4 Building and Loan Elects .New Officers The Dauphin County Building and I Loan Association ejected the fol lowing officers to serve for the com ing twelve months: President, C. W. McCoy; vice-president. U. A. Ruther iford; secretary, C. M. Pannell; treas lurer, Dr. J. L. Weirtck; directors, M. /R- Alleman. Manuel W. Dailey. Da ,:vid L. Diegel, George Hoffman, Fred erick Dengler, AdolpJi Johnson, Al fred Fries; auditors. Dr. William J. Middleton, Mary A. Alleman, Fred Wigfield. JIRS..FLOREXCE MITP TO BH BURIED THURSDAY Mrs. Floreince Muff, who died Monday night after a stroke of apoplexy, will be buried to-morrow morning. Services will be held itr , Window Boxes) T We supply the boxes. ? ! I plants and attend'to all de- | . tails—or if yu have the • boxes we will fill them. T See Our Benutitul Display of | Urns mid Pottery | THE BERRYHILL j Locust Street uit Second. j ( ' |„,,m t T r t - - - - -- -- > —" i If STECKLEY'S DISTINCTIVE FOOTWEAR Dainty White Footwear HE * ? ST l HI Shoes' —Oxfords Pumps Every- g V ; | one of the latest style; distinctive, grace- ,11 If j fuf models that add to the costume of the , [|J well groomed woman or miss. Unusual ?S. j } values, saving you a dollar or more on - 'C corresponding qualities, in almost evert instance. There is a growing scarcity of truly Summer lsln footwear,, so it's not a ' davstoo early'to get them. SHOES~-FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN Medium and Better Grades STECKLEY'S 1220 N. Third St., Near Broad The Most Complete Laundry Ever Offered the Buyer. Complete In Every Detail. ELECTRIC CLOTHES WASHERS of every description. See Our Large Display. Easy Payments. NEIDIG BROS. LTD. 21 South Second St. ®'" 1001—-35 United Wednesday, June 4, lUlll. Founded IS7I I & "" • WEDNESDAY EVENING, St. Ann's Church, and burial will be made in Mt. Calvary Cemetery. * VISITS IX CITY The Rev. Willam L. Smith, who re sides near Gettysburg, was a visitor at the home of Burton E. Commings, 14 North Fourth street, on Monday. The Rev. Mr. Smith is the organizer and first teacher of the Men's Hible class of Market Square Presbyterian Sunday School, of which Mr. Commnigs lias been a member for many years. LEAVING FOR THE WEST Mr. and Mrs. M. Luther Gates and children. James, Kenneth and Laura Gates of Indianapolis. Ind., who have 1 been East for several weeks, stopped j with friends here for a few days on I the way home. Yesterday they were] ! dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Nor-j I man Jackson of Penn street. j ADDITIONAL GUARDS PLACED | Additional details of State Tolico- | ; men were put on duty at the State Oapi- , i tol and other State buildings to-day and I ] will be maintainde here indefinitely for ; protection of public property. The j '< placing of grates about the lower floors ! of the Capitol was finished to-day. j GLOVES CLEANED FREE | H. C. M-ttern. of 4 North Sec ond street, proprietor of th Valet, j wishes to announce that he will; clean for any lady a short pair of | white gloves free, provided she has 'never had any done here befc e.j i This introductory offer is made sim- i j ply to get you acquainted with this! i modern dry-cleaning house.—adv. INTERESTING PERSONAL NEWS{ SHOWER ROSES AND OTHER GIFTS Miss Ella Yost Is Surprised With a Farewell Party The teachers and pupils of Vernon j School Building held two parties this : week in honor of two of their teach ] ers. j Yesterday morning the primary chll : dren surprised Miss Ella Yost, who | will be one of the summer brides, with I a rose shower. Bouquets of roses of ' all varieties made a pretty setting for | the afternoon's pleasure. The pupils I were gathered in Miss Rynard's romo. . Each of the upper classes gave Miss Yost a piece of aluminumwure. A stu i dent from each class gave a presonta ! tion speech which was fittingly respond led to by the surprised teacher. At the request of the children. Miss Yost sang Mendelsohn's "On Wings of Love" and ; played several piano selections. I The teachers of the building had also ' expressed their lasting appreciation cf Miss Yost's service and companionship ] with a gift in the "wearever" alum inum. lee Cream Party , Miss Hogan, the supervising prin i cipal of drawing in the schools, was i the honor guest at an Ice cream party. \ A social, friendly time followed the ! treat. The teachers who arranged these sendoffs were Miss Rynard. Miss Par themore. Miss Zudrell, Miss Charles. : Miss Payell, Miss Walmer, Miss Kelson ! and Miss Ryan. ATTENDS CONFERENCE Miss M. Glenn Gottschall. general secretary of the Associated Aid So cieties of Harrisburg, is attending the national conference of social work, at ' Atlantic City, this week. Dr. G. L. Laverty Home , From Long Period of Service in Army Hospital l Dr. G. L. Laverty, who served as 1 a lieutenant with the Base Hospital N'o. 70 unit in Allerey, France, has been discharged from service. Dr. Laverty will resume his practice at 404 North Third street. PALMER SUMMONS BEST DETECTIVES [Continued from First Page.] i tie more than half an hour before i the explosion. Public buildings and homes of of ! lieials continued to be under extra guard as a precautionary measure. Pittsburgh, June 4.—Evidence that ' anarchists responsible for bomb ex- I plosions at the homes of Judge W. j H. Thompson, of the United States I District Court, and W. W. Sibray, chief inspector of the Bureau of Im ' migration, Monday night, were op i erating under orders from Russian i radical headquarters at 133 East Fifteenth street. New York, was in j the hands of the police here to-day. According to an announcement j this morning by Superintendent R. J. ! Alderdice. of the Bureau of Police, j John Johnson, president of the lo cal I. W. W. organisation, arrested I yesterday after a fight with' detee ] tives in a downtown building, j came to Pittsburgh from New York two weeks ago at the instance of : "No. 1001.' William Haywood, j president of the National I. W. W., j according to Mr. Alderdice, bears I the pass No. 1001. Johnson Directs Terrorists i Johnson, who the police say was the directing genius of the bomb! plot in this city, was held in jail! | to-day with a score of other alleged I j :marchists arrested yesterday and! | last night. Bail was refused in each j case. In a partial confession made to the police late yesterday after | noon Johnson is said to have named I | a Cleveland man as the maker of the' | bombs exploded here. This man, j 1 whose name the police withheld,! ' also is said to have operated under! orders of the radical headquarters ; in New York and is believed to have' | gone to Chicago after the explosions! ' here. A search for him was being j made in that city to-day. j Among the important suspects ar i rested last night was Mike Blelesta, 1 also known as Zeleste, said by the j police to be secretary of the Rus sian Soviet organization in Pitts burgh and a delegate from the Pe trograd Council of Workmen and I 1 Peasants, sent to this country to j spread Bolshevik propaganda. A 1 i large quantity of I. W. W. and an-1 archistic literature was found on I 1 ( the suspects, • which the police ■ j turned over to agents of the Depart ment of Justice to aid in running I down perpetrators of the nation j wide bomb plot. ; In his activities as Alien Property Custodian the present Attorney Gen-! Leral of the United States, A. Mitchell j ] Palmer came upon evidences that | German merchants, even while the war was on, planned to recapture the trade lost through the struggle and to make this country their head | quarters in the campaign. He traced ! this plot down to its scource and" last ! August ga-e out a statement in j which he exposed the attempt of German chemists to tighten their grip on the market and shut off I American and other competition af j ter the war. I Speaking of the bomb explosion !at his residence in Washington he jsaid: "The explosion took place about j 11:15 o'clock. I had been in the j library on the first floor, and had I just turned out the lights and gone upstairs with Mrs. Palmer to retire. II had reached the upper floor and undressed, but had not yet retired. I "I heard a crash downstairs as if | something had been thrown against | the front door. It was followed im mediately by an explosion which I blew in the front of the house. The I door against which it was thrown leads into the library in which we had been sitting, and the part of the house blown in was in front of the library. "The police and other agents who hurried to the residence to make an investigation found in the street in front of the house the limbs of a man who had been blown to pieces by the bomb. No papers were found and no evidence has yet been un covered tp indicate his identity, and it is not yet known whether the limbs were those of the person who threw the bomb or of a passerby. I hope sincerely that they were not portions of the body of some inno cent person passing the house. "No one inside the house was in jured by the explosion. It cracked the upper part of the first story of the house, blew in the front of the lower floor, broke windows, and knocked pictures from the wall. The damage done was chiefly down stairs." A ..... ~i BAMUSBCHG TEXEOWAPH Crouse-Heiges Wedding Solemnized Recently Amos H. Crouse ,1250 State street, announces the marriage of his daugh ter. Miss Susan Blanche Crouse, to Ray Charles Heiges, of this city, at the parsonage of the St. John's Reformed Church, Chambersburg, on Saturday. Mr. Heiges recently returned to this country, after 21 months' service over seas and has accepted a position as car inspector for the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. After a ,vediling trip to Niagara Falls and New York City, Mr. and Mrs. Heiges will reside in this city. Miss Esther Wagner Entertains at Home Miss Esther Wagner entertained the members of the class of 1917. of the Teachers Training School, on Monday evening, at her home, 2449 Keel street. The house was profusely decorated with roses, and games, music and dancing furnished the evening's entertainment. A buffet supper was served to these guest 3: The Misses Mary Dennison, Katherine Gnmtle. Ida Hoffman, Margaret John son, I.ea Kla vans, Blanche Minnick, Pearl Malaby, Lena Marcus, Katharine Miller, Mary Stroup, Marie Wagner and Esther Wagner. Girl Scouts Raise $l4O For Foster Child Members of the Dogwood Troop. No. : 7. Girl Scouts, cleared $l4O at their; drill and entertainment given Monday : evening, on the Herman lawn. The' event, uder the supervision of Miss j Almeda Herman and W. Ray Chap- 1 man, educational director of the Grace Methodist Episcopal Church, was a decided success from every j standpoint. The proceeds will be de leted to the support of a little French i orphan whom the troop has adopted. 1 Mrs. Ainey Is Hostess at Penn-Harris Luncheon Mrs. W. D. B. Ainey, '1409 N. Front street, was hostess at a luncheon yes- j terday at the Penn-Harris. The table appointments were of pink tinged with yellow, carried out with masses of svveotpeas, rosebuds and snap-1 dragons. The ■ guests were: Mrs. James N. Moore, Mrs. C. A. Hibler, Mrs. George E. Foss, Mrs. William I. Shaffer. Mrs. George B. Kunkel, I Mrs. Samuel C. Todd. Mrs. John S. Rilling Mrs. Henry M. Stine, Mrs. Lewis S. Mudge, Mrs. Thomas M. Williamson. Mrs. John C. Stine. Miss Ruth Rilling and Miss Kathleen Ainey. GUESTS AT LAWN PARTY The following guests had the pleas -1 ure of attending a lawn party gn en I Monday evening in compliment to ' Miss Dorothy Weber, at her I home, 2329 Logan street: Miss 1 Gladys Pciffer, Miss Margaret Peters. | Miss Betty Shadle, Miss Mary Rath | fon, Miss Rose Rathfon, Miss Poro ! thv Kelly, Miss Anna Shepler, Miss Helen Sanderson. Miss Dorothy San derson. Miss Katherine Harvey and I Miss Dorothy Weber. Stanton Black i smith, Howard Coyle, Jack Shaver, Wiliam Kelly. Marion Shepler, Harry I shepler, Richard Sanderson. Ralph I Harvey, Homer Harvey, William ! Weber. Mrs. Mary Peiffer, Mr. and i Mrs. William Weber and Mrs. Mary j Weber. LUNCHEON FOR EIGHT Miss Louise Herring. Miss Kathleen House. Miss Leonore Thompson. Miss Harriet Jaynes. Miss Myrtle Miller. Miss Helen Miller and Miss Irma Howells were guests at luncheon to dav of Miss Nelle Richardson who is ' celebrating her birthday. The appointments were of June roses and the favors were tiny candlesticks with rink candles. Cards followed the feasting. MUSIC ALE AND TEA . Guests of Mrs. Edward Gaines Rowland of Market street had the, Pleasure of meeting her visitors Mrs Irving Mauser and Mrs. Paul f. 1 ?"! nedv. of Jersey City, at tea this afternoon. An informal musical pro-, gram was given by Miss Esther Har- , per at the piano and Miss Rose; Bucher. of Cleveland. Ohio singing, j Hoses and honeysuckle made lovely; house decorations. CAMERA CLUB OUTING The Camera Club of the Susque hanna Township High School, chaper oned bv Miss Caros Worrell and Prof. F A Smith. Instructors, spent an en joyable outing at Orr's Bridge on the I conodoguinet creek. Among those ! present were : The Misses Caros Wor ! rell Marie Gerhart. Mae Rovve, Iv. ! Umholtz. Daisy Bickel. Hannora Line ' burg. Sarah Beck. Mary \are Dyke. Fsther Cain. Grace Klinger. Florence Motter, Kathryn Lingle. Myrtle Mtrr nhy Professor Smith. Carl Henry, Wil liam Baker. George Cain. George Gru ber. George Cobaugh. Earl Ltngle. John ! Single, Abraham Fry. Charles Cain. Allan Solado, Jeremiah Long. Marlin Longenecker, Warren t MUler, Fred Singelton and Herbert Llrich. Mr and Mrs. Charles H. Hunter and son 'Norman, of Cameron Extension, started to-day for a western motor trip, including stops in Chicago and at Green Bay, Wis., where they will visit relatives. Miss Anna Myers, of Buffalo. N. Y., is a guest of her aunt. Mrs. Martin L. Golden, at Mount Gretna. Miss Lill'an Espenshade has returned to' her home. 1614 Penn street, after visiting friends in Pittsburgh. Mr and Mrs. Ambrose Carson went home to Ilion. N. Y.. to-day. after a week's stu'/ with old friends in this VlC Mr ty knd Mrs. H. J. Babb. of 404 North Second street, and Mrs. Anna Grubb, 419 Briggs street, spent the weekend at Golden Rod cottage. Mount Gretna. Miss' Madeline Strouse went home to New York a day or two ago, after visiting Miss Lenore Rosenthal at 1627 North Second street. Mr and Mrs. Harvey M. Reese and small son. Charles Henry Reese, are guests of relatives in Atlantic City for a week. Miss Ellen Houser went home to Canandaigua. N. Y., to-day, after visit ing relatives in town for a month. IT PAYS To get high-grade glasses. Cheap glasses are not a saving In the long run. Our service :'.l please you. Consult Us. (Rohllftinkenbach&lflrmse OPTOMETRISTS &OPTICIANS N0.22 N.42ST. HARRISBURG. PA. •Where Olas -.re Made Right" . I VICTORY FETE HELD FLAG DAY Camp Hill Community Carni- j val Promises to Be Largest j and Finest of Thepi All The date selected for the annual j community carnival held by the' Camp Hill Civic Club is June 14, | and, most appropriately comes on 1 Flag .Day. This is a little later than j usual, but Mr. and Mrs. Charles O. J Shaar, who are training the children for the dances have planned some novelties and needed the extra time. The carnival will take the form of a \ ictory Fete, both novel and beauti ful. Mrs. George W. Kehr will have charge of a booth representing a Y. M. C. A. canteen, Mrs. J. C. Arm- j strong and her assistants will be Salvation Army lassies who will fry 1 luscious doughnuts while you wait. I Mrs. Carl K. Deen will have charge ! of the Emergency Aid restroom, I while Mrs. William H. Dennison's i table will contain all sorts of can- | ning and preserving accessories. ; Mrs. H. W. Zook and Mrs. Har- ' vard Zacharias will sell plants and ! flowers; Mrs. Dorsey Worley will j have a wonderful display of aprons, I garden hats and baskets and Mrs. ! E. S. Mills heads a committee serv- j ing a wonderfully tine supper. Amusements of all sorts, novelties ' that have never before been intro- ! duced in Camp Hill will fill the day I full of wholesome fun. The patrons j can learn how to become rich and \ famous by following the advice of the fortune teller whose knowledge of the future will be at their dispo sal after crossing the palm with | silver. There will be a meeting of the . carnival committee Friday afternoon | at 3 o'clock in'the flrehouse to com- j plete final plans. Pupils of Kepner School of Music Give Recital The piano pupils of E. A. Kepner gave a recital at his studio, 310 Mar ket street, last evening, assisted by Miss Hilda Famous. The following took part: Master Jack Ambler, Miss Helen Stewart, Miss Elizabeth Hatten, Mas ter Kenneth Reighter. Miss Evelyn Long. Miss Mabeile Meckley, Miss Sorada Thompson. Miss Svlva Schmertg, Miss Gladys Bolan, Mas ter Rohert Balthaser, Miss Elizabeth Balthaser, Miss Evelyn Thompson, I Miss Elizabeth Thurston, Miss Edna : Shaffer, Miss Elizabeth GafTney, Miss ] Joseph Macklen, Miss Celeste Dowl ; ing. Master William Fry, Miss Doro thy Wolf, Miss Bessie Koplovitz, i Miss Minnerva Barnhart. Miss Eliza jbeth Woley, Miss Hilda Famous, j Miss Marion Orr, Master Dick Bow. j man, Miss Ruth Wremt, Miss Wil jhelmina Stewart, Miss Mary Jan ; nett, Miss Marie Wohlfarth. AID SOCIETY MEETS The regular monthly meeting of I the Women's Aid Society of the Har | risburg Hospital, will be held to : morrow afternoon, at 2.30 o'clock, ' in ahe managers' room of the hospi tal. Mrs. Marl in- E. Olmsted will preside. This meeting is of great importance as it is the last one to be held until autumn. *™^fesSsToßK News [An announcement under this headina \ must be accompanied bp name to assure accuracy.] Mr. and Mrs. Otto L. Lins, of Car j lisle, announce the birth of a son j William Garlarrd Lins, on Saturday' | May 31, 1919. Mrs. Lins was for i merly Miss Hazel Garland of this ! city. [ Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E. Shaver, • 1833 Herr street, announce the birth :of a daughter, Marjorie Joyce (Shaver, on Wednesday, May 28, 1919. II Would You Like to Own an Electric Vacuum Cleaner? Frantz T~* Here Is Premier | Our Electric S"~ Proposition aCUtlin . ' I ®' le takes pride in the • )?' furnishings of her home will rent a Frantz \I V jt\ the modern housewife. Pres- Premier Cleaner to you for V/16d116r ii \/y ervatlon of costly rugs tap. SI.OO a day. Simply tele y, / ' M y estries and upholstered furni- J rvt ecco £ a \ ture is simple with the ph° n e, Bell 3634; Dial 5068, f IV-' ■"■Q Frantz Premier, A quarter JlMty we will deliver the cleaner "Premier" Those who select Premiers I home and be convinced of Own a # ow * 'Frantz Premier' Frantz Premier Electric Cleaner Co. ™ 5 D 5^ ■ 206-08 N. COURT ST. • HARRISBURG, PA. —r _! DAUPHIN COAL LANDS ! NOT WORTH BIG SUMS [Continued from First Page.] spent weeks at the colleries inspect ing the mines, going over the com pany maps and reports, checking : them, and then determined the amount of unmined coal, the amount which could he mined and how much of it would be marketable. The re port kills the hope of many that the county's coffers would be enriched ! by millions through tax on the coal j ; mines. His report included maps show ing the tracts and the surface area, | cross-sections of veins of coal and | i a tabulated statement of the amount | of unmined and the tonnage of mar- I ketable coal In? each tract. His written report follows in part: j "In Williams township there are . nine tracts of land containing 2,596 acres, of which 2,130 contain coal, | ahd 17 tracts of land containir.-g 3,- 929 acres, of which 2,940 acres con tain coal in Wiconisco township, a total of 26 tracts containing 6,525 acres of which 5,070 acres are in the coal measures. Sekol's Report "From the above tracts of land coal I has been mined for the past 75 years. ; and from State reports about 35,000,- | 000 tons were produced in that time. In 1918 the production was about 412,- ; 000 tons at the Short Mountain col- I liery, of which 81.000 tons, or 20 per , cent, used for heat and steam. The I Willlamstown colliery in 1918 produced • 391,000 tons, of which 123,000 tons, or j 32 per cent, were used for heat and j steam at the colliery, due principally |to heayy pumping. During the year (1918 the Short Mountain pumped 878.- | 000.000 gallons of water, or 2.400,000 | gallons per day. and the Willlamstown I colliery pumped 1,524,000,000 gallons, I or 4.200,000 gallons per day. | "To produce 412.000 tons of coal In i 1918 from ths Williamstown colliery i 590 men were employed inside and 254 | men on the outside., working 295 days I during the year. i "To produce 391.000 tons of coal in j 1918 from the Williamstown colliery ' 507 men were employed inside and 353 on the outside, working 283 days dur ing the year. About 100 men were em ployed daily to do the timbering in these collieries. Mining Cost High "The prices paid for labor, material, supplies and the other numerous bad conditions encountered in mining makes the cost per ton in cars at the breaker high. j "In making a preliminary estimate of the coal lands in Williams and Wi conisco townships by using the sec j ond geological survey as a basis for I acreage and aggregate thickness of coal j a large tonnage was obtained by T. E. I Davies. mining engineer, but as a re j suit of a careful examination of the I properties with their present develop j ments and having found considerable areas in very faulyt condition in all ' the coal beds I And that in Williams township 44.530,800 tons of coal re main unmined. and in Wiconisco town ship. 20,483,305 tons, or a total of 65.- 014,105 tons in the several tracts in the two townships of Dauphin county." Mr. Sekol then refers to his map of j the coal lands, cross section views of the coal veins, and tabulated state ment showing the amount of coal in the ground in each tract, and the amount which it is believed can be marketed. Continuing he says: "The following is the estimate of T. E. Davies of the Samuel Kimmel tract in Williams town .jv sfTZ&bi et Your Upholster t * n S Done the 11/Av /ffl" ' Man Who Does the Work You can save a great deal . A GOOD SELECTION* OF I TAPESTRY. LEATHER & OTHER COVERINGS We do general furniture repairing in all branches. PROMPT ATTENTION* j We also buy and sell second-hand furniture. Newmark & Cown 308 BROAD STREET, HARRISBURG, PA. Bull 1705-R Dial -iS26 JUNE 4, 1919. ship: Original coal in the ground, 21,- 518,838 tons, and assumed that 1,702,- 134 tons had been removed, leaving 19,- 816,704 tons still in place. "My investigation and estimate dis closes the following of the Samuel Kimmel tract in Williams township: Original coal in ground. 17,539,163 tons; mined, lost and faulty, 14,000,000 tons, leaving 3.539,163 tons still In place." A comparison is made by Mr. Sekol in the report on the Jacob Meash tract. | Davles estimating 8.653.608 tons in place and Mr. Sekol finding that at i present there is no mineable coal in the tract which is now exhausted. "The tabulated estimate on which the details are more fully set forth and are as I find them, shows that the es timate of coal remaining by T. E. Da vies in the several tracts in Williams and Wiconisco townships is much too high and that he did not consider the faulty conditions and the actual coal thickness in the several coal beds," Mr. Sekol concludes. He then esti mates that eight cents a ton would be a fair valuation on the unmined mar ketable coal. On Friday afternoon the county com missioners will meet again to confer with the coal company representatives in an effort to reach an agreement on the amount of unmined and market able coal in the .lands held by the cor poration. Reserve Militia Makes Showing on Inspection Units of the Reserve Militia are declared to have been "generally in : a satisfactory state of training and | discipline" when inspected by the ; report of General Charles T. Oress ; well, commander of the brigade, ; made public to-day. In a number of i instances, he says, the troops were ) "much above the average of what I could be expected from troops I whose organization dates from little ! over a year past and whose training ' was interrupted for several months i by the epidemic of the fall of 1918." | General Cresswell also says that ev | ery effort was made toward main j tenance of the standard of State j troops. I SEVKXTY-MM'H MAY BE KEPT IX CAMP TWO WEEKS Two weeks may elapse before the Harrisburg men of the Keystone Di- Witmer, Bair & Witmer WALNUT NEAR SECOND Summer Wear in Abundance Special trip to New York this week brought many new dresses in light and dark voiles and new summer tendencies. ' I Wash Skirts Silk Skirts In fine quality pre- In a big variety of novelty shrunken materials, materials, $3.95 to $12.50 $12.50 to $25.00 Sport Suits / In plain Jersey and Heather Mixtures, $27.50, $28.50 to $32.50 Witmer, Bair & Witmer I ————————|Hl 1111 H vision now at Camp Dlx, N. J., are discharged. This is the information given out by Major Samuel W. Flem ing, 104 South street, who arrived in this city last evening to spend a seven-day furlough. Captain Rich ard Robinson, Front and Relly streets, who also arrived yesterday, can give no more definite informa tion. f V Dinner Wednesday Eve., Jane 4. Stouffer's Restaurant 4 Bf# Court St. 5 to 7.3© 50< Chicken Rice Soap Calf Uver In Huron Chicken Giblets Reef Steak, brown gravy Roast Reef Mashed or l.yonnalne Potatoes Stewed Pens Kgg Plant Snlnd lee Cream, Pie or Puddlnir Coffee, Ten or Cocoa l ' WEAR A New Shipment of All Slmdcs White Black j Hl' Gra y s )irifl ans I J Browns sl.lO, $1.35, SI.BO, $2.00, $2.55 They won't last long—be sure to secure your share. We espe ; clally recommend .Phoenix hosiery i for long wear and the most popu- I lar priced hosier; in America. We ask you to make compari son with other hosiery and prices. Wolfe Corset Shop 224 N. 2nd j Wc Sell All Kinds of Underwear, j