This Guaranteed I Frances *Bacon it 1 "Play er-'Ptano 9 Here is a player-piano (equal in quality to any player selling anywhere ! 11l at $500) available through this store's cash buying facilities and enormous business at the low price of $395. Made and guaranteed by the famous Auto piano Company with every necessary device for musical expression, a hand some case and unusually sweet tone, surely this instrument represents the I maximum of quality at a minimum price. Think of it 111 A Cash Sends One Home Payment of Only JL Balance; $2 Weekly I —with 12 music rolls of your own choice, bench, scarf, membership to our roll library and two tunings included free. But—come today or tomorrow V° u want yours now they're hard to get and quick to go. Other makes $455 to SIOSO. I j Want a Vicfrola for I llli Come in today or tomorrow choose any style llWiJi 1 Victrola sls to $250, make your own selection of j 1 records, pay cash only for your records, have | t ' lC comp ' ete out^t sent home at once, begin paying | Choose the New Edison if you prefer. Week-End Sale of Guaranteed Used Pianos Henning, oak upright $145 Kimball, mahogany upright . .$235 Lockhart, mahogany upright, $155 Merrill, mahogany upright . .$265 Schubert, oak upright SIBO Poole, mahogany upright ...S2BO Stieff, mahogany upright $l9O Hardman, mahogany upright, $290 Terms to Suit Your Convenience J. H. TROUP MUSIC HOUSE Your Old Tires ■ Made New Again Make* no difference how old they W/jh. (jT arr *•>' ■ new and Improved Y////1 / \ DOI BI.K TREAD SVSTFJM we K lve lw// fVvjH _ you practically n new tire—and nave Tfbl ij* / / \ I fj you many dollars. Send that old tire V\ \ M < I*" I \l II J>l • U"j— ee what we do with it at ■II R. K.TIRECa 1401 BIDOR AVE., PHII.A. ~~7\ \ JWW/ If you hnve no old tires wo will _ / furnish you with a complete double , Th#> fKilrirpn / HHI tread tire at 20 per cent, above the 1 Ilv vnilUrcu / A above price _ . / , Wanted. Good Proposition. JbllJOy f \ TfaiSirjninfi KINGAN'S M Sliced Bacon Its purity and wholesomeness keep their young constitutions vigorous and robust UIMABM ABHAI AM m. 4b KINGAN PROVISION CO. 421-425 S. Second Street, Use Telegraph Want Ads ■' ■ Use Telegraph Want Ads Use Telegraph Want Ads FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAM OCTOBER 13, mt. WILL LAY CORNER STONE OF TEMPLE Chisuk Emmuna Congregation Ready to Seal Foundation of New Synagogue With solemnly YV \ impressive aerv \\A . | ices the comer stone of the new CsOvt|B| Chisuk Emmuna Sw,JKjIBB synagogue at I \iN Sixth and Forster j hj AI ■{' y- streets will be Hv&HiiHffl Am >H ' d Sunday aft-j Prel i m i n a r y | to the formal de parture of the congregation from the old synagogue at Filbert street and North alley will be held at 1:30 o'clock and at the close of this pro gram the congregation of one of the oldest orthodox Jewish churches in the city will march to the site of the new home at Sixth and Forster streets. Hundreds of members and their friends will attend the services and the time has been impressed particu larly on the guests from out of town. Joseph C. Claster, chairman of the building committee, will preside at the exercises, just as he officiated some eight or nine years ago when the Filbert street synagogue was erected. The speaker of the afternoon at the old synagogue will be Rabbi W. Margolies who will come on from New York City especially for the purpose; at the actual laying of the corner stone on the new site, Rabbi Louis J. Haas, the Ohev Sholom will speak. Into the cornerstone will be placed the roster of the whole congregation in scribed on parchment. Copies of the by-laws and constitution will be among the other articles that will be sealed away in the stone by the rabbi. The new synagogue is being erected on the site of the old Central high school annex, the building that at one time was the St. Paul's Episcopal church. The building committee have been pushing the work as rapidly as pos sible with a view to getting the edifice under roof before the winter sets in. Every member of the committee has been equally busy in preparing for Sunday's celebration. To Name Winners in Wharton Campaign At a smoker in the rooms of the Wharton Study Club, 213 Walnut street, to-night prizes will be awarded to the winners in the student cam paign by Wendell P. Ralne, secretary of the Harrisburg Extension of the University of Pennsylvania Wharton School. Members of the club worked like so many beavers to procure freshmen for this year's school year and the men who got the most students will receive University watch fobs. Fifty seven students were enrolled to date. Registrations will be accepted until next Monday evening and Secretary Raine said this mormng that any young man or woman who intends to take advantage of the university training must enroll before that time. Commissioners Admit 23 More Applicants on the Registration Records Twenty-three of the twenty-nine ap plications for registration by electors' who hadn't been able to formally appear before the registrars, were approved to day by the County Commissioners, and the names will be placed on the books. The other half dozen were refused be cause of technical errors. The commissioners put into effect to day the new ruling which allows elec tors to register who had been unavoid ably absent or ill, on the final registra tion day only. CAPT. KOENIG COMING BACK Amsterdam, Oct. 13, via London. According to the Hamburger Nach richten Captain Paul Koenig, of the German submarine Deutschland, re plying to a telegram of congratulations from his native town on his voyage to the Untted States and return, said he was busy with preparations for a sec ond trip across the ocean which would soon begin. ISRAEL TYSON Funeral services for Israel Tyson, aged 29, of Millersburg, who died at the Harrisburg hospital yesterday from typhoid fever, will be held at his home Sunday afternoon. The body was taken to Millersburg by Undertaker Hauck. Wilson Denies Democrats Have Sectional Party Indianapolis, Oct. 13.—President Wil son yesterday replied to the Republi can charge that the Democratic party Is a sectional party with a statement that "any man who revives the issue of sectionalism in this country is un worthy of the confidence of the nation." The President came to Indianapolis to address meetings of good roads ad vocates and farmers' review an automo bile parade celebrating "Good Roads I>ay" of the Indiana centennial and at tend: a nonpartisan luncheon of leading Indlanlans. He was seen by crowds which packed the streets for blocks. In his first set speech he spoke of the good done by highways In preventing sectionalism. The Coliseum at the fair grounds, where he delivered his first address, had many vacant seats In the rear, but the hall In which he spoke later was filled. He also spoke briefly at a lunch on given him by Governor and Mrs. S. M. Ralston, of Indiana. The second set speech was devoted to a discussion of the works of the Democratic admin istration for the farmers of the nation. Tells Delegates This Is Day of Great American Missionary Opportunity St. Loul9, Oct. 13. This is the day of American missionary oppor tunity In the Western Hemisphere, the Right Rev. Arthur S. Lloyd, of New York, president of the Board of Mis sions of the Protestant Episcopal Church, told delegates to the Church's tercentennial convention to-day when ho presented the report of his board. He said the catastrophe which has thrown Europe into chaos has brought North and South America together in a way not hitherto deemed possible. For this reason, he asserted, the con vention should adopt a recommenda tion of the board of missions that a bishop be consecrated for Panama. SATO PRESENTED Washington. Oct. 13.—Aimaro Sato, the new Japanese ambassador, waa offi cially presented to-day to Secretary Lansing and other officials at the State Department. He probably will present credentials to President Wilson when he returns to Washington far the winter* fpDfO Young men's clothes aS Schaffner & ( Marx make them "T)bV W UST because a man's young, I CS I U tf he wants particularly lively / I L style in his clothes; and all of us, W 111 L |r\ /v makers and retailers, are trying II I 1 \\\ to see h e gets it. I I H \ V But just because he's young is ll f/iCJf no reason why he should not I 1 ? g e t good quality with his smart I uJ style; on the contrary, it's all JISL the more reason for being very Copyright ll*rt Sch*f[ner !l Mux r p T 1 1 • careiul about quality. \ < -*• y s-vttst t i , , r That's the real substance of the Y OU LL find here lots of ~*.u— 4.u- argument of the new models in other things men wear 6 besides clothes; sometimes Varsity Fifty Five suits. these other things—the right ti j i • . 1 b & 1 hese new models are in the snap color or pattern of a cravat; . . . , , r , , . , piest style; with the sort ot quality the height or shape of a hat; , • .• j • , . that is real economy. You 11 find the correct idea in a shirt; — all these may be of much im- these the sort of clothes that pay portance to the well-dressed you a profit. man ' Hart Schaffner & Marx Better let us be your pur- Suits and Overcoats veyors in these things. 00 H. Marks & Son 4th & Market Streets SPHINX CLUB ORGANIZES The Sphinx Club at the Harrisburg Academy was organized yesterday for Fall and winter work. The program will Include a series of lectures, special trips and other interesting features. These officers were elected: President, Samuel Phillips; secretary and treasurer. William Bruce; faculty representative, H. E. Smith. Members present: Robert Shreiner, Jr.. Frank Payne, Jr.. Henry Moore. William Bruce, Samuel Phillips, William Walter. Central High Notes At a meeting of the Junior class, of Central High, In chapel yesterday, Harry Good was re-elected president. Miss Ida Yoder, secretary, was also re elected. At a meeting of the H. A. Society, this evening, at the home of W. Thomas |PMI|I1IIII!!IIIMIII IIIIIIIMIII IIIIIIIWIIIIIIIIII 11l 11l IIBfS j A Timely Sale of Curtains jl J and Drapery Materials || M This announcement, coming as it PlßjpffW~ M 5" W 1 ! i| § does at the very time when the Fall |Ba:iffl Bm : M r g cleaning is in progress will be of spe- 1 M cial import to the thrifty housekeeper. Bss JMjIM I Here one may select from a remarkably | KB *'!|||| attractive stock of the celebrated Sunfast ' - 'g H Draperies and materials. All are this sea- JL I 1 ) 'g H son's poods—all perfect. In green, brown, IJ J = rose, blue, gray, verdure and Chinese effects. f H Note the rare savings: .*** Special To-morrow Only f ibdL_ §55.00 Curtains Special at ig $6.50 Curtains Special at , $>5.00 !& M SB.OO Curtains Special at $6.50 M 75c Sunfast materials, all colors are special at 500 H Extra Special Values Q Sunfast Materials, 50 inches wide, at $1.25 per yard Sunfast Materials, 50 inches wide, at $1.50 per yard H Sunfast Materials, 50 inches wide, at $2.00 per yard | Home Craft Week Ends To-morrow But one day remains of the HOME CRAFT WEEK which we devote to explain- 1 j! ing the superiority and artistic advantages of. Quaker Craft Laces and Quaker Craft 1 I Lace Curtains over all others, for enhancing the beauty of the home through window decorations. 1 Quaker Craft Lace Curtains, at, per pair $2.50 up ! 1 Quaker Craft Laces, at, per yard 29£ up | GOLDSMITHS I North Market Square j Senseman, Jr., 154 Sylvan Terrace, new officers will be electecr. Owing to exceptionally heavy busi ness for the business department of the Argus, Professor H. G. Dibble appointed Arthur Gardner, 'lB, and Ross Huffman, 'l9, as additional assistant. They were recommended by the faculty adviser and treasurer. Professor Karl E. Rich ards, and Business Manager Caldwell. Miss Sue Applegate, elected to teach elocution during the illness of Miss An nabels Swartz, announced yesterday that exceptional interest Is being shown by candidates for the Junior Boys' Ora torical Contest. TO TRY CHICAGO CHIEF Chicago, 111., Oct. 13. Warrants , charging Chief of Police Charles C. Healey with conspiracy and with mal feasance In office will be applied for to-day by State's Attorney Hoyne. i "I shall probably ask for the arrest i of other persons," said Mr. Hoyne. The charges are said to have their root in the chief's administration of the law with regard to vice, saloons and gamb ling. ROYAL LAUNDRY COMPANY NOW OWNS IMI*KIUAI, CO. PHOPKRTY Chief among to-day's realty transfers was the formal recording of the sale of the old Harrisburg Imperial Laundry Company's property, in Howard street, to the Royal laundry Company, ot which Charles A. Klemm is proprietor. The property changed hands six months or more ago and the Royal Company has been doing business on the place. The formal transfer, however, was re corded to-day. The consideration was JIO.OOO. The only big record was the recent sale of a tract of ground in Lower Swatara township from the Harrisburg Real p:state Company to the Keystone Fair Association. The consideration was given as one dollar. 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers