1 wonde^SGß'^T! I CIGARETTES I fa Every smoker of five cent H p cigarettes in America ought ■ I Because they are better value |j made of better tobacco, V To Get Rid of 1 & That Shiny Nose *| K* U Crexnc Toksloa (RoMtted) W ■ „ 4 Ac , ts 10 -I°™ nights Nerer V 1 it'l* ;The secret of the beautiful |v /fcj complexions of hundreds oi famous Hb fe Kennedy's. 1 Croll G Ke?U?r X and all leading dealers. FOR THROAT AND LUNGS STUBBORN COUGHS ATfD COLDS ECKMAN'S ALTERATIVE SOLD BY ALL. LEADING! DRUGGISTS Use Telegraph Want Ads FRIDAY EVENING, 4 \ Here Is the Recipe For a Perfect Woman New York, Sept. 19.—Take the legs of Anna Pavlowa, tho body of | Charlotte, Hippodrome skater, hands of Elsie Ferguson, eyes of i Jane Cowl, mouth of Billie Burke, hair of Margot Kelly, neck of Mary Garden. • Martha Hedman's nose, the chin of Mae Marsh, Dixie ! Gerard's shoulders and Ann Pen nington's feet, and you would have ! a perfect woman. At least this is the opinion of a majority of the 1 chorus girls at the Hippodrome. A | ticket to the world's series was hung up as a prize for the best selection made from eleven stage | stars to form an Ideal composite i woman. ! Pavlowa's legs ran far ahead In j the contest. Annette Kellerman's 1 ; body was a close second to Char- I lotte's and Anna Held, Maxlne El -1 i llott and Julia Marlowe crowded I Jane Cowl for the eye honors. 'V kspoß.Tin6?>nev?gj Automatic Scoreboard Big Feature at Colonial ■When you mention an automatic scoreboard that will reproduce the world's scries Karnes In their smallest detail you naturally look for some large, complicated affair that takos an expert baseball fan to understand, but tho fact that It Is possible to make a board that will reproduce every play accurately and not be a puzzle to un derstand Is going to bo demonstrated on the new automatic scoreboard that is being Installed at the Colonial The ater for the world's series, starting, Saturday, October 7. at 2 p. m. Up until this year there lias never been a place where the ladles could enjoy the games In a first class theater. The Colonial - Theater will be run In the same high class manner during the games as it Is for the motion pictures, and the ladtes will be just as welcome as the men. Motion pictures will be suspended during the game, but will be continued Immediately after It is over. Music will be furnished before the game starts and the game will be made as realistic and as exciting as is possible without being rlht on the field. BASEBALL SUMMARY YESTERDAY'S RESUI/TS National League Boston 4, Philadelphia 1. Brooklyn 7, New York 5. STANDING OF THE oiußS National League W. L. P. C. Brooklyn 94 60 ,610 Philadelphia- 91 % 62 .596 Boston 89 63 .686 New Y0rk..... 86 66 .666 Chicago 66 ' 87 .431 Pittsburgh 65 89 .422 St. Louis 61 92 .399 Cincinnati 60 93 .392 American League W. L. P. C. Boston , 91 63 ,591 Chicago 89 65 .578 Detroit 87 67 .566 New York 80 74 .619 St. Louis 79 75 .513 Cleveland 77 77 .600 Washington 76 77 .497 Philadelphia 36 117 .235 How Teams Will Look in Tomorrow's Battle Tech. Lebanon. Eyster—l. e. Nagle—l. e. (Bell) Wear—l. t Ely—L t. (Todd) Fitzpatrick—l. g. Mllberry—l. g. (Qarman) Snyder—a Clymer—c. (Gipple) Miller—r. g. Holland—r. g. (Pelfer) Lauster—r. t.CConne r. t. (Landls) Ebner —r. e. Joo Leaf—r. e. (Ramey) Lloyd—q. b. Whitney—q. b. tHornsr) Hair's—l. n. b. Bearfoss—L h. b. (Ca-otain) Phtllppelll—r.h.b. Streicher—r. h. b. Beck—f. b. (Wllsbach) John Lear—f. b. Saturday Football Games Tech High vs. Lebanon High at Island Park. 3 p. m. Central High vs. Johnstown at Johnstown. Harrisburg Academy vs. Lykens High, Academy field, at 1:30 p. m. Steelton High vs. Dickinson College Freshmen at Cottage Hill, Steelton, at 2:30 p. m. Cornell vs. Gettysburg at Ithaca. Princeton vs. North Carolina at Princeton. Penn vs. F. and M. at Franklin field. Navy vs. St. John's at Annapolis. Dartmouth vs. Lebanon Valley at Hanover. West Point vs. Holy Cross at West Point. Penn State vs. Bucknell at State College. Dickinson vs. Maryland Aggies at Baltimore. MOTOR CAR FOR MORAN Philadelphia, Oct. 6. Pat Moran and the members of the Phils were the guests at a dinner held at the Cedar Park Driving Club last night. They were the guests of Frederick T. Chandler, vice-president of the club. Besides the players. President William Baker and Directors Murphy, Hagerty and Ruch were present. All the of ficers extolled the manager and the players and the climax of the evening was reached when President Baker gave the manager a high-powered au tomobile on behalf of the shareholders of the club. Pat Moran responded feelingly and stirred the participants when he told of the adversities met by the club during the year. He declared that the pennant was lost because of the game that Umpire Rigier threw out and the injury to Bancroft In the last series of the season. PLAYERS IN BAD SHAPE Carlisle, Pa.. Oct. 6. —After the hard scrimmage against the Conway Hall eleven yesterday Dickinson College's football candidates appeared on the field this afternoon considerably stiff ened up and a few of the players had minor injuries, which, however, will not keep them out of the coming gante against the Maryland Aggies on Sat urday. While Head Coach Crdver supervised the entire squad, Dunn gave individual Instructions to the back field candidates and Reap took charge of the line material. Ingersoll, McCabe, Llns and Prlchard took likely candi dates for varsity berths, notwithstand ing the light weight of the last two, who are expected to be effective on a dry field. SECOND TEAM STAIITd TODAY Annvllle, Pa., Oct. 6. —While the var sity at Lebanon Valley College meets Dartmouth on Saturday the second team will open their season with Mer cersburg Academy. Manager Charles Gemmll ha* prepared a schedule that will be quite Interesting. It Is as fol lows: October 7, Mercersburg Academy at Mercersburg; October 14, Palmyra at Lebanon; Ootober 19, Carlisle Indians at Carlisle; October 21, P. R. R. Y. M. C. A at Annvllle; October 28, Bucknell Reserves at Annvllle; November 4, Schuylkill Seminary at Reading; No vember 11, Palmyra at Palmyra; No vember 25, Mount Joy at Mount Joy; November 30, Sunbury High school at Sunbury. STATE PRACTICES PASSING State College, Pa., Oct 6. Penn State's eleven to-day perfected Its de fense for the forward passing game It expects Bucknell will play here on Saturday. Head, Coach Harlow saw Westminster use that system of at tack successfully against his uharges, and he Is not going to be satisfied un til State's secondary defense can stop both the short passes just over the scrimmage and the long heaves down the field. The fracas between State and Bucknell will mark the resumption of football relations between the col leges after a lapse of six years. GIANTS TO KEEP M'GRAW Now York, Oct. 6. —John J. McGraw will continue to manage the New York National League baseball club next year despite any reports to the con tra rv, says John B- Foster, secretary of the club j HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Mary Roberts Rinehart's Thrilling Mystery of "The Curve of theCateijary" (Continued From Yesterday.) "That," said old Bolsaeau Impres sively, "that was a different matter. There was no need to attack the po liceman. No. monsieur. There are those whom the night makes mad. In the city It Is never night. There are lights, lights everywhere. But now comes the real night, the terrible night. And with It the mania." He made me shiver, but he did not convince me. I've said before that I don't think much of coincidence. The robber meant to leave by the main entrance 1 and had done so. You re member about the pearl. Probably ho had a machine waiting across In the park. If there was an alarm, the policeman at the awning would be In his way. So he —or they—did away with the policeman. It sounds like good sense, doesn t it? Well, it wasn't! The policeman was attacked before the hold-up, for one thing. It would be more than likely to put the management on the watch tor trouble. Was the policeman injured by a madman? Was it the same hand that Attacked him that immediately after ward committed two murders? was he wounded ifi order to facilitate the escape of the Jewel robber? Was it reasonable to suppose that such an attack would lessen vigilance at tne entrance to Boisseau's? Wouldn't It be likely to increase it? I put it down like this. I could connect tho robbery and the cutting off of the light and telephone service. I could connect the other crimes with the darkness in tho same way; the policeman, for one. had been attack ed the moment the lights went out, aa if it had been a signal. But things nnectlng with the same thing aro not necessarily connected with each other. Did the robbery and the other crimes connect? And how? I didn't get to that point without trouble. It was a new game for me and thero were some moves in it that I could not figure out. What had Miss Hazeltine to do with it? Why had she fainted when she saw the morning paper? What did the little spring belong to?- What in the name of all that flies haa she looked for in the trees? Why was her father not to see the newspaper? Was I craay to connect her, even for a moment, with the trouble? She'd been worried the day before, you re member, when nothing had happened. I left Bolsseau, who gave me an abject note to the mater, and went out. The awning lay folded on the pavement with the right-angled tear on top. The workman was survey ing It with wrath. "You're rong about the bottle, you know," 1 "Something with a sharp corner did that." "Maybe I don't know as much about bottles as you do," he said, and turned his back It was only noon and the fellows don't go to the club for luncheon until 1. I had time to look up the policeman, so I hailed a taxicab. While the driver was cranking his engine I saw something glittering in the street. For a minute I thought I'd happened on some of the loot, but when I walk ed out, it proved to be the piece of glase. I picked it up and put It in my pocket. It wouldn't hurt to find out what it came from, anyhow. Then I went to the hospital. The policeman, whose name was Schmera, was sitting up in bed, and an elderly nurse was steadying a tray across his knees. "I'm Oliver Gray, Mr. Schmere," I said. "I called In to see how you're getting along." "I'm doing fine, Mr. Gray. But they pretty near got me, all right. A bit higher up or lower down and where would I be?" The nurse picked up the tray and went out. "Ain't it just my luck?" he said. "Twenty years on the force and never In a hospital until now. and I get a nurse that'll never see 50 again!" • • • He was clearly flattered by my vis it. As I've said before, we're rather well known, and the governor comes over pretty lavishly at elections. "I'm glad it's no worse." "He tried for my stummick," aver red Mr. Schmere. "If I hadn't stoop- i ed I'd have got it, too. It's a Jap- i anese trick. I've heard of it. "Have you any idea who did it?" " i His eyes twinkled. "There's a number that might have tried." "Then you haven't any one in | mind ?" "I'll tell you how it was, Mr. Gray. ! I was standing there. The lights were going all right. AH at once they ; went out. I struck a match to look , at the time. I'm supposed to repdrt ; those things. Then something jingled to the ground at my feet. I thought \ it was my watch chain. It breaks now and then. I've got a habit of catching it on things, and it weakens It. So I stooped over and picked it 1 up—only It wasn't tho watch chain— I and then he got me." "Neither saw nor heard him. He'd : been skulking behind the awning. I | didn't think much of it at first. I straightened up, still holding the bit of spring and cursing. Then I felt the blood pouring down my arm." "The what? What did you pick up?" "A sort of steel spring." He rambled on—what the doctor had said, how he had let his accident policy lapse, the way his wife had taken the news of his injury. I hardly listened. "I'd like to see the spring, if I may." "Sure you may." he said affably. "Look In the pocket of tho coat in the closet. And take a glance at tho shoNilder. It's a neat ut." With my fingers Itching to get the spring, I humored him by examining the coat. There was a long gash across the left shoulder through mate rial and lining as if cut by a very sharp, thln-bladed knife. Around it the cloth Was stiff with blood. In the drying the cut in the material had gaped, like a wound. It made me sick. "Nice work," Schmerz grinned from his bed. "I used to know a dago who could have done it. But he's dead now- Got too proud of his work, and want ed credit for it. The spring'# in the right hand pocket." I found it. As well as I could tell from the glance I'd had of the one in Miss Hazeltlne's bag, the two were identical. "Do you want this?" I asked. "Not if you'd like to have it. I wouldn't mind giving it to the missus as a souvenir. "I'll tell you." I said. "Lend it to me, will you? I'll see that you get it back. It's a queer story, all around and I'd like to show this to the fel lows at the club." "The missus will want to hang It up scmewhere." he explained. "She's a great one for that. If I hadn't stoop ed for it, I'd have got the slash in the stummick. Sure you can take it with you, Mr. Gray. So I took the spring away with me, leaving Schmer* smoking one of the cigara X left with him, and congratu- J latlng himsolf that he'd escaped hara kiri. It had bocn a pretty full morning. I felt tired, I can toll you. And, some how or other, I felt older. I'd never had much responsibility. I suppose, if you come right down to facts, I'd pretty much played up to that time. There's nothing like a Jolt to stir a fellow up, and I'd had aeviral. I left the office, for one thing. I'd seen a man die a sickening death. And I'd found out that I was tired of the girls I knew In society, and sick of the Lot tie Murray type, and that the sort I'd like to marry lived In a white house with flower-boxes and old furniture, and thought about as much of me as she did of the office cat. Less, prob ably. The cat was useful; I wasn't. Martin and I lunched together. We generally sit at a tablo that holds a dozen or so and It's rather noisy. But neither of us was In lorm, and we sat alone In a corner. Martin was gloomy. Usually he has no nerves, but ho hadn't slept any more than I had, and he said things at tho mill were bad. The governor was In a rage, and he'd upset every plan we'd made In the morning. "I'm sick of it, Ollio," ho said. "I've a notion to get out. The way we've sche ned to land that shell or der, and now to have everything balled up—lt gets my goat." "What would you do?" "I'd look around for a while. I've saved something. I'd like to travel. Then I'd come back and settle down." "That sounds like marriage." "I might do that, too." • • • He looked at me steadily across the table. not as clever as he is, but I didn't need an interpreter to tell me what that look meant. It meant Miss Hazeltine, and a few other things. It was not n challenge. Don't make any mistake about that. It sim ply expressed a few of the things fel lows don't say to each other. Oh, I understood. And when I looked at him I felt he had a right to try to look a little into me. He's a fine-looking man, Martin is. Besides, he'd kwown her and liked her, all the time I was thinking of her as an office fixture. He had. all the brains and looks I hadn't. All I had on him was fam ily, and I knew she didn't give a whoop for my family. On the con tra ry! But I had a sort of sickening feel- j ■ng that bis and I were rather getting i ours. Poor Sis! She liked Martin from the start. I knew that. And he hated society and the sort of girl Sis was—nice, you know, but frivol- I ous. "Not standing for anything," he used to say. Poor Sis! I don't recall all that we talked about at lunch. The fellows were making an awful noise at tiie lonir table, and kidding us to beat the band. I know that I tried to persuade Jinr ' " st . ick b >' the works, at least un " ,^" ew orde , r was ofT, and that he wouldn t commit himself. Evidently the governor had been on a bluster , m °i n ?. ns ' Mar,tn looked pale, and he had set his jaw at an angle that reminded me of the Is*. C. ♦ , T ? 'if 111611 the tension I' told him the incident of the N. C. and what led i He llstenea carefully. I " pr ! n * and the Slass out of my ?h™ ' ro * exa mined them, but on him n ° VeFy Kreat impression ay-ScS? Hazeltine being where you found her is very a mple. The old man is a sort of pseudoscientist. fond of wander^ mints h niffht mnkln e expert ments. He d been out last night and she was looking for him." In a tree?" (To Be Continued.) AMTSKMKXTS mm to-day and TO-MORROW double feature BILIj ciMS, rrlcßNr, "THE PAWNSHOP." Charlie hns n wild life under th • , * n Bl 1,1.112 111 hkE In the alxteentl. oiliipter or "GI.OniA'S ROMANCE." ("A Modern Pirate") to-mokrow. io a. mTtui to x, JectJ. "" d Kdac l"nal *ub -1 Come nnd get a souvenir ruler. tin Town To-day To-morrow V I 111 Catherine Crawford AND HER 9 FASHION GIRLS Presenting; an entirely new style display arraoared by BOWMAN & CO. Front Their Local Stork. Four other excellent Keith featured. GRAM) THEATER' 14*U Derry Street Tn-NIGHT WILLIAM S. HART in "THE I'IWMAI. LURE" A l'rlaacle-Inee Production and OHA PREW in "I.OVE COMEDY" A K*ytoae Comedy nnd sperlnl uiusle n our magnificent Moller Pipe Or (rail by Brafensor C. W. Wallace, N. A. O, the eminent blind orcaoUt. OCTOBER 6, 1916. Standard Woolen Co.} WOF~IO3 North Second Street" o^ l 1 2 DOORS ABOVE WALNUT ST. ! j| \lm? CUSTOM-MADE jW 3 Piece Suits or O'Coats j | Measure sls "W3 | SATISFACTION GUARANTEED ' , I I MUST FIT OR NO SALE I , | k Standard W i Harrisburg'i Oldest Popular Pric# Tailors C NOTICE ) > 3 The shortage of Woolens and Dyestuffs has not affected J "A US, and our selection of Fall and Winter fabrics is fully as J M good in quality, and as large and diversified as ever. K i We Exhibit ♦ C i NEARLY | I A Thousand Different Patterns i J Before ordering a suit or an overcoat elsewhere, come ( | and examine our line carefully and make a comparison. Come—You will not be obligated to buy. I SAMPLES GIVEN FREE TO ALL J I In addition to our wonderful $15.00 lino, we also exhibit a selection K of Suitings uiul Overcoatinjjs at SIB.OO, $20.00, $22.50 and 925.00, a X fiood many of Uiesc arc imported and arc all equal to those tliat arc 9 sold elsewhere from $28.00 to $40.00. I ■ We make styles to suit the young, the half young and the old. 3 ■ Conservative, KnuliMi or Belter Back or any other style you may K 1 fancy, wo con make them. • "—-j 1 AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS ALWAYS \ l N | ADULTS, 10c THE BEST CHILDREN, So Hill , T |t n u c "uADT SATURDAY WORLD'S WILLIAM S. HAKT -0e Only- SERIES ed r , lurn FRANK KI3ENAN GAMES enKßiceineßt of | n "The Captive God" The on the a romantic ami picturesque story Tl^rlrolla^lhr/^' , ,vc. w . of the Went i uui uugnDrCCl . Added Attractioni . > AUTOMATIC "THE DANGER GIRL" n '* tory of ' SCORE BOAHD Funny two-reel Triangle comedy. the minny South QRPH E U M TO-night To-morrow, Mat. and Night mi 1 t / SPECIAI. CHILDREN'S MAT., 15c The Mischief VOfiEL , s B , G Makers CITY MINSTRELS With AMHAHK Al.l HO—-PEOPI |-' to SPECIAI. EEATtlltEi 00 50 The VAAIvA HULA, HI.N'KY DULA DRIfFS • MAT., 25c and BOc. GIRLS. r IMIC.O . E ve„ 25c to 1.00. Tuesday Night, Oct. 10, Seats Tomorrow ANOTHER COHAN AND HARRIS SUCCESS COHAN n —It is worth 10c and will admit you to The Victoria Theater, from 10 a. in, to 5 p. ni. Saturday, Oct. 7th, FREE. NAME ADDRESS Use Telegraph Want Ads Use Telegraph Want Ad % 17