll have to get one of the other stenographers to take I some dictation from him. 1 bet I J won't,be the one to do it!" Before Agnes could reply she heard j her name spoken, and. turning, saw | that the red-haired office-boy was at . her side. A New Kmployer. "Miss Morley," he announced. "Mr. i Bainbridge says that If Mr. Hale has not come back yet he wishes you'd j take down a couple of important let ters for him. Miss Durkee. his stenog- I rapher. you know, is gone home sick. I "I —I —think perhaps Mr. Hale's [ come in," Agnes stammered. "I ! haven't been in his office yet, and I !am late already. Please explain that jto Mr. Bainbridge, will you?" "Yes, Joe, you go tell him just ■ that," Miss Rooney struck in with de i cislon. "You give him Miss Morley's ! message straight." "He won't like it." Joe warned her. I "And Mr. Hale's not in yet anyhow." "You're all to the good!" Annie murmured, as the boy moved oft. "Don't you let old Bainbridge boss you. He's sure got a cast-iron nerve and he keeps It right with him all the time." Agnes hurried away without ac knowledging these comments. Enter ing Mr. Hale's office, she found it empty, as she had known it would be. It was not yet the hour at which ! he had said he expected to return. She closed the door softly behind I her and crossing the room hastily, seated herself at her machine and slipped into it a slip of paper. Then she began to work fiercely, as if she i had not a moment to spare. No sentence would come to her head but the one that is often used by operators to test the condition of a machine. "Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of the party." she pounded out with feverish speed. Again and again she wrote it until a quarter of the sheet of paper was covered wkith the inscription. Then she started another test sen tence: "This is the type of work done by ' this machine." This line had been written but three times when the door into the ' outer office opened and Mr. Bain i bridge entered. To Be Continued | is absurd to expect any young man to have achieved that much success. If the young man has a bank ac count to match the girl's father's, he lis bound to have inherited it. He hasn't had time to make it for him self. Looking at the matter from a ; business point of view, and with refer- I ence to the girl's bread and butter, it | is a strange thing that it doesn't often er strike fathers that the young man who has successfully held the same place in an office or a store for four or Ave years and saved up a thousand j or two dollars while "clerking it" is a thousand times better match for any [girl than the youth who never earned a dollar in his life, who knows, neither j how to make money nor to ! save it, and whose one star perform ance in life consists in having been born the son of a rich man. j Only too often, however, the well -to-do man turns a cold and unfriendly! eye on the suitor for his daughter who! tells him that he has nothing but a I good situation with a chance of doing' I better. Father sternly remarks that | [when HE married he was able to sup ! port his wife in the style in which she I had been accustomed to live. He forgets that he took his bride to! a cottage or a hamble flat, while he j expects his son-in-law to inslall his daughter in a fine mansion. He ig nores the fact that his wife in their j | early days did her own cooking and i made her own frocks, while he de-! j mands that his daughter's husband' jshall provide her with a retinue of | servants and millinery from Paris. I Of course, in tiying to keep his, | daughter from nia-r.ving a poor man, | the father truly says that he has noth- 1 ing but hpr happiness at heart. He believes that she will be perfectly mis erable living in less style, with fewer clothes, and plainer surroundings than those to which she is accustomed, j That depends on the girl. If she is the kind of a girl whose heart is stuffed with chiffons and whose soul will go to Paris when she • dies, she will never be indiscreet I enough to fall In love wilh a man who isn't strictly eligible from a monetary point of view. She is just as incapa ! ble of loving a man without a nose as one without a big hank account. But the girl whose true heart beats just as faithfully and warmly under | velvet as it would under homespun, j whose eyes, ttnblinded by wealth and I fashion, see the man and not the posi -1 tion. and who is willing to exchange a [ little of the tinsel of society for the | fine gold of an honest love, knows what she is about when she picks out ! her own particular Jack and refers ' him to Papa. i And Papa makes the mistake of his life when he refuses his blessing for no better reason than that the young i man can't support the girl in the style in which she is accustomed to live, j There is, also, this other point of view, that if the girl's father has rais ! Ed her with such luxurious tastes that 'she cannot be happy on the income I that an ordinarily successful man can 1 offer her. it is nothing but common fairness for her fond and foolish par lent to provide her with a dowry »hat j will offset her demand for frills. That is one way around the difficul ty. and certainly it. Is quite as just as i to expect the young man to be able to humor the unreasonable extravagance and wastefulness in which the daugh ters of so many rich parents are reared. j As it is. the average worthy young j man fights shy of the rich girl. The j idea of breaking into a family tn ! which he is not desired because he is ! poor Is not attractive. Neither is it 1 alluring to feel that his wife Is looked upon as a martyr for having married him. The modern father must adopt a kinder attitude, if he doesn't want to be left with a lot of old maid daugh ters on his hands. Children Cry Fop ■ wi ' ncss |il9c' f, > ■ nor-Mine™- Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Par** 1 Not Narcotic. gorlc, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It frffisM' ! contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotio > jLwMi.rret- i substance. Its ape is its guarantee. It destroys Worms MxSginj- and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it BfßMf has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Gjjjfr'',: v*., Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and ESScEH Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, Bawllfi'! fitrifai&sgr fi assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural Sleep. Epj&J, 1 jtDitPfnx/irnr — The Children's Panacea —The Mother's Friend* P GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS ImSSf ' lossofSließ | . , ilji j ft i the Signature of _ Pyfjfl'i gPPgjg In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Alw 2* s Bought THi CINTAUKCOMrANV, NIWSHKCITV, LACE INSERTION USED ON DIMITY The Prettiest Frocks For Chil dren Are the Simplest in Design By MAY MANTON 9134 (IVi/h Basting Line and Added Seam Allowance) Child's Dress, 2, 4 and 6 years. This is a very simple little frock and at the same time an essentially smart one. The belt is arranged in a novel way and the smocking that holds the fullness is exceedingly attractive. On the figure, the material is a white batiste and the rnish is lace banding, but in the small view is a suggestion for the use of fancy stitchery that is especially worthy of note. All forms of needlework are fashionable and such stitchery is perhaps the simplest form. It is quite within any woman's power and it makes a very charming finish for the child's frock. Dimity would be charming treated in this way or hand kerchief lawn or any similar material. If liked, the work can be done with color and there is a great tendency toward using color on white this season. Rfidy and skirt portions are cut in one and the dress is gathered at the waist, the belt being adjusted over the gathers. ( For the 4 year size will be needed, 2 yards of material 36 inches wide or 2 yard 9 44. with s yards of lace banding to trim as illustrated. / daijswith Uneeda Biscuit- // AUGUST 10, 1916. jpAMUSEgfMENgg The new Pathe serial, "The Grip of | Evil" began at the Colonial Theater | yesterday. The tirst I "Grip of Evil" episode will be re nt the Colonial. peated to-day, along i . with "Hypocrisy" in | which Virginia Pearson is starred, j There is said to be enough human inter ! est about the serial to appeal to all movie patrons. The picture is built on the story of a young man who desires to spend his newly gained wealth in removing some of the suffering of the underworld, and in his efforts lie comes in contact with so many strings by which the so-called underworld is man ipulated from the upper world that he | begins to wonder if the entire world is not at present in the grip of evil. To-morrow and Saturday the Colonial will present "The Eye of the Night" with William H. Thompson in the lead ing role. To-day is double attraction day at the Victoria in that there will be shown Francis X. Bushman, in "A Brother'* "A Brother's Loyalty, l.o>nlty" and "The Valiants of at the Virginia," featuring Victoria. Kathlyn Williams. For to-morrow for the first time in this city "The Tarantula." fea turing Edith Storey and Antonio Ma reno. I Admirers of Marguerite Clark will i have opportunity of seeing their favor ite in the produc i Marguerite rinrk tion of "Silks and at the Regent Satins" now being shown at the Re gent. Tn "Silks and Satins" Miss Clatk is a modern girl who is to marry a cer tain young dandy against her wishes. Through the careless maneuvering of a I table a drawer is dislodged, revealing j a diary with an avenue of escape from her predicament inscribed in it by an | ancient relative of the eighteenth cen- I tury. who had been in a like predica | ment. The plot is a combination of an old love story with one modern origin. . Behold Charlie Chaplin in "One A. M„" the special attraction coming to-mor row and Saturday. The story of "One i A. M.," which deals with Chaplin's ad- I ventures in the home of a bachelor i friend whose hobby is collecting stuff ed animals, is said to be excruciatingly ! funny. In addition to Chaplin—the eighth chapter of "Gloria's Romance" i I The Mesh of Mystery) will also he : shown rhe last two days of the week. Miss Fairfax Answers Queries DON'T MAKE THE ADVANCES Dear Miss Fairfax: I am deeply in love with a young ' man, a very good friend of my broth | er's. I do not know whether my love ;is returned. Would you think it proper for me to tell him of my love, as I usually have conversations with ; him, or let my brother have a talk I with him? ANXIOUS. You will be making a very grave j mistake if either you c;r your brother tries to force this situation. What you will probably succeed In doing will be to estrange this friend of your brother's and to lose the interest he now shows in you. Why not wait un til he develops enough regard for you to show it rather than thrust your feelings upon him? TALK TO THE MOTHER Dear Miss Fairfax: I am twenty-two and in love with 1,000 of These 12KT Gold Filled Eyeglass Mountings, .SI.OO each c>o Exceptional Value In the past two weeks I have soli ; nearly half of this lot. When they are i all sold you will have to pay me or i any other optometrist $2.00 or more | for the same mounting, this of course does not mean with lenses rnd exami nation of the eyes. We are not in the fake class but are offering you an exceptional value will put your lenses in one of these mountings .without extra charge. Twelve sizes to select from. My charge for lenses are the cheapest in Harris burg considering the service and ex perience I give you. Ask your friends. With H. C. Claster 302 Market St. No. 1 N. Third St. ' a young lady three years my junior 1 who promised to marry me this ! month. Her mother has suddenly de clared that she will not allow the wed ding to take place. I have a fine posi tion, a good salary, am of good habits ' and cannot understand her. My financee refused to consider my sug gestion of eloping. LAWRENCE M. E. There is just one thing left for you | to. do. That is go to the mother of j this girl and plead with her for an 1 explanation and a chance to right ! yourself in her eyes in any misunder | standing which has arisen. If you \ love the girl enough to be patient and j tactful you can undoubtedly win her 1 mother over. Directs His Ashes Be Buried With Two Wives Special to the Tdetrafh ■Washington, Pa.. Aug. 10.—James S. I Stocking, 77 yeurs, former legislator, | county clerk of courts, Civil War vet i eran and one of the wealthiest men of i Washington, was buried under the pro visions of his will which are extremely unusual. The portion of his will relating to his burial follows: "I direct that ny body shall be cremated, and no religious ser vices shall be held on my body, ashes or grave. I direct that my ashes shall be divided in two parts and placed In two strong and air and water tight urns, one to be buried in my first wife's grave, and the other in the grave of my second wife."
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers