open a box of Sunshine Graham Crackers and eat them with jam or jelly. Sun shine Grahams have the flavor 51. of perfect baking that's found in all 8 Blscrotts j! There are over 350 kinds of Sunshine =r: Biscuits, so many tl at there's al- . ways a Sunshine surprise in store s=r for you. You can buy a big- assort- pf" ~ ment at your dealer's. Just look . for his Sunshine Rack. (okpant NLfocjm \ I AVE RAPE °FIOtIHE3 | L| Kg STOUt'hCURES I W. B. Nuf orm Corsets W. B. Reduso Corsets give Style, Comfort and perfectly make ' ar S e tips disappear; bulky fitting Gown. Long wearing, they waist-lines more graceful ; awk • it. • . i ward bust-lines smaller and assure the nfcnost .n a cornet at ncater> and hayc th<J corset „ most Economical Price. $3.00 comfort with the first fitting, to SI.OO. $5.00 and S3.GO. WEINGARI E? BROS., Inc. New York- Chicago, San Francisco a Discovtry mm, 'about your yjry TEETH —riiT MMiaMMMMi - Tonight, if you will closely examine your teeth after / j&X brushing them, you will make a surprising discovery. JPsf\ Though you have been cleaning your teeth regularly, you will find an accumulation of tartar on the enamel and bits of food de j posit hiding between the crevices. Your dentifrice has not been Jfcj|F 1\ REALLY CLEANINGI Or sjJ \ Loss of teeth is usually dne to one of two conditions —Pyorrhea |EEr<\ or Decay—both of which ordinarily develop only in the mouth / 7 where germ-laden tartar is present. £ / / CLEAN your teeth—REALLY CLEAN them! Senreco, a den ' Jl tal specialist's formula will do it. Senreco embodies specially ' I prepared, soluble granules unusually effective in Jl cleaning away food deposits. Moreover, it is partic ularly destructive to the germ of Pyorrhea. J Go to your dealer today and get a tube of Senreco— JTX keep your teeth REALLY CLEAN and protect your. "S self against Pyorrhea and decay. Send 4c to Senreco 304 Walnut St,, Cincinnati, Ohio, for trial package. W * "PREPAREDNESS" . 11l J ffM jjf Thi tooth paste that REALLY CLEANS V'y t WASHINGTON D.C OPPOSITE CAPITOL and UNION STATION Abaolutalr New aad Strletlr Modern Renowned for its High Service and Low Rates. A EUROPEAN PLAN Room per day $ 1.50 L without bath and op 153" w,th bath u,d " p iflSt All Rooms Outside ffßiiWlß S i £9| Booklet (or the ailcing \V. T. KNIGHT. Manager UMawma aim WEDNESDAY EVENING. jfovefffisurance i 4 Barl (2s\ Derr /H|\ M Copyright, 1914, by th- Bobba-Morrill Co. && && &&&&S&S&S8&&0&S&&&S&& Continued. "If we were back on the train," she j said, "and nil that followed could be | different—and Harrowby had never been—l might"— "You might—yes?" "I might not say what I'm going to say now, which Is—hadn't we better return to the hotel?" j "I'm sorry," remarked Mlnot "Sorry I had the bad taste to say what I have at this time—but if you knew and 1 could understand—which you can't of course— Yes. let's go back to the hotel —the shortest way." "Considering what you have told mo ! of—Harrowby," she said, "I shall be j leaving for the north soon. Will you , look me up In New York?" "Thank you," Minot said. "It will be a very great privilege.'' Cynthia Meyriek entered the eleva tor, and out of sight in that gilded cage I she smiled a twisted little smile. Mr. Minot beheld Mr, Trimmer and his "proposition" basking in the lime light of the De la Pnx, and, feeling in no mood to listen to the publicity man's triumphant cackle, he hurried to the veranda. There he found a bellboy calling his name. • "Gen'le*iun to see you," the boy ex plained. He led the way back Into the lobby and up to a tall athletic looking man with a ruddy, frank, attractive j face. | The stranger held out his hand. [ "Mr. Mlnot?" he asked. "How do j you do, sir? I'm very glad to know you. Tromised Thacker I'd look you up nt once. Let's adjourn to the grill froom. I'm the owner of the yacht In ' the harbor, which somebody has re christened the Lileth." "Yes—l thought BO," Mlnot replied. | "I'm mighty glad you've come. A Mr. Martin Wall is posing as the owner just at present" i "So I learned from Thacker. Nervy lfld, this Wall. I live in Chicago my self—left my boat—Lady Evelyn, I called her—ln the North river for the winter in charge of a caretaker. This Wall, It seems, needed a boat for a month and took a fancy to mine." The stranger leaned across the table. "In the meantime," he said, "I happen to be interested In another matter. What's all this talk about George Har rowby coming back to life?" "Well, there's a chap here," Minot explained, "who claims to be the elder ! brother of Allan Harrowby. His cause Is in the hands of an advertising ex pert named Trimmer." "Yes. I saw a story in a Washing ; ton paper." "This morning George Harrowby, so j called, confronted Allan Harrowby and | denounced Allan himself as a fraud." i The man from Chicago threw back j his head, and a roar of unexpected laughter smote on Minoi's hearing. "Good Joke," said the stranger. "No Joke at all. George was right— at least, so it seems. Allan Harrowby i cleared out this evening." "Yes. So I was told by the clerk in I there. Do you happen to know—er— I Allan r j "Yes. Very well indeed." "But you don't know the reason he | left?" j "Why," answered Mlnot, "I suppose because George Harrowby gave him twenty-four hours to get out of town." Again the Chicago man laughed. "That can't have been the reason," he said. "I happen to know." "Just how," inquired Mlnot, "do you happen to know?" "I fancy I neglected to introduce my self," he said. "I make automobiles in Chicago, and my name's Geofrge Har rowby." "You—you"— Minot's head went round dizzily. "Oh, no," he said firmly, "I don't believe it." The other's smile grew even broader. "Don't hjame you a bit, my boy," he said. "Must have been a bit of a mix up down here. Then, too, I don't look like an Englishman. Don't want to. I'm an American now, and I like it." "You mean you're the real Lord Har rowby ?" "That's what I mean—take it slowly, Mr. Minot. I'm George, and if Allan ever gets his eyes on me I won't have to prove who I am. He'll know, the kid will. But, by the way, what I want now Is to meet this chap who claims to be me—also his friend, Mr. Trimmer. "Of course you do. I saw them out in the lobby a minute ago." Minot rose. "I'll bring them in. But—but"— "What is it?" "Oh, never mind. I believe you." Trimmer and his proposition still adorned the lobby, puffed with pride and pompousneßs. Briefly Minot ex plained that a gentleman in the grill . i Give Him for Xmis a UNITED sl-50 1 Ui' Caps, $2 & $3 Velour Hats, $3.50 fer OAK BRAND 92 lIAT9 factory to J OB i atom cv nr j wkcrr Ca aat • Csul United Fa! Stores ' Third ■nd Market Sta. , > HARRISBURG 88699 TELEGRAPH room dtsiivu to be Introduced, and graciously the two followed after. The Chicago George Harrowby rose as he saw the group approach his table. Sud denly behind him Minot heard a voice: "My God!" And the limp English man of the sandwich boards made a long, lean streak toward the door. Minot leaped after him and dragged him back. "Here. Trimmer." he said, "youi proposition has chilblains." "What's the trouble?" Mr. Trimmei glared about him. "Allow me," said Minot. "Sir—oui leading vaudeville actor and his man ager. Gentlemen—Mr. George Harrow by of Chicago!" "Sit down, boys," said Mr. Harrowby genially. He indicated a chair to Mr. Trimmer, but that gentleman stood, his eyes frozen to the face of his proposi tion. The Chicago man turned to that same proposition. "Brace up, Jenkins," he said. "Nobody will hurt you." But Jenkins could not brace. He al lowed Minot to deposit his limp body in a chair. "I thought you was dead, sir," he mumbled. "A common mistake," smiled George Harrowby. "My family has thought the same, and I've been too busy mak ing automobiles to tell them different ly. Mr. Trimmer, will you have a— what's the matter, man?" For Mr. Trimmer was standing, pur ple, over his proposition. "I want to get this straight," he said with assumed calm. "See here, you rrlnging cur—what does this mean?" "I thought ho was dead," murmured poor Jenkins in terror. '"You'll think the same about yourself in a minute—and you'll be right," Trim mer predicted. "Come, come," said George Harrow by pacifically. "Sit down, Mr. Trim mer. Sit down and have a drlnls. Do you mean to say you didn't know Jen kins here was faking?" "Of course I didn't," said Trimmer. He sat down on the extreme edge of a chair, as one who proposed to rise soon. "All this has got me going. I never went round In royal circles be fore, and I'm dizzy. I suppose you're the real Lord Harrowby?" "To be quite correct, I am. Don't you believe it?" "I can believe anything—when I look at him," said Trimmer, Indicating the pitiable ex-claimant to the title. "Say, who is this Jenkins we hear so mucU about?" "Jenkins was the son of my father's valet," George Harrowby explained. "He came to America with me. We parted suddenly on a ranch In south ern Arizona." "Everybody Bald you was dead." per sisted Jenkins, as one who could not lose sight of that fart. "Yes? And they gave you my letters and belongings, eh? So you thought you'd pose as me?" "Yes, sir," confessed Jenkins humbly. CHAPTER XV. • "A Rotten Bad Fit." INOT rose early on Monday VI morning and went for a walk along the beach. He had awak __J encd to black despair, but the sun and the matutinal breeze elevated his spirits considerably. Where was Allan Harrowby? Gone, witU Jjla wed. ding little more than twenty-f<?Ur hours away. If he should not retufti—golden thought. By his own act he would for feit his claim on Jephson, and Minot would be free to— To what? Before him In the morning glow the great gray fort rose to crush his hopes. There on thos? slanting ramparts she had smiled at his declara tion—smiled and labeled him foolish. Well, foolish he must have seemed. But there was still hope. If only Allan Harrowby did not return. The first man Minot saw when be re turned to the lobby of the De la Pax was Allan narrowby, his eyes tired with travel, handing over a suit case to an eager black boy. What was the use? Listlessly Minot relinquished his last hope. He fol lowed Harrowby and touched his arm. "Good morning," he said drearily. "You gave us all quite a turn last night. We thought you'd taken the advice you got In the morning and cleared out for good." "Well, hardly," Harrowby replied. "Come up to the room, old man. I'll ex plain there." "Before we go up," replied Minot, "I want you to get Miss Meyrlck on the phone and tell her you've returned. Yes—right away. You see—last night I rather misunderstood—l thought you weren't Allan Harrowby after all—and I'm afraid I gave Miss Meyrlck a wrong Impression." "By gad—l should have told her I was going," narrowby replied. "But I was so rattled, you know"— He went into a booth. His brief talk ended, he and Minot entered the elevator. Once in his suit, Harrowby dropped wearily Into a chair. "Confound your stupid trains. I've been traveling for ages. Now, Minot. I'll tell you what carried me off. Yes terday afternoon I got a message fron my brother George saying he was ui his way here." "Yes?" CTo be continued.] K, Less for ® e t l 6r Quality Millar &5T||K Santa Claus to You This Christinas I Follow out the above suggestion. You'll be glad—because our advice and suggestions will be of practical value—because our prices mark true economy. A gift of furniture is a !l gift of thoughtfulness. Our big store is filled to overflowing with good things awaiting jj your arrival. Our efficient salesmen can serve you promptly and well. Selections made now h will be held for Christmas delivery if you wish. Make your first stopping place on your shopping tour —we know then you'll make it your headquarters. Buy Your Gifts on Credit—Pay Us as Best Suits You The Largest and Most Complete Line of Smoking Stands | and Humidors In the City--Prices from $1.25 to $25.00 fji '|pij I'lti'j if I " V I As a Christmas Present B| 9 It is at the same time useful and inexpensive. The minds of people H $ 1 ' are turning towards the giving of useful gifts that will p easantly re- I mind the recipient of the giver for I 'JJ years to come. ' (pairs, Beautiful Mahogany Nut Bowls Useful and iJ Make Acceptable Xmas Gifts ornamental I 517.50 to $50.00 j|| Let a Columbia Sing the Xmas Carols in Your Home ' iB "M"i The minstrels who sang of the "tidings of great ■ -** —l | jtiKSI joy" in the days of long ago have been supplanted by 1 JHI the minstrel of modern days, the IHH I* COLUMBIA FMN 1 GRAFONOLA ■ i/lrlifffii Sh| The Columbia Grafonola truly brings "tidings of ' Mikh|| I 11 J 8 Brag 11 great joy" at Christmastide. There is no gift quite fPgjl like it. No gift so welcome, no gift that could bring a more lasting joy. The Columbia ffigfl Grafonola is the "gift supreme." W\\ A gift around which more \ \ II dreams are woven, which brings f/|y 1 II ** more pleasure day after day, than II 1 91 J I any other gift you may give or re ceive, and it is a gift within the I ) means of all. $15.00 to $250 Miller & Kadesi FURNITURE DEPARTMENT STORE 7 North Marke The Only Store in Harrisburg That Guarancees (T JH | to Sell on Credit at Cash Prices DECEMBER 13, 1916. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers