IFSCABTORIA fe| r ° rlnfants an <i Children. i £ASTOR|i Mothers Know That pyfifigHHi Genuine Castoria Pif'iii l ALCOHOL 3 PER OtNT. j _ §d|l Always / |£Js tingtlieStonodisanlßowsof ~ /A/ n l 9 ■pmaMn Bears 1119 /Ar iSIHI I P romof?s Disestlon£hferfu{- f jf . Ir^ |||;! : nessandßest-CoiUainsneitfer #|V /V if j Opium .Morphine nor Mineral g\f #\\ Ir NOT NARCOTIC. • U1 |LUIr stti/xofoMDrSMmmvm j 1^1; f2S Fimpkia Sttd" | V jUx.Saaa* 1 II V ,ffC " Jhc-J/tUfS" I m |*EA • jtiistSad * I AU . I n ssgs &&-**. [ 1 • 4 jTv in ills tlimSvd- I 11 I II ■■■ MfljJj!. QarfHSugcr ■ 1 ll ■ huiayrie>7ltmr. I T P || Bfflllll: . Aperfect Remedy for Consflp: AVI" Aft 115 R cwkt. fi 1 tton, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea I | IV vww iS-Q < \Vorras.CoHvulsionslevcrish- I 11^ ggjj | nessandLossorSLEEP. lif Lav [lupP !oo~!ij TacSinuk Signarure of IUI UW 01 plfe®'' Ml ■ W Thirty Years ECHSTORIA Exact Copy of rapper. TK I CINTAUH COMPANY. KCW *C*I err*. City Briefs 1200 Pounds l"all on Man. Earl Swartz, employed as a trucker at the Pennsylvania Railroad freight station, had his right leg seriously injured yes- ; terday when a box weighing about 1200 pounds fell on his leg. Palls Off Bridpre. While working on the new Cumberland Valley Rail road bridge yesterday afternoon, Silas Putman. aged 25, this city, re ceived a broken finger and bruises and lacerations of the body when he fell about 25 feet. He was treated at the Harrisburg hospital. Bites Befriending Hand. Scott CViliiams, aged 9, 135 Balm street, who was bitten by a strange dog DON'T just order paraffine from your grocer. Always ask for "Parowax"—we urge L y° u * * tsd " s< - 14 Absolutely No Pain R , My latest Improved appll- * JSSL mSk. Ml ■nee*. Including on oxeygrea- jv 4 '""l "tr apparatus, make* V extracting and all dental W w work positively patnlesa .A' and la perfectly harm- •'5 le "* (Ate aa EXAMINATION "LX 0 1 teeth ...Vo.tfU FREE Go,d ■*• i Fillings in silver ' noy tsoc Registered 4\, r Gold crowns and Graduate Jr brldire work I3,HU Asslstaats T Office open dally 8180 32K IT old crown.. .96.00 A f V to p. m.t Hon, Wed. and Sat., till 0 p. M.i Su days. 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. BELL PHONE 3322-R. EASY TERMS OF PAYMENTS 320 Market SL (Oyer the Hob) Harrisburg, Pa. M didt .w WHI 111 HI I i | ——l_——| The Fruit of Your Labor should be case and independence in our declining years. The way to f y'*' ' nsilr e this "consummation devout- V Vrr£*> to w ' s ' iec '" * or * s to tak e prop mt lmzLy er advantage of your youth by econ fJwMk om y thrift. By starting* an ac count in tllc First National bank in *\ & y olll ' l y° u can have an incentive for saving and can secure a competence First National Bank '"i'' l * 224 MARKET STREET {Early Coal Buying Advisable I It's the part of wisdom to buy your winter supply of coal now. M Once the frost and ice and snow of winter get busy, it's pretty % difficult to keep the coal free of dust and dirt. Summer-mined ft caol by the very nature of things is cleaner, the screening we £ give it insures practically a complete absence of dust and dirt. J i Phone your order now. M J. B. MONTGOMERY 600—Either Phone. Third and Chestnut Streets C TUESDAY EVENING, | which he befriended Saturday night, j is improving from the wound. Young I Williams picked up the animal which ! had been run down by ar. automobile. Flnsrcr Crushed. Ralph Ander , son. 1531 North Sixth street, employed iat the Harrisburg Pipe and Pipe Bending Company, had the index 1 finger on his right hand crushed yes terday while at work. Motorcyclist Hurt. lrank Penny packer, 2416 Lehigh avenue, Phila delphia, sustained a laceration of the right knee, and probably internal in juries yesterday when the motqrcycle. : which he was riding, crashed into an automobile near Dauphin. He was taken to the Harrisburg Hospital for j treatment. Silver Sandals A Detective Story of Mys tery, Love and Adventure. By Clinton H. Stagg Copyright. W. J. Watt & Co.. International News Service. (Continued From Yesterday.) "Don't move!" Colton's command came in a sibilant whisper. They waited for the last weird move in the whole weird game. Silent they sat around the vaulted room and stared upward at the curious thing in the ceiling that had been covered with the heavy design. The light on its straight silver tube swayed back and forth from the center of the hinged door that had opened. Like a black shadow the crow flew in through the window. Once more they watched it, tjot daring to move, lest they disturb it. But the bird paid no attention. It flew ceiling ward. Its bill picked at a dangling led, pulled it, then darted to another. To Sydney's mind, as he watched, came the picture of the crow as he had seen it in the velvet-hung hall in the old house wnen its bill had pulled the cord that had opened the curtains to the rootn where he had lost all recollection of things. From one cord leg to another the crow dart ed, apparently without rhyme or rea son jerking one at one side and then a leg connected with another bird be fore it flew back. With a sudden scream it flew downward to perch on the table. The squa.< of silver swung slowly downward. nesting on two bars was a heavy box. "The rubies," Colton said. "The crow was the key that unlocked them. If you will look in the tree you will probably find a clever crossing of fine wires in the hiding pace of the crow. The simple dropping of the metal feather on them closed the electric circuit that opened the first door. Clever, yes, but a man who could build the supporting frame that brought John Neilton into the Beaumonde Restaurant was clever enough to do anything." His voice became very solemn. "Anything but to solve the Higher Mystery," he said softly. Once more Thornley Colton was in the darkened library of the old. brownstone house. Once more his burning eyes were swathed in band ages. In the darkness sat the district attorney and Sydney Thames. It was several hours after the scene at the house in Poughkeepsie. Carl, still cool, was In a cell at police head quarters. Norman was in another. On the streets newsboys were yelling the damp extras with Police Captain McMann's name spread in great type over the first pages. At Poughkeepsie Silver Sandals, the girl, and Bracken were beginning new life that had op ened before them, fn an upper room of the Colton house shrimp was pet ting Rameses. It had been given him by the old woman, and was the only fee that had come for the long hours of work and risk and pain. "There is one thing that puzzled me," declared the district attorney slowly. "How did Bracken get out of the diningroom at the Beau monde?" The darkness hid Colton's smile. "He walked out," he said. "It was the simplest thing In the word. He was in a dress suit. He sauntered leisurely into the lobby when he saw that the captain's eyes were not on him after he had apparently hurried away to carry out an order of the girl. He presented a hat check that he had arranged for, got his hat, and sauntered out. Then he got the car he had left near by, and was all ready for the girl." Sydney put in a question: "But I remember that the eyes of the old man were very bright. I noticed them." "Silver Sandals told me of that, while we were waiting for the time to come for the denouement. It was a chemical he had discovered that was used by the ancient Egyptians for their mummies. He had also found another secret, in his years of re search, that the old embalmers used. It prevents stiffness of dead joints. The incense odor was another secret, Just as was the making of papvrus for all his writing. He wouldn't "have so modern a thing as paper." Silence for a few minutes, then the district attorney put another question: "The woman found the body, with the slashed wrists, beside the tub?" "Y es, but, as Carl said, she merely thought that her brother had taken the thing into his own hands. It didn't seen] strange at all to her. She was a curious woman, strange as the old man himself. And you must re member that there .vas nothing else she could do. She did not dare men tion the fact of It being suicide, be cause that would mean the police, and explanations of the things they had done. I think that was the real cause of the nervousness that she never let the girl suspect. Heading of the coroner's Inquest and the police surgeon's testimony showed her that it was murder. But still she dared do nothing. She thought that only Bracken could be guilty. I accused him of the murder to draw her out. Naturally she thought that he had stolen the crypto gram map. But she figured he had only done that to see that it was the girl who got the rubies. She told me those things at thu Bracken house Of course young Bracken was nearly crazy. He was trying to locate Nor man as the only one who could be guilty. Then, when he heard the wo man as I intended he should, he thought that she had killed her broth er because of the long-nursed scheme of revenge." "Thank God it all came out right'" .T. T a ,? fer y ent thankfulness in the official s exclamation. "This morn .my nerves were raw. X realized what a slip meant to me. Now I'm clear. McMann wi|l see that it doesn't come out. Election's only a little wwy Once more the darkness hid the smile that curved the thin lips of the blind man. "Isn't ft very true," he said quietly, that we can't go back Uv.neiJ.h 6 °' d " la , n thought he was lhing in the centuries that were dead f nd died as the Egypt died, let modernism thrust Its way in. Wall Street, money, specu ation, caused his murder, though he knew nothing of them. You have been worrying over election, ballots and newspapers. But time halts for no man, nor can it be pushed back a .h I r °?° from the desk and dipped the bandages in the solution of bora.dc acid he had been using since his return to relieve the burn ing of hours. "Sleep is the onlv 1 h t ♦ nti*' 8 worr - vln 8 me. It is only about thirty-seven hours since John Netlton sat at his table; but events have come swiftly. r m tired, verv .f, nd . my eyes haven't had sleep for fifty hours. I was up earlv day before yesterday. P pr eyes that are dead and useless, they, cause a lot of trouble a lot of trouble!" he finish ed, with grim emphasis. 3HE END. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Thursday, Next, Sept 28th Our Store Will Be Closed AH Day On Account of a Religious Holiday. That Means Two Days' Business Crowded Into One Day Tomorrow, Wed. These Special Remarkable Bargains, on Sale Tomorrow, Wed. our Pattern De- |j | ' | Special Delineator rdvteHUd^sug new Fall appai el. jjjJJ 11||||||||1|||||[[||] to investigate. f m % s ? ec H , Big e is Tomorrow Will Be Another Red-! '</ t^iji\f'\f TT TV! ®®y in the.Women's and i| 'J atp c ! M' sscs ' Ready-to-Wear Department ij 1 / HA 1 J I l\ Prices on the Newest FALL SUITS, COATS, SKIRTS 3; ® Tomorrow A OfY * a DRESSES Special For Tomorrow, Wed., Only j J , V iir j i ' . ! <>512.95 for the handsomest new „. 3> f J Wednesday,at<: Suits; worth up to $16.50. A wonderful big variety of this season's choicest new Fall creations, A ~| \AA r__ _. v, (ton T" I made of the finest Lyons' Silk Velvet, In black and colors; large <, 'jj , , "V PHILS WOitn to I sy/j. % i small Sailors, Turbans, Tricornes and Tarns; all the latest new trim- ft J s**-1 j for Suits worth to s"3*l t /W f. Sming effects of metallic ornaments; gold braids and laces, flowers f(' d. r _ , a .jkjfl St ; and feather fancies. 1 *[ >'>•*'•> for CoatS Worth tO $7.50.W 1 J //Vifef ► Untrimmed styles, in Velvet and Hatter's plush; 4iV ti f„- n nn *.„ ... t . <t., - en Iff' / / IXll' <! J black and colers; newest shapes fSjCS lOr Coats Worth tO $11.50. jjj' JJ Iff Vj/f i < > Hnflji i. ifl _ -ji TfL ec T-Jl > " r |j t|L i. rJL ill A<> for Coats worth to sls. i <1 l>l^wr j lJ 11r -w lJ w 11 " wu w u u < ► cj 5 for Serge and Silk Dresses \ HTFwVyNi ! worth to $7.50. J/7J V; I Tomorrow, Wednesday, a Special Big Sale of !► SIO.OO for Taffeta Silk Dresses, /I, \ *1 I Boys' SCHOOL SUITS $12.75 for Combination Silk i , Early purchases enables us to offer now (at 7"\ | |f[ I < and Serge Dresses, worth , \\ \ < ■ a time parents will appreciate real bargains) V. 1 ill _ ({(4 nn I \ t VV \ <> ■ the Best Wearing Boys' SCHOOL SUITS f a-t - pit.UU. I U \ \ % \ |at appealingly low prices. Prices that are at \\ fl J >S] .).<{() for Combination Silk \\ \ 1 \\ Yt \ < least a fourth below the average other stores dU\ _ " ull OUK " ,\\ \ \V \ > ask for these same School Suits. See these \\l Jo U and oerge lJreSSes, WOrth 'i\ VI \t " Remarkable Big Bargains to-morrow and get ""j J r tn t?fl (Ifl \ \\ \ your boy ready for school at the least cost to v( 1 a* - Boys' Newest Fall SCHOOL SUITS; I ;l '' J°o rt Jf t °°l 2^o'' SS SklrtS ' ' •' This sfeason's very newest novelty styles; '1 y S WOrtn tO $3.50. made of neat mixtures and cassimeres; nicely J -,l <M\ >^s/^ a " > Q X f r . r 5,1' 01 • . .1 . RT>*- m finished, in sizes 2% to 10 years. A wonderful f JT\ g. n/W H \ lor oatin UreSS bkirtS, WOrth tO $6.50. < big value. ifTT' I' l\/\ 1m 1 i SECOND FLOOR S Bo y s. New Co r du roy SCHOOL SUITS; |Yj . l|j 1 Worth to $4.00. To-anorrow, D O 3 *V.SW.VJ^V.-_-.-.-.-.-.-. . .. . . Wednesday, at 'il TT // rap li_ .. A _ __ ---- ---- .• A hoy's suit value that can't be bought any- \\ \| / S* W pi' H lIIT Ut U MI A RBfi&| I# FT All P') whre to-day for less than $4.00. Made of good || I / HM H■'HIIVI II Lll KjllS til MWllr I NH I ff* 5 corded corduroy in the nemest Norfolk styles // I '\ TTTUfc H■' ■ W BaiTl II It ■■ I WRkk t with patch pockets. Trousers are full lined and tmt " -hIV ■■' T 117 1 • ,1 n . _ ,5 Bcys^ Two Pair suits; . J Tomorrow, Wed., m the Bargain Basem't. \ Worth to $5.00. Special, <f O A 5 . ? 00<, • Hcav > C ® tto " Blankets,] 5t.25 Double Bod Size Cotton i WcHnNrlav at V ■ sk" ° F gray ; 7 colored OQ -J Blankets, in tan or gray, with 5 weanesaay, at <(;/•/V B ■ 5 borders; special, pair OJCj handsome colored borders; QQ_ i The equal for wear of two suits. Made in the Fl % $1.50 Gray Cotton Blankets; full] special pair J/OC newest Norfolk styles of best wool fabric. Two f \ % size and good, heavy quality? col-l , . i pair of trousers to match, full peg style; siy.es——> ' 5 ored horders- snecinl A Woolnap Plaid Blankets; / 6to 17 years. The biggest, best-wearing boy's D' J , ' p * 51.25 E° od . double bed size in pink, blue i suit bargain in all Harrisburg for ........ 3.05 j P 7 s cpaby Blanket; in pink and." d r ,2" COlorinB8: $1.69 # Boys' Odd School TROUSERS; Boys' New School BLOUSES; < blue animal patterns. AO l s P eclal i J Worth to 75e; Special AQf. Worth to 39c; Special OA ~ !" Special TfOCI Woolnap Plaid BLANKETS— ? w S?r'®hiM-w.?";, '■■<'. 4c t re dS/ , JSS.r l h ~ w t TiS I sorvii-eable pants your boy needs There aro extraordinary good ? extia hea/vy quality 0(1 special, pair ... V 6to 17 years. Seams all school wear; percales and madras; S size"'nink and "lue '"i h f aUtlfU ' lntllan tlcsie-ns and , and double stitched. P newest open cuffs; high collar ? f',*,,d ß ,neci n l $ 1.98 Co '°!' i '? SS; 1 lat Floor, Rear. styles. All sizes. • ? plfcids, special, pair ... w special PAROLE FOR HOVERTER Lebanon, Pa., Sept. 26. Word has been received here of the action of Department of Justice at Washington, D. C., in granting a parole, effective Monday, October 9, to Arthur J. Hoverter ,of this city, who is serving a five-year sentence in the Sunbury jail on a charge of aid ing and abetting in the defrauding of the Schafferstown National Bank *ln 1915. Hoverter was arrested on February 9, of that year following Sleeve Valve Motcr Owners Never Stop Praising It "Just completed 15,000 its flexibility is marvelous , / It has a vastly different, miles with my Willys-Knight now have a Teal cat" vastly better motor —the only motor perfect satisfaction motor that knows no carbon not one cent for repairs.'* "For hill climbing on high trouble the only motor *'Have owned eleven other 9 ear % zs certainly a wonder" whose power increases with cars—never had anything „ use —nothing else equals it. approaching it." Thousands of owners of Willys-Knights write these Come in and see it—drive "Its power surprises me, things about their cars. it —today. The Overland-Harrisburg Co. Open Evenings. 212 NORTH SECOND ST. Both Phones The Willys-Overland Company, Toledo, Ohio " Made in U. S. A." the tragic suicide of Alvin Binner, the cashier. BLASTS LIQUOR ARGUMENT Raton, N. M„ Sept. 26. The argu ment that more liquor is sold in "dry" States than in "wet" frequently ad vanced by the saloon interests, was declared "silly" to-day by Dr. Ira Landrith, Prohibition candidate for Vice-President at the last meeting of the "dry" special train campaigners in New Mexico. SEPTEMBER 26, 1916. Enola Yard Crew Changes Bring Several Promotions The Pennsylvania railroad announces the following assignment of trainmen in the Enola yards effective 6 o'clock yesterday morning: W. H. Sheaver, brakeman. 0 crew to brakeman 124 crew; W. H. Tarnian, conductor 122 to conductor 126; C. E. Minnich, brakeman 130 to brakeman 133: J. B. Reeser, brakeman 126 to brakeman 132; C. S. Keel, brakeman 0 to brakeman 126; C. W. Wallace, brakeman 0 to brakeman 126; C. J. iVi' 50 '' r " brakeman 0 to brakeman 126; W. R. McNeal, brakeman 133 to conductor 122; J. G. Brubaker, brake man 0, to brakeman 130. CHURCH 100 YEARS OI.D Marietta, Sept. 26.—One hundred years ago on September 30th, the Friends' Meeting House, at Drumore, was built, and an elaborate celebra tion will take place on Saturday. Prominent members of the original families will be present to make ad dresses, and the music will be a spec ial feature. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers