NOTHING QUIET ALONG SUMMERDALE FRONT [Continued from first Page.] Cunningham, restaurateur, who vow ed he would eat every bit of the luncheon prepared under the direc tion of Frank F. Davenport. The party left Harrisburg at 1' o'clock this afternoon, arriving at Summerdale shortly after halfpast one. The festivities and events be gan immediately. V. H. Bracken ridge, James H. Lutz, Jr., and a host of others rolled up their sleeves and began pitching quoits, while Charles E. Reeser. manager of the: Franix Premier Company and the) Kiwanis baseball team, agitated the / : We Want an Ex-County or City Official —a Bank Employee —a School Principal —or a man of this type in short, a man of integrity and large acquaintance in Harrisburg to represent a financial house hand ling only highest-grade securities. A man posses sing these qualities is assured success and perma nent. satisfactory compensation. Your communica tion will be treated as confidential, it you so desire. Address R—. 408 Finance Bldg., Philadelphia. < TRAINED HELPERS HAVE LEFT THESE GOOD POSITIONS TRAINED HELPERS MUST TAKE THEIR PUCES WAS IS Bookkeeper Training for Aviation Corps Stenographer In Nurses Training School Cashier Over There With Marines Stenotypist With Y. M. C. A. in France Accountant In Officers Training Camp File Clerk Doing Red Cross Work Secretary Yeoman in Navy Not one bit less urgent than the needs of Civil Service are the needs of Business. Millions ."■( men and women have given up good positions in Business to heed their country's call. Millions must take their places Hero again is your opportunity to do a patriotic service and join the Nation ? productive forces. Not only is it your duty. It also is your opportunity for never have salaries beer, so high or chances for advancement so plentiful. SCHOOL OF COMMERCE Central rfnnnyhnnia'ii I ratlins aad Accredited Bu*inc*s CtUfgc Troup Building 15 South Market Square Bell 485 SKMI KOU CATALOGUE Dial 4393 SOUTTER'S 25c DEP'T STORE Buy Here Not Alone Because Prices Are Lower, but Because Qualities Are Better j The Lowest Prices You Have Enjoyed This Season In This Big Sale of SUMMER MILLINERY Smart, chic models—the best of the season—go out at ridiculous prices with the best part of the season still ahead for you. But it is riddance time with us—so you profit. Ladies', Misses' and Children's Trimmed and Untrimmed Hats For Summer Wear $2 to $2.50 value ; $2.50 values Ladies' Trimmed Hats Ladies' Trimmed Leghorns in lisere and hemp, and Hemps, sale price. sale price. 88c $1.19 $3 to $5 values $5.00 values Ladies' Trimmed Hats Ladies' Trimmed Leghorns in lisere and hemp, and Hemps, *ale price. sale price, sl-59 SI.BB $2.00 values $2.50 to $5.00 values Ladies' Untrimmed Hats Ladies' Trimmed Sailors good shapes, best colors, sale price. 69c $1.59 $3.00 to $4.00 values 75c and SI.OO values Ladies' Untrimmed Hats . Children s Trimmed Hats Leading shapes and colors sale P ricc ' Mile price. $1.19 ,59c 1 cn J nn I $1.50 to $2.50 values $1.50 and $2.00 value. Children', Trimmed Hat. Ladies Trimmed Sailors prJce sale price, | ' _ 88c 88c 50c value 25c value Peanut Hats For Outings Peanut Hats For Outings and Picnics Picnics sale price, Price, 15c • 9c SOUTTER'S If 1° *° 25c Department Store Where E 215 Market St Opposite ConrtlioDse THURSDAY EVENING, circumambient atmosphere, seeking a game. Keeser lined the members of his winning team up for a photo graph to be taken by J. Herbert Kell- Ihers. official taker of pictures. "Some team this is." ejaculated Reeser. "Last night we smashed up from I last place to second place in the In dustrial League. Watch us grow'." P. B. Rice, life insurance manipu lator, better known to Ktwunians as ' "Dutch," spent the afternoon seek ing for a pond wherein he might bathe. Rice recently took a swim ming lesson: now he was desirous of trying his knowledge. "Xle for the briny deep! 1 can sing with Harry iLjiuder l Love to Be a Sailor' " said "Dutch." of course, the well-known "Bill" St rouse was at the picnic, accom '■ panied by A. J. Simtns and Ed Marks, his two business rivals. And'| Paul Fuhrman. collector of the cur rency. made his cherubic nppci>ran<-e i 1 with 'X. Ross Walter, rising young at- ' torney anit keeper of the attendan.-e records. "Bill" Brown. Odd Fellow and furniture connoisseur, wore his three-link pin and expounded the| meaning of "F. L. T. w to an Inter- j esUng group. Doctor Harry B. Wat- j ter, a hearty-*"*"""" scout, brought with him his us. . store of reminls-' cences and fun. "Doc" Walter has won the admiraUon and love of Kl wanlans and he la generally hale-.l as the best scout of them all. "Not so different from managing u five and ten cent store," said "Ed" Chenoweth. official mixer and chief of police. "Ed" Is used to selling! combs to men like "Baldy" Peace. ( and the Job of Introducing people toj each other, didn't fame him a bit. Dan Lowe let everybody know he : was present by bringing a piece of his sheet iron along. With this he manufactured a fake thunderstorm, and occasionally the corpulent Ki-1 wanians such as Claude C. Merrill j might be seen looking anxiously to- i ward the heavens, since they couldn't run so fast when a thunderstorm hit them. "It's only Dan" was the phrase which relieved the member: of the Falstaff society. The Falstaft society is composed of the club mem bers who have surplus weight. Be longing to this class is Fred H. Mer ger . f the Senate Hotel, renowned as the happiest hotelman in seventeen counties. "T.o Fd' What would you do If; you had this bunch up in court." Charlie Burns asked Alderman E. J. Hilton. "Thirty days and costs:" was the crisp reply. "Buy the Victor and the Stein-! way'" That's the W,HV W. T. Rodgers! of the Sigler Music House boosted) his wares. The new Victor record j catalogs were by his side and every- j one who cared to listen, was made acquainted with the merits of these I instruments. To-night there will be all sorts of festivities. These will range from I orchestra concerts to bowling tour naments and penny ante, perhaps.> At any rate, the whole bunch Is look- j ing forward to a good time. PICK POCK FTS FIND SKIRTS A GRKAT AID Omaha. Neb. —Two well-known young men who admitted to the ( police they had been masquerading [ in the togs of the opposite sex were j sentenced to sixty days In Jail. The young men testified they had ! come to the city to seek employ- j ment. Dishwashing and other men ial occupations offended their aes thetic tastes, so they adopted femi-1 nine attire to ply their trade at: picking the pockets of their unsus pecUng admirers. Frequent reports to the police of female pickpockets led to their un doing. Both had gentle voices, deli cate features and the latest walk. Your silent piano—not in use —j will be taken in trade on a fine, talking machine with a nice selec-! tion of music. Troup Bros.. 31" j Chestnut street. —adv. H-AJRRJSBURG TELEGKSI STATE AHEAD IN INDUSTRIES; Commonwealth Would Easily! Win Prize For Supremacy, j Says Trade Bulletin i Pennsylvania would easily win a j priie for Industrial supremacy among • ' the states of the United States, the monthly bulletin of the Pennsylvania Manufacturers' Association, says. New j York leads the country in the amount 1 of revenue collections, but deducting j the amount collected from the Wall i Street district, which really should be credited to the whole country, the bul- j letin says, Pennsylvania will be out In i the lead. The bulletin notes with satisfac- i tion. however, that the state not only ; is doing its part along industrial lines, but it is supporting the government in ways that should make all of Its' : citizens prpud to be able to live in i the Keystone State. The bulletin says in part: "If a prire were to be awarded to I the state showing the greatest in- ' dustrial supremacy, Pennsylvania would wir it easily. "In railroading, in shipbuilding, in mining, in building and loan associa- . tiors. and most important of all, in | manufacturing and wages paid. Penn sylvania leads all the states In the Union. "A conservative estimate of the ' value of Pennsylvania's manufactur ing output for ISIT is 15.000,000.000. j For 191S it will probably be $6,500,- ■ 000.000. or between one-sixth and one ! seventh of the output of the entire I country. "There are fully 1.300,090 employes, and wages and salaries will amount to $1,350,000,000. This last item is. | however, misleading, as the wages paid in the preparation of so-called i raw material and in every phase of i production, transportation and dis i tribution would give us a much larger i payroll credited to manufacturing. "Of coal. Pennsylvania, with its pro- ] duction of practically all of the an ; thracite and over one-third the bitu- I minous mined in the entire country, is pre-eminent. "In railroad mileage, counting all tracks, and traffic, Pennsylvania leads all the states. "Again, in building and loan asso ciations. in both number and assets. I Pennsylvania leads. This is a popular 1 form of savings, and while other states | lead us in savings banks deposits, yet in actual money saved, Pennsylvania I is among the first. ] "In shipbuilding, this year. Penn ' svlvania will be first of all the states, and the banks of the Delaware within a few miles of Philadelphia has be ! come the shipbuilding center of the world. This form of manufacture will put the state still further in the i l van in the total value of production ! and wages paid. "While Pennsylvania cannot be call ed an agricultural state in comparison * i with several states of the west, yet it t I is among the first fourteen and has j !a county that exceeds in value of crops ' any other county in the I'nited States. ! . "But Pennsylvania is not only in the forefront as regards industry, the part • ! it is playing in producing the muni tions of war. but also leads in its con tribution to the country's revenue. • The revenue collections for the fiscal ' year ending June. 1918, amounted to 53.671,915.236. The two leading states were: "New York 1535.416.781 | "Pennsylvania .... 589,073,722 "But the collections from the Wall | Street district of New York were ' $457,058,250. and this should really be accredited to the whole country, as every large financial, commercial and industrial concern was more or less involved. Deducting Wall Street's share we have for the rast of New- York state $381,358,531, while the re turns from the Pittsburgh district alone were $"32,159,701. Comparing income and excess profits tax by itself we have New York state, outsfte Wall Street dis-rict, $275,308,118, while the share we have for the rest of New i $292,576,362. This is another confir mation of our contention that Penn sylvania has passed New York state :in the value of its manufacturing output. "New York City, as a financial clear ing house for the entire country, puts the Empire State in the van financi ally. but with that exception, the Key- I stone State is supreme among her sis ter commonwealths, and while not boastful nor unduly exultant, is justly proud of the position she has gained j and is maintaining. ! "Figures are not available for a comparison of Liberty Bonds or vol- j untary contributions, but Pennsylva nia has done her part in that way. as I she has in the number of men who • have gone to the front and to the training camps. In fact, our produc- | tion of coal and the output of our factories would be still greater if it i were not for the men who have vol- 1 unteered and been drafted from the i mines and mills. In this connection, i the following from the Harrisburg Telegraph of June 14, will be found most interesting: •• 'This week Pennsylvania will send to Camp for the National Army more of her sons than there were American soldiers with Washington ! when Cornwallis surrendered to him and the French at Yorktown. I " 'Last month Pennsylvania sent to , the various camps more of her boys i than there were troops commanded by ! General Scott when he marched to Mexico City. " 'ln April Pennsylvania >ent to i camps more of her youth than there i— 1 Heirs of Cattle Baron May Pay $10,000,000 Tax San Francisco The heirs of Henry Miller, California cattle baron, are liable for $10,000,000 inheritance taxes, equal shares of which are claimed by the Federal and State Government, according to a report submitted to-day to the Federal au thorities by R. P. Slogan. State In heritance Tax Appraiser. Mogan fixed the gross value of j the property left by Miller at $42.- ' 000.000. Exclusive of liabilities the j value is placed at $35,000,000. ! J. Leroy Nickel and his wife, who ' is Miller's daughter, principal heirs ' to the estate, are the plaintiffs in a i suit brought by them against Justus i Wardell, collector of internal reve nue. to prevent him collecting the | Federal inheritance tax. On toe half of the Government, Wardell re cently seized the estate for non payment of the Inheritance tax. AMERICAN LOSSES ARMY Reported Aug. 1 Total. Killed in action (in cluding 291 lost at sea) 12 2,121 Died of wounds.... 23 840 Died of disease.... 11 1.491 Died of accident and other causes .... 7 597 Wounded 63 6,681 Missing in action (in cluding prisoners) 1 705 Totals 117 12,435 MARINES Deaths 9 735 Wounded 26 1,211 Prisoners 0 5 Missing 0 79 Grand total 14,465 I Grand total 14,582 were men in both armies that fought the decisive battle of New Orleans. "'Between April 1 and July 1 it is estimated that this state will have furnished 75,000 drafted men to the Army, which is seven times the num ber of Spanish soldiers surrendered to Shafter at Santiago and six times the number that laid down arms at the capitulation of Manila. " 'Since the Hist of the year the Keystone State has sent to the camps iiJW/WTcIfEJM/WML STORE OPENS AT 8:30 A. M — CLOSES AT sp. MIBBBBBB Three Big Events For Tomorrow, Friday | AT KAtKMAV* " 1 50 Very High C ' or Afternoon and. Street Wear | f In The Most Extraordinary Sale ijk Of The Entire Summer Season Including Values HJI Tomorrow —*• Friday jfjjffu j rnk 5y.95 50.95 5Q.95 j § Satin Taffeta Crepe Meteor Crepe de Chine ij . See Comprehensive Window Display TT IS HARDI.Y necessary to dwell at length upon the Import- /ja Sj I r.noe of this sale to the women and misses of this city. The MS , ! ability to sell dresses of this high character at J7.95. sß.9} IJ I*SSsBB and $9.95. when materials and labor are high, and'when many VjSgfl/SIM S of the best materials are scarce, lies only with a store that can f,';{ TRBnaK^nV WEM dispose of a large quantity. We have not attempted to 'tell you L>-~ MSBKaSgffi* M the reason we secured these dresses at such a low figure as to ■SgHfHifSy S be able to sell them at these prices. The dresses are here Jjf Ijf You will be here, too—and early Friday. There are black, lf J \ S ff I |J 5 navy, taupe._and, rose, African brown, pearl gray and tan. jM I yj f'j v w s - zes ' rom misses' size 16 to women's size 44. //,\ ' I/( ** // NONE WJI.I. UK SENT OX APPROVAL—XONK C. O. I).—Xo j.''/ \J Ss |W \A RETI'RXS OR EXCHANGES AIVTERATIOXS l] j* j 0 1/ WILL. BE CHARGER FOR AT COST M ISS - SKCOMI I'I.OOH I ~VT *•' ' t M ' v " | Our 10 Day Muslin Underwear Festival m Starts Tomorrow Morning, Friday, Promptly at 8:30 |jg This i* one of the most iiv|>'iU-M - -;l Mns'n l • > over held in llairishtiig. It is so important that cverv woman and rill mise should buy all site needs for a long time to conic. Consider the present market pritv of materials and workmanship and tlic ou will he obliged Nj to pay later on for the same qualities and styles and yon will .see that you should buy lilHru'lv now. QJ P" EXTRA!" ] EXTRA!' ''' j ' "IsXTRA! "t " ' EXTRA*!'''J*"*EXTRAr *"'"7 EXTRA I Corset Covers jBS Camisoles I 100 Bloomers; 60 Bloomers!m I: Drawers; Muslin Drawers i TMade of fine nain- f Made of washable t Made of extra qual-fM&de of satin strip-: ui#ww) T ssook with lace and ? satin with lace trim-f ity voile, flesh color:|ed voile, well made,tNot a very large lot.f„"„ __j .1 „ Tembroidery. trim-finijng and ribbon fah sizes for womenf superb quality. AI embroidery trimmed, t moSo ,!r Tmed neck and arm-f beading, very tine f and misses. SlightlyTlimited number inTopen and closed.! Jholes Sale Price, f values. Sale Pricfe, | imperfect. Sale PriceTthe sale. Your choicejsale Price only, 'sale at only tnej 47c ; 69c j 47c i 89c I 47c t 69c ? >i ii .i>i i >ii i.i •■' ••> > i i >ii mm n,% i <■ n n■ t -■ t - ■ "■li..*.,* ■.. ■■■■t nt nil rij >mi { Charming Gowns | meiit. ' I.OT OK IS J White Skirts—Fine jStSBT" White Skirts—Km- f i.ot ok 2a EJiVKI.oPE i muslin short /lQr* an 7 J ■ % broidery trim- IO T E.WKI.OPK t'HENBb J skirts ~~med. Choice W 1.1 <& . ( HUMise hi Made of wash- | White Skirts Em- Jf jttVW M WEk'' i, \ X White Skirts Lace \ cre P? K1 sale at I Sale Price ery t.-immed , . J 1. • In the 111 A 4 ! White Skirts—Trim- White Skirts Lace f BH il 0? | i med with em- anil embrold- tfo jp | fl? "I ftrj M

245 WAISTS Sizes 38 to 42 Only ggSTJSin Sizes 38 to 44 Only I Price 39C W Vf Price 74 gi Made of white voile, -with JTJLX. -J=W *:>; \ WL—."A All new models in white and 111 lace trimming; very charmins S \ J J Bwy \ \ IK: Tt ~ striped voile; some of the models; extra special valuea |j \ \ I Ch °' teSt Waists i|j Georgette and if /V/l W ** Georgette and Crepe de Chine \ Crepe de Chine 1 4.74 |v| New shades as well as ,r 3fIES9Ep, I J I - Among the finest dress flesh and white; very fine jj ] j j V* j and waists in our M Crepe de Chine Waists ; /" / \ J A P Silk Waists 2S An extraordinary lot; in v V/M//M/Z////WiML./ A White flesh and all colore. white, flesh and new shades. J 'Br JMmH V////>//'/ I and in tt " siz es | 57.94^- ' r v g 659 VERY FINE VOILE WAISTS m* QA —— GeOrEfette and Crepe Nothing like them in the town at the price. Fine voiles. %7*T C Oeorgette and Crepe | M . r*.i • \u • . lace trimmed or plain tailored. Those large collars and neat j /~t, • _ lr , r* Qg Chine waists §inall collars, newest effects. Regardless of former price— Cie VVaiStS Very fine quality: flesh, a " s ° at one P r 'ce. Your choice Afternoon and street waists Ss riiv* and n,w A h, A > 269 FINEST VOILE WAISTS AT&W $1.74 sM ne,al Wea ww^ ' ' %k ? /yf This is a lot In which you will be able to pick up two and JK M? O / A PRICE %J •* Jf three. The assortment is very good. All sizes in the lot. PRICE %P £l •/ Tr KIRST KIiOOR —— | Three Big Sales If" Three Big Sales 1 Tomorrow Friday | \^jii;|^;M ji■ Tomorrow Friday OPENS AT 8:30 A. M.—CLOSES AT 5 P. M. WfMiMJMJMfmm under the call of the nation about as j many men as were in the Army of Napoleon, at Waterloo. " 'These figures represent only the men who have been drafted from Pennsylvania. They do not Include the men who have enlisted In the Regular Army, the Navy or the Marine Corps, or the young men who have become officers. " 'When counted with the National AUGUST 1, 1918. i Guardsmen, who volunteered and ' the men who went into the Regular 1 Army and Navy since the war began. ; the drafted men make the share of I Pennsylvania In our armed forces , greater in number than the two | armies at Gettysburg. " 'And all this from a state which | Is furnishing one-tenth of the muni- j tions and Kivlng as freely of natural | resources as of manhood.' " : ALLEN'S FOOI-tASt 808 11. 1 SV heu jour ibi'it pinch or !"' nd bun tons ache bo that you are tired all Over* Jp* Alien* Foot—Kae h antlKipilcoowdar Icrtie (liiikun Into the shoes and (prinkM In the toot- I bnth It will take the •tlna ont °fco™nd bunions and give Instant relTet to Tired, Ach ing, Swollen Tender feet Ow 100,000 psck aM*B arc being need by the Allied and German 1 troops si the front. Bdld everywhere, 86c. DoiJt accept any •üb*UuU. 5