10 FRESHMEN HAVE HARD TIME TO DINE IN PEACE [Continued from First Page.] fleers of the class responded to va rious toasts and the banqueters en- Joyed a delicious repast, served un der the direction of Maitre J'hotel Davidson. Perhaps the most dramatic escape in the history of the college was that of a young man locked in his sec ond-story room by upper classmen. Leaping to the ground, he managed to reach the house of a friend, where he donned woman's attire and walked to the waiting auomobile. So successful was his disguise that Sophomores patroling the street The Season's Newest Styles For Women and Misses Will Be Shown At Our Shop Tomorrow A -We have just arrived from our weekly trip to New York and have secured many additional charming garments to make our stock new and fresh and com plete for Saturday's selling. Among the choice models which we will offer at low prices are: The New Capes and Dolmans We have dozens of these to show and each is a very exclusive model, but very moderate in price. Every wanted material, such as Poiret twill, velour, silvertone, crystal cloth and serge. SPECIAL SERGE CAPES, snappy new models at $15.00. OTHER CAPES AND DOLMANS at $19.50, $25.00, $29.50. EXCLUSIVE MODELS, one of a kind, at $35.00, $39.00 up. Many More New Suits Will Be Ready Saturday Suits that are different. That is what we hear from our customers every day. So for Saturday we again will show many new models in high-class tailored models, blouse ef fects, and straight-line styles. These suits are shown in tricotine, serge, poiret, twill and silvertone. Exclusive styles. One suit of a kind. $35, $39 and up Suits that you will pay $35 to $4O elsewhere, shown here at $25.00 and $29.50. Come in and prove to your own sat isfaction that you will save. Wonderful Suits at $25 and $29.50 New Georgette Waists At $4.95 and $5.95 Fresh, new shipments that will "catch the eye" of the woman who is looking for exclusive styles SfIARRfSBURG.PA. A Phonograph is Always JtjjMm Ready* Always Pleasing FT - serves as a source of enter 'lT s® takiment and education. The d e phonograph which because ofits per , fection is recognized as the leader is CLCAft AS I^ V< C d j Tbe Sonora plays all dtac reoasds • .sS*' " be played and y* V the So norm is guaranteed. Q QV* The SCOOT* has many valuable V J*. features which are patented and lß3wlSg&l|^B v" exclusive, Mch aa the "bolge" EK|Win /Y design lines, the special long MU^S|H| running motor, the spring con- a3H<lll|l trol, the motor-meter, tbe tone BjMjwWS eA. control at the sound aooree, etc. V"*> V < Ay The Sonera will delight 70a. I V aiy for years. It is. Indeed, the f I phonograph beanU/oL \J Santa am biffcnt acara far taw at Paaaaa Pacific Expatibw Gaff and JUor lit Somora! $5O to $lOOO YOHN BROS., 13 NORTH FOURTH STREET Sonata Is Beaaaad and npwtis ander BASIC PATENTS of the phonograph India try I IBS Highest Clan Talking Machine in the World FRIDAY EVENING. HAIUUSBURQ TELEGRTAJPEC MARCH 21, 1919. Wondered who the attractive young lady was. Those present Included the follow ing: Misses Meta Burbeck, Helen Daugherty, Marion Heflfleman, Paul ine Daugherty. Ella Dundore. Doro thy Engle, Mary Gingrich, Gertrude Gingrich, Maryland Glenn, Ruth Evans, Gladys Hower, Josephine Hershey, Ruth Helster, Anna Stern, Effie Hffcbs, Verna Hess, Ethel Leh man, Pearl Light, Josephine Stlne, Miriam Cassel, Lena Angel. Messrs. H. Bender, J. R. Bowman, H. Bender, J. D. Daugherty, J. Gingrich, Myer Herr, Ray Hershey. Oliver Heckman, Adam Miller, Russell O. Shadel, John Snider, Paul Tschudy. Prosper Wirt, Clifton Cole, Harry Fake, Calvin Feniel and John Cretznlger. Miss Urich and Professor Harlng chaper oned the class. BELGIUM'S KING VISITS PERSHING [Continued from First I'a go.] ■wore crowded with visitors from nearby towns, including many Amer ican troops from neighboring canton ments. Nearly all the French and American officers of the staff were present and the American headquar ters band furnished the music. Hun dreds of school children lined the City Hall square, waving Belgian and French flags. . • Royalty Reviews Troops The Belgian royalties, after the reception at the City Hall had been concluded, went to the Courhan air drome and reviewed the Eighty-first American division. ' They . then re turned to the chateau and took tea with General Pershing, his staff, the local, civil and military authorities and the chiefs of the allied missions. British Air Forces to Have Assistance of Weather Man in Flight By Associated Press. London, March 21. All the re sources of the British air force's Weather Bureau will be at the dis posal of the aviators competing in the trans-Atlantic flight, according to a statement made to the Mall today by Major Gondle, chief of the bureau. A twenty-four-hour forecast for every competitor will be attmepted, being based on reports from experts at St. Johns, Lisbon and the Azores. A British battleship will also be sta tioned between Sa. John's and the Azores to co-operate with any Brit ish or American aviator making an official attempt to cross the ocean by airplane, he said. SOCIETY TO MEET The annual meeting of the Wom an's Home Missionary Society of the Market Square Presbyterian church, will be held Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock in the church parlor. A so cial hour will follow. Tea will he served, the executive committee act ing as hostesses. SAVE YOUR HAIR AND BEAUTIFY IT WITH "DANDERINE" Spend a few cents! Dandruff dis appears and hair stops coming Try this! Hair gets beautiful, wavy and thick in few moments. If you care for heavy hair, that glistens with beauty and is radiant with, life; has an incomparable soft ness and is fluffy and lustrous, try Danderine. Just one application doubles the beauty of your hair, besides it im mediafely dissolves every particle of dandruff: you cannot have nice, heavy, healthy hair if you have dandruff. This destructive scurf robs the hair of its lustre, its strength and its very life, and if not overcome it produces a feverishness and itching of the scalp; the hair roots famish, loosen and die; then the hair falls out fast. If your hair has been neglected and is thin, faded, dry scraggy or too oily, get a small bottle of Knowl ton's Dandarine at any drug store or toilet counter for a few cents; apply a little as directed, and ten minutes after you will say this was the best investment you ever made. We sincerely believe, regardless of everything else advertised, that if you desire soft, lustrous, beauti ful hair and lots of it —no dandruff —no itching scalp and no more falling hair—you must use Knowl ton's Danderine. If eventually— why not now? BON-OPTO Sharpens Vision Sooth;, and hetl. the eye. tnd strenrhen. eyeileht quickly; relieve, inflammation in eyes and lids; aharpena vision and make, gla.se. unnecessary in many instances, say. Doctor. Druggists refund your money if it fails. TWO HIGHWAYMEN GET LONG TERMS [Continued front First Pago.] were from San Francisco, were giv en sentences of from two years and six months to four years in the Eastern penitentiary by President Judge George Kunkel' to-day. They were called for sentence In courts room No. 1 this morning shortly be fore the session closed. According to Shuler and Chal lenger the men were taken in the former's machine to Clark's Ferry and there, with loaded revolvers pointed at Challenger, demanded and received $lB. Judge Kunkel told the defendants they had committed one of the most serious offenses on the criminal records. It was said that the youths gave fiictitious names to save their families from disgrace. The police have been un able to identify them through any records. After they had been sen tenced they were handcuffed in the courtroom by Sheriff W. W. Cald well and taken to jail. Two other men, both colored, were given penitentiary sentences for attacking and robbing a peanut vender. They were George Patter son and John Williams, who were each given a sentence of from fif teen months to three years in the penitentiary by Judge Kunkel. Pleads For Daughter When Eva Cole, colored, convict ed of aggravated assault and bat tery, was called for sentence in courtroom No. 2 before Judge A. W. Johnson, her father, Walter B. Cole, interceded for her and asked the court to be lenient in imposing sen tence. Eva. it was charged, slashed a man with a razor while the two were quarreling. Judge Johnson talked kindly to Cole and told him that after care fully considering the case he had de cided that he might not impose a penitentiary sentence. When it was said that the girl had served a pre vious jail sentence Judge Johnson ordered an investigation to deter mine if she were the same person and directed Assistant District At torney Frank B. Wickersham to call her again this afternoon. Judge Johnson, when Mr. Cole pleaded for his daughter and ad mitted he, too, had made mistakes when he was young, replied that this was true in many of the average families, and that in watching his children he found that they made little mistakes just the same as he had when a boy. Other attorneys who were present in the courtroom joined in the discussion, one of them asking how about the mother's faults. $l,OOO For Matrimony "The mother is generally better than the father," Judge Johnson quietly replied. His response was re ceived with some little laughter, but he told the attorneys that his re marks were given in seriousness. Then one of the lawyers suggested wh y not send the father to jail and let the daughter go, when Judge Johnson recalled a play in which the father had always punished himself when his children did any wrong. The judge said he would let the fa ther go in this case because of his good record, but that he could not grant the parent's wish to have his daughter released on probation. Asen Ivanoff, in defending him self in a larceny spit brought by Nik Dancheff, who accuses him of swin dling him ott of $l,OOO by trickery, declared that he and Nik were good friends and that Nik was supposed to furnish this money because a wealthy woman had been found out west who would marry him. A number of other prosecutions were disposed of in the two court rooms as follows: Elmer Fo, George Carlile, serious charge, acquitted; George Washington, Thomas Brown, larceny from the person, bill ig nored; Charles E. Weibley, serious charge, bill ignored; Arthur Wynn, larceny and false pretenses, acquit ted; Edward Brown, larceny, ac quitted; Clifton Martin, larceny, three months; Herbert Derry, lar ceny, four months; Joe Rennel, re ceiving stolen goods, acquitted; Fen ton Snowden, same charge, two months; Pete Raglan, larceny, six months. SALES RECORDS ARE BROKEN AT SHOW [Continued from First Page.] ness and every one associated with the show cannot speak highly enough of its success, which, really, is beyond all expectations. We are drawing from a wide radius of the State, from such distances as Al toona and Chambersburg, and the out-of-town folk are even more em phatic than Harrisburg in declaring this demonstration the be nearly perfect. Not one complaint has been made of any kind. To-day and to morrow promise to bring the great est crowds yet registered, and such is the enthusiasm for motor traffic that I believe the truck and trac tor show, beginning at 10 a. m. Monday, will be equally successful." Preparations are being made to take care of an invasion of the country market folk who have noti fied the managers that they will be on hand in multitude Saturday morning when they have finished feeding the capital city. Excursions from many nearby towns are also planned for to-morrow and the illus trious show will wind up in a mon ster party to-morrow night. The truck and tractor exhibition should attract thousands, for the sales have jumped beyond all esti mate since the war closed. The pro prietors of the Overland plant con tinue their generosity of making no charge for rent and the intelligent visitor will see the big plant almost as attractive with motor engines planned for work as with the beau ties which furnish pleasure and re creation. Manufacturers began this morn ing to get their products to the vi cinity and the streets will be crowd ed soon with all sorts of motor ve hicle, including the nifty garden tractor which man, woman or child can use on the smallest plot; the demon which is going to turn every garden owner into a producer. There is almost a snap of romance in this exhibit planned for three days next week. Like magic, these dozens of types of tractors will, in a few years, tui n out more food than was ever contemplated, for the trac tor is here to stay. The truck was Introduced only a few years ago, but even now. according to George B. McFarland, head of the Harrisburg Automobile Company, and handler of Cleveland and the Beman, there are nearly seven hundred motor trucks used in this city. Two Men Are Badly Hurt; Truck Drops 20 Feet | Altoona, Pa., March 21. Frank ! Hileman, 26, suffered a fractured skull, and Charles Clark, SO, severe body injuries when a truck driven by the former skidded off the road and toppled down a twenty-foot em bankment yesteray. Hileman is in a serious condition. The truck was completely wrecked. Use McNeil's Cold Tablets. Adv. Famous Sistine Choir Will Tour Country Under Guidance of Churchmen By Associated Press. New York, March 21.—The famous Sistine choir from Rome will make a concert tour of the United States under the auspices of high dignitar ies of the Roman Catholic Church this spring, it was announced to day. The choir, which is the oldest and most famous known to the Christian world, will come here in May. It is composed of thirty-two choral chap lains, and for many centuries these singers have had the exclusive privi lege of singing at these services and ecclesiastical functions at which the Pope officiates in person. The Sis tine choir was founded in the Fourth Century by S. Sylvester, whose pon tificate extended from 314 to 325. WEST SWEPT BY STORM ' By Associated Press Denver, Colo., March 21. The western section of the country is isolated to-day as the result of a snow and sleet storm that swept Western Colorado and Wyoming last night. All wire communication west of Denver has ceased and trans continental trains are reported to be behind schedule. O'LEARY CASE WITH JIRY New York, March 21.—The case of Jeremiah A. O'Leary, the Bull Pub lishing Company and the American Truth Society, which has been in pro gress nearly eight weeks to consider evidence relating to their alleged se ditious writings and publications, was given to the jury this noon. I New Spring Skirts *■" n/UVrrCTAIVT'O New Spring I lv UlUolUll Millinery desired stylo. Sizes 22 to 40 waist. ■ M . „ T , ... 7 , - L '7&9S oth Market square O Wo^ BG,rlB 8 G,rl8 I lliSEil Friday and Saturday I JBSaan::.-8S ** Bargain Days at Livingston's "spring Sweaters I —— 7 7- For Friday and Saturday we place on Sale womb's—Misses' 300 Sample Skirts m This $5,000.00 worth of brand New Spring Samples. In Silk and Wool, Slip-ons and | " Lot on Sale Don't miss these values. a^jSSd^T 8 ' ,n u,c ncwcst weaTCa 500 SAMPLE CAPES, DOLMANS AND COATS on Sale f6r Friday and Saturday. We have just received 500 Sample Garments—in time for our Friday and Saturday Specials. Every color, every material, every style, every size. 100 Capes and Coats in dark and • 150 Capes and Dolmans. Every de- I light shades. Friday and Satur- s ' re< * st ri e a °d material; $22.00 $ 13.98 m JljQ $15.98 150 Capes, Dolmans and Coats—a \ mightiest collection of outer- I wonderful showing in this lot. / / /WrrT garments shown this season. I $29.50 value \/l I \ Jl/ \ \ Values in the lot to $39.50. $19.98 I'lfF $24.98 | Hundreds of Spring SUITS Special Showing of |j Placed on Special Sale for IKI J I -p, • i jri A l for Women and Misses, in Serge, Satin, Tricolette, Tricotine, I Ir riday and Saturday Taffeta, Crepe de Chine, Georgette, etc., in every shade, style ra and size. An extra special price for Friday and Saturday. Serge, Poplin, Velour, Tricotine and others in every desired $12.50 Dresses, shade, style and size. ~ •• #J V Suits, $14.98 —— * Sale for Friday and Sat- $ll 08 / your new Spring Snit Em y $20.00 Dresses, Ly j /f| fyi ' • I Women and Mioses at tfrl QQQ j very special prices. vlvivO For Friday and Saturday You Will Find Real Values in OUR MEN'S AND BOYS' DEPARTMENT pAVQ' CITTHTC First showing of Men's and Young Men's Spring Clothing MEN'S PANTS 13171 O OUIIO j n t h e latest fabrics and colors—in the new cut waist suits, kJ kj A good assortment of Suits or double breasted models, or the plain cQnsecvative cuts for 5Q( j pa j rs placed on sale for for boys in plain color and the plain dresser. A wide range of patterns and styles to p r j day and Saturday. Work fancy mixtures; all kinds; choose from at very special prices. Values to $40.00, or Dress Pants, 28 to 54 waist, ages 1 to 18 years. value to $5.00. For Friday and $5.00 SUITS $2.98 PBO Saturday only. $6.00 SUITS $3.49 £f% II VV CP • # CT SBiSp S2OWS $1.98x52.98 $12 s 5O SUITS $7.98 , L • ,c™ • $15.00 SUITS $9.98 500 Suits to choose from at these- prices. Choice or 500 pairs. V. M. C. A. TO HEAR OF "PLEASURES OF SIN" "The pleasures of Sin" will be the subject of an address by the Rev. Dr. W. W. Orr before the 'men's mass meeting in Fahnestock Hall, Sunday afternoon, at 3:30 o'clock. Harrv 1' Armstrong, evangelistic soloist, 'wlli lead the singing. The meeting will be held under the auspices of the Central Y. M. c. A Cuticura Will Help Clear Pimples and Dandruff The Soap to Cleanse The Ointment to Heal Don't wait to have pimples and blackheads, redness and roughness, dandruff and itching. Prevent them by making this wonderful skin-clear ing complexion soap your every-day toilet soap, assisted by touches of Cuticura Ointment to the first signs of little skin and scalp troubles, and i dustings of Cuticura Talcum, a fas cinating fragrance. In delicate Cuti cura medication The Cuticura Trio is wonderful. 25c each. Sample eich free of "Cuticura, Boston." You'll Appreciate This Golden Coffee Golden Roast Blend Coffee is not an ordinary blend. It's far, far in advance of the regular blends which you buy loose. Golden Roast is put up for people who like rich flavored, golden clear, coffee, the aroma of which the moment you sense it, tells you that here is a "different" coffee tells you that it is in a class by itself. Golden Roast Blend Coffee is so carefully blended and roasted that with the first sip your conviction will be that Golden Roast will thereafter be the coffee you'll serve. In pound air-tight packages at your grocer. R. H. LYON Coffee Purveyor to the rcnn-lfarris, HarrLshurg, Pn.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers