2 GIRLS! CLEAN AND BEAUTIFY HAIR NO DANDRUFF—2S CENT DANDERINE Stop Washing Hair! Try This! Makes Hair Glossy, Soft and Abundant Surelv trv a "Danderine Hsir Cleanse" if you wish to inuuiHliitrlv double the beauty of your hair. Just moisten a cloth with Pimderine atnl draw it carefully through your hair, taking one small strand at a tiuie. this will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt or any excessive oil —in a few minutes you will be ama red. Your hair will be AlQl IT WOM AN OF MI'RHKR Aged Mother of Defendant and Chil dren Welcome Her Home Kane. Oct. 9. —Mrs. Gerrrude Carl son, who shot her husband, was a. quit ted yesterday afternoon of murder. The jurv went out a" uoou and fouud the verdict in an hour and a half. When the tr.al opened yesterday morning, the aged mother of the de fendant was placed on the stand and related the story of the snooting. she told how Mrs Carlson came to her ho.ise with her children seek mg pro tection. She tol.l of Carlson's visit and his demand that his wife return home with the children. She said Carlson attempted to attack his wife when she interfered and that Mrs. Carlson, to ward on his attack, picked up a revolver from the table and shot her husband. When the verdict was telephoned to M-s. Peter Swanson. age i mother of Mrs. Carlson, she cried with joy. M-s. Carlson returned to her home last n:ght an .1 was greeted at the train by her mother and little children. SHOT IN PARISHIONER'S HOME Chased Into Her House by Man Priest Is Wounded St. Louis. Oct. 9.—The Rev. Nuol Casu. assistant pries: at Our Lady Help of Christians Catholic church, was shot yesterday when he stopped a* the home of Nathalie du Mosure. a woman par ishioner. while on his way to mass. He was wounded in the hand and the left shoulder. The woman was arrested. The Rev. Oaesar Spigardi, superior of the wounded priest, said the woman had asked him to help her got work and that he had sent her to several places. Father Casu said he was passing through an alley when a man with a revolver menaced him. To escape he ran into t-he hallway lea-ding to the woman's rooms and then upstairs. The man pursued and tired. EPISCOPAL BISHOPS ELECTED Four Chosen After Decision Not to Reduce Dioceses by Merger Minneapo'.s. Oct. 9.— Four uew bishops were elected \ est or day :»y the House of Bishops of the Epis 'Opal church n session here. Those chosen werei The Rev Herman Page. rector of St. Paul's church, r failure. The question is, what kind of sparks does your brain generate ? The brain, like a battery, must be supplied with certain elements to gen erate thought properly. These brain elements are water, albumen and phos phate of potash. If any of these are lacking in the daily food, brain and body energy are vitally lessened.. Are any lacking? Listen! "Water and albumen are plentifully supplied in ordinary food, but phosphate of potash—together with other mineral elements —is almost wholly lacking in white bread and all white flour products. Grape-Nuts —containing all the nutriment of wheat and barley, including the precious phosphates so essential to perfect bodies and active brains, provides a food at once delicious, nourishing and economical. A morning dish with cream furnishes POWER for accomplishment that many a man has come to appreciate. 1 Common sense goes a long way toward success. To eat right often means to BE right. "There's a Reason" Grocers everywhere sell Grape-Nuts. wavy, fluff\ and abundant and possess an inebmparable softness, lustre and ■ luxuriance. Besides beautifying the hair, one ap plication of Oandorine dissolves e>er\* particle of dandruff; invigorates th'e scalp, stopping itchiug and falling hair. Danderine is to the liair what fresh showers of rain and sunshine arc to vegetation. It goes right to the roots, invigorates and strengthens them. Its cxhilaratiug. stimulating and life pro ducing properties cause the hair to grow long, strong and beautiful. You can surely have pretty, soft, lustrous hair, and lots of it, if you will iust get a 25-cent bottle of Know It on *s Danderine from any drug store or toilet counter and trv it as directed. Adv. 'great CROWD AT YORK FAIR Attendant of 70,000 Recorded and Financial Success Assured York. tVt. 9. —There was an esti mated attendance of 70,000 persons at the York fair yesterday and last night and the financial success of the sixty tirst annual exhibition is assured. The throng bogau to pour upou the spacious 1 invlosure early, and when the sun broke 1 through the lowering clouds yesterday afternoon the multitude increased with rapidity, until there was one mass of hiunanitv in every direction. Fifty thousand visitors were brought here in special trains o\cr the several rail roa.ls. While some of Hie fakers did not do a profitable business, showmen and other concession holders reaped a har vest. More than a score of children were separate i from their parents in the crowd, but were found late-. The pyro technic*! display last night was elabo rate and daring ascensions were made by Fred Carwile. a young aeronaut. DUKE TO FIGHT ANNULMENT Says He Wants Wife. Not Money Her Family Has Offered New York, Oct. 9. —The Duke di Mato O.irar.r.o. defendant in a suit filed Wednesday to annul his marriage to Miss Elisabeth Frances Hanan. n sister of John T. Hanan, a millionaire shoe manufacturer, announced yesterday that he expected to defend the action. "The Hanan family offered me $25 a week fo- life," he fsid. "Rut what s S- 5 to me? What 1 wanted was a wife.'' The marriage was one of the notable social events here last winter. Annul ment is sought on the allegation that the Duke is a convicted thief and that he was under indictment in France at the time of the wedding. WILSON SEES POSTMASTERS Receives Delegates to Convention of National Association Washington, D. l\. Oct. 9. —Presi- dent Wilson yesterday received dele gates to the convention of the National Association of Postmasters of the Sec ond and Third Classes, which ended its deliberations with the selection of At lantic City as the next meeting place. New officers elected were: A. H. Frit... (Quarryville. president: Andrew Price. Marlington, W. \'a.. vice presi ;ent. and H. A. Hopkins. St. Clair, Mich., secretary-treasurer. May Buy Delaware Canal Washington. IV C.. Oct. 9.—A reso lution ailing upon the Secretary of War for a report on the price at which the government conld purchase the Chesapeake and Deiawae canal was passed yester lay by the Senate. An appropriation of nearly $11,000,000 for the purchase of this canal was one of the items forced out of the rivers and harbors bill bv the recent filibuster. HARRTSBCRG ST AR-IX HEP EN PENT, FRIDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 9. 1914. LORIMER INDICTED BY JURY Federal Body in Session at Chicago Returns Bill on Eve of Charge Being Outlawed Chicago. Oct. 9. William Lorimer. ! ousted member of the Cnited States Senate from Illinois, president of the Ui Salle Street National Bank, and its successor, the La Salle Street Trust' ami Savings Bank, until the failure of the latter institution last June, was indicted yesterday by the tVleral Grand Jury. Joseph P. Gallagher, a director in the former bank and a partner of the I contracting firm of Ijorimbr 4i Gal lagher, was named with him in a true bill containing thirty six counts. and accusing them jointly of misapplies tion of the bank's money. During a period of eight months, '.jorinier and Gallagher misappropriated $70,000 from the National bank, • with intent to iu.iure and defraud," according to the indictment. Three additional indictments were returned. They charge t harles B. Mini dav, vice president: Charles G. Fox. cashier, and Thomas McDonald, auditor.] with having t'al«e entries in the books of the old National bank. ljorimer's bail was fixed at $ to.ooo and that of Gallagher at SIO,OOO. The ■ 06 counts in the one indictment against ; liorimer and Gallagher hinge on six specific instances of alleged misappli cation of funds. There are six different sets of counts in each of the six in stances 't is that a note was drawn by the 1«>: tner Ji Gallagher Company, an insolvent concern: endorsed by Gal ■agher, also insolvent, aud the worth less paper placed in the bank for money withdrawn. On October 10. 1911, the indictmen' charges, ''William lioritner. «s president of the bank, misapplied $15,000, which lie converted to his own use. with intent to injure and defraud the bank," and he was "aided and abetted by Gallagher." \ll nf the remaining counts are with variations based ou the>e. The indictments against ljorimer an 1 Gallagher were returned just in time to avoid their becoming outlawed by the statute of limitations. The statute would have become operative to-day. The three indictments against Mun day. Fox and McDonald all charge en tries on the bank's books, showing more cash oti hand than the bank ac tually possessed. CHOKES BURGLAR TO DEATH Man Whose Family Were Slashed Kills Intruder With Hands Alton, 111., Oct. P. — A ntvjro burglar was choked to death here yesterday by Joseph Winkler after the negro had cut Winkler, his wife and son with a razor. Winkler's sou Frederick, aged IS, awoke to see the negro leaning over his • bed. A str.iggle began and the rest of the family were awakened and hurried to the aid of the son. The elder Wink ler seized the negro, choking him until he weakened. Frederick went for a rope which which the negro was bound. The police were notitiel. but when they arrived the man was dead. GREAT OAS WELL STRUCK Gusher With Dsily Production of 12.- 000,000 Cubic Feet Found Pittsburgh. Oct. 9 —Announcement was nva-Je yesterday by the Philadel phia Company that it hud struck a gas well with a daily production of 12,000.- 000 en-die fee; and a rock pressure of m>o feet per square inch on a farm in The old Murraysville field. This is within fifteen miles of this city. The new well is within half a mile of the first well drilled in the field thirty-five years ago. Tt was struck several days ago in the sand 600 feet below fhe original discovery. The fact that the well was opened in Mnrrays v-.ile fie: i •'.tatters the genera! opinion that that section has been •'dead'* iu production gas for many years. BIG BOOK RUSH IS SURPRISE The Distribution Astonishes the '' Show Me" Man. Who CaUs Run Most Remarkable "There ain't no sich animal. That's what the farmer said when h« saw his first circus giraffe, and that ; is practically what Eastern publishers! have been iaviug about the record breaking run upon the Stardudepen 1 dent'» book bank. It has been almost impossible to meet the demand, so, great have been the inroads upon the] banked up store of Modern English' Dictionaries created bv our readers' insatiable craving for knowledge neat-, ly bound in black limp leather. One certificate from the Star Tilde pendent and a small bonus secures a J book. "Ji hat's coming off in Harrisburg? " | Twis has been the terse exclamation I going the rounds of the publication | world as wire after wire carried the news of the rush for dictionaries and the demands for more books faster than j the publishers could readilv supply them. i Yesterday the dictionary man. the one who is responsible for the cre ation of the volume which has set Har risburg dictionary daffy, hurried ititfc town to ''see what was up." "Unbelievable" was the word he used when he saw the Dictionary De partment almost depleted of its store ot volumes. He was shown the fast emptying storeroom and the crowd of| eager, intelligent purchasers aud he be i came convinced. "It only goes to )how how greatly; Harrisburg has been maligned,'' he] said. "This city knows a good thing] when it sees it and the best is none j too good for Harrisburg. This city ! beats all others tor culture and appre . elation of an educational opportunity. lin going link and busy myself with I supplying this demand instead of scoff ] iug at it." GOES TO HUNTINGDON ALONE Youth. Unattended. Presents His Com-] mitment to Superintendent Huntingdon, Pa.. Oct. 9.—John Thrash, 15 years old, was sentenced jS* > eml>er 30 by Judge Evans, of llloonisburg. Columbia ounty, to the | Huntingdon reformatory ami told the' court that he would receive a railroad ] ticket and be trusted to go to the re-: formatorv unattended by an officer. rhrasii left Rloomsburg Wednesday morning an 1 tae same evening rang the | bell of Superintendent Pattern's office ;»eeond Stranger—"Who are you?". First Stranger—"Why. I'm the ; chap you pledged eternal friendship to last night.'' i Second Stranger—■'"Yes. T know' that. But who are you?''—Chicago i News. 1 Great Suit Sale JT s2o, b Sm25 To-morrow at . . VALUES A SPECIAL SALE! Every Woman and Miss thinking of New Clothes should make sure to inspect these extraordinary values. Certainly there hasn't been such opportunity earlier this season, and it's not likely there will be soon again. MATERIALS COLORS Broadcloth, Poplin, Serge, Gabar Navy, Holland Blue, Plum, Brown dines, Cheviots. and Black. samples included in the lot, of which there is only one of a kind. Six styles of the popular long coat suits and as many ot' the jaunty shorter models. Misses' and Women's Sizes. PfIATC I SPECIAL for SATURDAY) ec QQ UllA lOj $7.98 to SIO.OO Values J $3.90 COLLEGE COATS—SMART BALMACAA.NS—MANNISH MODELS—DRESSY STYLES. They are all wool Scotch mixtures, plaids and handsome Treeo cloth in black and navy. SALE NEW SKIRTS striped . Waistt $1.19 $5 Models in All Wool Serge, QQ Shown Saturday for the First Time. Bedford Cords and Checks, . Beuutiful rolor Pomhinntionß in gtunnin(l two . Perfectly matte Skirls in newest tunic with sinnrt three and four-tone Roman ami Persian stripes button trimming: all sixes. Guaranteed Washable. Silk Messaline- and Poplin Dresses *C QQ Positive $lO Values. Special, . . . Without question, the greatest value in the city. Newest models with the popular basque girdles of crushed silk. Navy, green, brown and black—women's and misses' sizes. ASTRICH'S CARRIED DI'CKS AS BAUUAUE Visitors Hud to Have Large Bathtub j in Now Yorl; Hotel N'ew York, Oct. ?. —When Miss Jen nie labb\ and her sister, of Masardis, Me., arrived ai the Hotel laiurelton ou Tuesday night with several bags and a 1 large box fhey demanded a room with j n large bathroom and a proportionately I large tub. and insisted upon seeing the! before registering. Yesterday the manager of the hotel j foun.i a hambermaid with a broonisti.-k > marshaling four wet du ks that had just i waddled out of the bathroom of t>he I ladies from Maine. Ho bad the ducks I remove.l at once to a phwe of security. ■ When the Misses Lib by were asked! how it was they had traveled with so | much aquati. 4 poultrt". Miss Jennie said it was becauso her elder sister was not in goo.l health anri that the doctor had i said she must have every day egis that [ were only a few hours old. MBS. CARMAN'S TRIAL OCT. 19 Indicted on Charge of Killing Mrs. Louise Bailey New York. Oct. 9.—The trial of Mrs. Florence Carman, itidi ted on a charge ' of killing Mrs. Louise Bailey in Dr. Edwin Carman's hofne office, at Kree jort, 1/. 1., probably wiil not begin tier: Monday in the Supreme Court. Mineola, it was announced yesterday afternoon. Another murder trial, that of Joseph Kerri, of 1 n wood, begins on Monday and will probably occupy four days. Wither D'.stri -t Attorney Lewis Smith nor George Levy, counsel for the de- > fense, care's to start trial of Mrs. Oar-. man at the end of this week, so the! trial probably will begin on O. tober 19. A panel of 150 talesmen has been 1 called, and an additional panel w ill' be drawn next week. On the last two! Sundays the choir of the Hempstead j 'Methodist Episcopal church has sung! in the Nassau jail corridor, giving great comfort to Mrs. Carman, whose nervous! condition seems to be improved. WHAT IS AMORTIZATION? The Method of Providing for the Re payment of a Loan Every now and then the plain man who has saved a little money and wants to invest it so that he will get a reasonable and safe return runs I against a nest of terms which are be wildering and all but meaningless. I'm afraid he usually passes by without taking the trouble to understand them. Take the word "amortization." [ hold that it's no shame to any man nc*t to know what that word means. And yet to investors the word is highly important. "Amortization'' means simply the method of providing for the repayment of a loan. If vou lend me SIO,OOO, which T promise to repay in ten years, J you have a right to be interested in my plans for meeting the demand fur the SIO,OOO which you expect to tn;ike upon me ten years hem-e. So I,say to you: "I am going to amortize that SIO,OOO debt in this way: Out of my earnings every year I'm going to set aside S9OO. 'Each year I will set the S9OO to work ; enrning something too. At the end of ten years the fund will amount to just enough to discharge my debt." j Y'ou will find that specialists in ! bonds use the word a great deal. They : know better than anybody else its im portance. They realize that a borrower j of money for a long term of years is very apt to forget to make provision for repayment. Certain lenders of money on long 1 terms insist upon the borrower's taking I out a life insurance policy big enough j to meet the debt in case of death before the debt becomes due. Generally the longer a debt has to run the more im 1 portant becomes the question of ''amor ; tization."—John M. Dskison in Chicago 1 News. The Reason "The Comeups declare their ances ■ tors came over with the very early set 1 tiers.'' "Well, then they couldn't afford to 1 deport them.'' —Baltimore American. SOCIAL and PER MISS AIMER HOSTESS Entertained at Five Hundred at Her: Home at Hainlyn Last Evening— Supper Was Served Miss Evelyn Aldinger entertained at five hundred at her home at Hainlyn last evening. The rooms were pretitily decorated with mountain feru ami cos mos and a Dutth supper was serve I fol lowing; the games. The guests included: Miss Sarah We it/, el, Miss Mora Rea gaii. Mrs. C. H. Hunter, Miss Anne Keanc, Miss Cecelia Joyce, IMiss Mary 1 Reagan. Miss Agnes Keaue, Miss Mal tha Fox. Miss Margaret Dougherty, Miss Nan MvKadden, Miss Anne Sweeney, Miss Katherine Sweeney, Miss Maine Hope, Miss Mary Toomey, Miss Agnes Teoniey. Miss Hannah Vanderloo 1 and Mrs. Roscoe Bonisteel. I BAM) LEADER'S HOME BERN'S ; Kerschner Brought Original Gorman Organization to This Country Sunbury, o<'t. 9.—Eire of undeterm ined origin yesterday, destroyed the home built by Karl Kerschner here, a Herman, who came to America in 187" bringing with him a band of music of fortv pieces, which was the original German band in America. Kerschner, after he built the home, started a large vineyard. He quartered his band and trained it there for more than a year, when he started out on a concert tour. One of the pieces lie played was called "The Burning of Moscow." To illustrate it fireworks were exploded. At Allentown, Pa., the firecrackers set lire to the. opera house and caused a $7 5,000 blaze and broke up the band. Kerschner returned to his home and died of a broken heart. The property is owned by Jacob Kerschner. Mrs. Kerschner was asleep on the second floor and escaped by jumping from a window. Foiled Mr. Crimsoiibeak —I see a novel de-j parture has been made in New South j Wales by starting plowing at night. Mrs. Crimsoiibeak —lust think! i There is a new excuse for you to try and put over for staying out late at night!—Youkers Statesman. | aven '* Tasted llfl You've missed a rare treat 111 They're «o delicioui you limply c»n't eat fj |t'i great lun to toait them over a candle flame, £*s■ Ml II and they're Oh I to good dipped in hot n ; i! Thirty-fivt rents the package at the v\ ■' f H v shop) inhere the DeUara Girl smiles '/. 1 STRAW RIHK TO PA XT A\ (i Club Members Chaperoned by Mrs. Spotz and Mrs. Sansone Mrs. \ en Sotz, ."M rs. Sansone and IMiss Sansone chaperoned a party of young people, members of the if. A. Club, on a straw ride to Paxtang last, evening. 1 roll their arrival there sup per was served to the following: Miss Katherine S hillinger, Mi<* Katherine Barringer, IMSss Ruth Spoti, Miss Prune es Sansone, IMiss Virginia llarinan, Miss Klias Ku.'kaloo, Miss Lil lian Shoop, Miss Martha Shartaer. \li--i Vera Hrrshey, Miss (Jrace Hershec, Miss Miriam Spotz. Thomas Hershev, •Harold Nor by, Kdgar Spot,- and I'asii mere Sansone. Visiting friends in Wost 'Mrs. Ida Blessing. 1342 North Cam eron street, is spending several weeks in Columbus. Ohio; Chicago and Tis kilwa, IN. VOTERS DC N.«Y. APATHETIC Only 5<»2,a0."> Out of 1,206,107 Par ticipated in Primaries Albany, Oct. 9.—Out of an enroll ment oi' 1,266,107 voters of the three principal parties in the Sitate. only 502.1205 nvaile I themselves of the priv ilege of voting for candidates for the parties at the primary election on Sep tember 2S. Of the enrolled voters .1.8 per cent, of the Democrats exercised their fran chises. 1.2 per cent, of the Ri\r>ililica»s ami .25 per cent, of the Progressives. Thousands of voters lost interest aft;/ er voting for t'he head of the ticket, ti4 difference between the first and last named offices being 38,645 on the Dem ocratic and 25.902 on the Republican. Washington Party Meetings The regular meeting of the ward chairmen of the Washington partv will be held at headquarters on Saturdav night, when further arrangements for a vigorous campaign will be completed. To-night meetings will be held at Fish erville and Enders, when Dr. John H. Kreider, candidate for Congress; Ira B. Reider and Elmer S. McParland will make addresses. "She says her love for yon is a con suming passion!'' "It is. It takes five pounds of candy a week to keep it alive."—Town Top ic*.