10 11l HOUSEHOLD |pl TALKS i \ \ • Henrietta D. Grauel iitfr.rfnii f.i ■ Ml^TLfl Out of the Frying Pan The charge that fried food is indi- j gesrible and therefore harmful is true' only when articles are improperly fried. \ ■Rightly done frying is no more harm ful than any other mode of cookery:; Indeed it is more wholesome because food that is full of flavor and crisp aud 1 rich pleases the eye and the palate, aud this we all know is a big step toward good digestion. The trouble is that too many cooks think thoy arc frying food when they cook in a skillet with a tablespoon or two of fat. This is not frying, but J browning or sauteing. It is useful when preparing vegetables for stews, for the preliminary step toward a fricasee, and other similar things, but it is not true frying. To fry means to immerse every part of the food in deep fat that is hot enough to cook from the moment the food is put in. If the temperature is right, the hot fat immediately forms an impenetrable coat that browns with the process of cooking, but through which the hot fat cannot seep. To fry you must provide yourself with a wire basket and an iron kettle in which the basket will fit and suffi cient frying material to cover what evpr you intend to cook. Good country lard is hard to im prove upon when it comes to selecting a frying medium, but city dwellers find that most of the lard proves to be a compound or a mixture of various fats DOEHNE BEER j UNEXCELLED FOR PURITY * AND EXCELLENCE < <) It is highly commended to lovers of good—pure—beer. > i Remember the snappy flavor of our / I \\ STOCK ALE | DOEHNE B j Beii suflL Order It To-day Independent :tIH * to is screened & r rr ?ind protected From the weather. It pays to buy such cool. WH/l is r i i r-t/ r YoftMl realize it offer .m. tICLLL l 6" CO* <-jou have once burned 8 Office, 1 N. Third Street. Some of OurS Yard, 10th and State Streets - ' " " ■» HBOE! ig DICTIONARY CERTIFICATE f§! : PRESENTED BY THE | |gg 1 STAR-INDEPENDENT. OCT.'ii" l"W4~l ! ® ONE CERTIFICATE OF APPRECIATION jgf | slum >ou I'nilorNrmcul of tlii* grfal cUiica-Uoiinl o]t|iorlinill,v v | '* ''•* cutting on* the nhove C ertlllciite of Appreciation, anil prewentlnK y <£ II :it tltiN < I nice. with the eipenar bonus amount herein net oppo- $ f -.it" Dictionary mlilcli covers tin- Items of the cost of packing, $ 9 esprexN frntn the factory. etc.), ami you will he presented ivlth tills t £ he $4.00 (Like illustrations printed in the display announcements.) 1 T iunHorn Cnirlich II is the ONLY cntire 'y new compilation by the world's A 1 \ authorities from leading universities; is bound in $ % * ftill Limp Leather, flexible, stamped in gold on back and i, Illustrated sides, printed on Bible paper, with red edges and corners <| J> rounded; beautiful, strong, durable. Besides the general contents, there 4 1 | are maps and over 600 subjects beautifully illustrated hv three- i % X color plates, numerous subjects by monotones, 16 pages of IJF*"*"*? I $ educational chart; and the latest United States Census. Present I 1"!!! T Tat this office' ONE Certificate oi and the 98© % T M All, ORDERS—Any book by parcel post, Include EXTRA 7 cents within % X 150 miles: 10 cents 150 to 300 miles; for greater distances ask your postmaster £ nmouni to include for 3 pounds. X WEST POINT MEN FIGHT FTEE ' Entire Garrison Called Out to Stop Forest Flames Albany, N. V., Oct. 15. —The entire West Point garrison lias been called out to light great forest fires at Mt. Picas aiil and Phoenicia, Ulster county. Four hundred ai res of forest laud have al ready been completely swept bv the flames. The West Point men are doing heroic work in the attempt to stop the huge blaze. Smaller fires at Lackawanna and Greenville were reported under control yesterday by the State Conservation I ommission. Gould Gets Verdict Against Heinz &il Aasoniated Presn. New York, Oct. 15.—A verdict in favor of Kdwin Gould in tiis suit against F. Augustus Heinz for the re covery of $1,200,000, a part of the purchase price of stock fti the Mercan tile National Bank with interest thore on, was returned by a jury in the Unit ed States District Court here yester day. While the jury was out Justice Page sent instructions it must bring in a verdict for the whole amount or nothing. - when the label is carefully read. Some , • compounds are very good for all pur poses that you would use lard or eook ' ing oils for, but even the best vary in quality. Therefore use one of the American cooking oils—there are doz '| ens of them that are splendid—or buy pork lard from some honest farmer who ■ never heard of sterine, or any kindred '; substitutes. As the frying fat may be used agaiu 1 and again this method of cookery is not expensive. After frying in it strain the fat and return it to the frying ket | tie, cover and keep it in a cool place. ', For dough mixtures test the fat with > a crusty bit of bread. When it will 1 brown in 40 seconds the temperature is right. But for croquettes and foods ; that have had previous cooking, and need only to be browned on the outside and made hot through, you must have *j the fat much hotter. However the lard ' or oil must never be allowed to suioke. I else a strong greasy flavor will attach II itself to the fried food and the cooking i ! will proceed too fast. Put the articles to be fried in the wire basket and lower it gently into ': the fat. If you have to turn the cro ■! quettes or crullers over use a dull " 1 pointed fork and try not to pierce | them. When an unmistakable doneness : I shows itself in the color of the food lift I the basket out and drain the contents l 1 on soft paper or cloth before serving. ■ I (Continued.) To Honor Monsignor Shahan Washington, Oct. 15. Monsignorj Shahan, rector of the Catholic Univer sity of America in this city, will be I consecrated titular bishop of Herman i: copolis on Sunday, November 15, by Cardinal Gibbons at Baltimore. The as sistant conspcrators will be Bishop Nil an, of Hartford, and Bishop O'Connell, of Richmond. The sermon will be preached by Monsignor Duggan, vicar general of 'the Hartford diocese. Former Judge Ashman Dies By Associated Press. Philadelphia, Oct. 15. —Former Judge William Nielson Ashnlan, of this city, died Tuesday night at his sum mer home at Buck Hill Palls, Monroe county. Pa. He served as a judge in this city for more than thirty years and retired recently. He was 75 vears old. HARRTSBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT. THURSDAY EVENING. OCTOBER 15. 1914. THE AFTER HOUSE A Story of Love. Mystery anJ a Private Yacht By MARY ROBERTS RINEIiART Copyright, 1913, by the AicClurt Publications, Inc. Copyright, 191 + , by Mary Huberts 'Hinehart. CHAPTER I. I Plan a Voyage. Y the heque3t of an elder broth er I was left enough money to «ee me through a small col —_J lege in Ohio and to secure me ; four years in a medical school ill the ! east. Why I chose medicine 1 hardly j know. Possibly lhe career of a sur- J geon attracted the adventurous element !in me. Perhaps, coming of a family of I doctors. I merely followed the line of j least resistance. It may l>e. indirectly but inevitably, tint I might lie on the I yacht F.ill on that terrible night of Aug. 12. more than a year ago Commencement left me with a diplo i ma. a new dre*s *uii. an out of date , medical library. a box of surgical in struincuts of the same date as the books and an incipient ca.n- of typhoid ferer. i I was twenty-four, six feet tall ami j I forty inches around the 'hest. Also, il had lived clean and worked and j played hard. 1 got over the fever final- I j ly. pretty much all bone and appetite. | j but—alive. Thanks to the college, my ! hospital care had cost uothing. It was j a good thing. I had just ST iu the j world. j The yacht Ella lay in the river not I far from my hospital windows. She was not a yacht when I lirst saw her, | nor at any time, technically, unless I use the word in the broad sense of a | pleasure boat. She was a two master ! and. when I saw her first, as dirt.v'and I disreputable as are most coasting ves sels. Her rejuvenation was the history of ray convalescence. On the day she stood forth in her first coat of white paint I exchanged my dressing gown for clothing that, however loosely it hung, was still clothing. Her new I sails marked my promotion to beef steak, her brass rails and awnings my first independent excursion tip mid | down the corridor outside my door, and. incidentally, my return to a collar and tie. | The next day. f think it was. tlie deck furniture was put out on the Ella ' —numbers of white wicker chairs and tables, with bright cushions to match j the awnings. 1 bad a pair of ancient opera glasses, as obsolete as my am- I putating knives and. like them, a part of my heritage. By that time I felt a proprietary interest in the Ella and through my glasses, carefully focused with a pair of scissors, watched the nrrangement of the deck furnishings A girl was directing the men. 1 judged from the poise with which she i carried herself that she was attractive —and knew it. How beautiful she was and how well she knew it I was to find out before lone McWhirter to the i contrary, she had nothing to do with my decision to sign as a sailor on the Ella. One of the bright spots of tbat ioug hot summer was McWhirter. We had graduated together in .Tune, and in October he was to enter a hospital in ' BuCfalo as a resident. But he was as Indigent as 1. and from June to Octo j ber is four months. "Four months." he said to me. "Even at two meals a day. boy. that's some thing over '.MO. And 1 can eat four times a day without a struggle | Wouldn't you think one of these over worked-for the-good-of-hnmanity dubs would take a vacation and give me a chance to hold down his practice?" Nothing of the sort developing, Mc- Whirter went into a drug store and managed to pull through the summer with unimpaired cheerfulness, confid ing to me that he secured his lunch eons free at the soda counter. McWhirter it was who got me m.v berth on the Ella, it must have been about the 'JOth of July, for the Ella sailed on the 28th. I was strong enough j to leave the hospital, but not yet pbysi | cally able for any prolonged exertion. McWhirter. who was short and stout had been alternately flirting with the nurse as she moved in and out prepar ing my room for the night and sizing me up through narrowed eyes. "No." be said, evidently following a private line of thought, "you don't be | long behind a counter, I.eslie. I'm j darned if I think you belong in the medical profession, either. The British army'd suit you." "The—what?" "You know Kipling Idea —riding | horseback, head of n column—undress j uniform—colonel's wife making eyes at | you—leading last hopes and all that." j "The British artn.v with Kipling i trimmlncrs being out of the question. I the original issue is still before us. | I'll have to work, Mac. and work like | the devil, if I'm to feed myself." There being no answer to tills. Me- Whirter contented himself with eying I me. 'l'm thinking," 1 said, "of going to 1 Europe. The sea is calling me, Mac." I "So was the grave a month ago, but It didn't get yon. Don't be an ass. : boy. How are you going to sea?" "Before the mast." This apparently ' conveying no moaning to McWbirter. I supplemented "as a common sailor." j He was indignant at tirst. offering I me his room and a part of his small I «alary until 1 got my strength. Then he became dubious, and. finally, so well did I paint my picture of long. | idle days on the ocean, of sweet, cool I nights under the stars, with breezes 1 that purred through the sails, rocking the ship to slumber—finally he waxed enthusiastic and was even for giving up the pharmacy at once and sailing with me. He had been fitting out the store room of a sailing yacht with drugs, he informed rue. and doing it under the persona! direction of the owner's wife. ' "I've iniule a hit with her." lie con tided. "Since she's learned I'm a grad uate M. D. she's letting me do the whole thing. I've made up some lo ; tions to prevent sunburn and that sea «ick prescription of old Larimer's, and J she thinks I'm the whole cheese. I'll : tuggest you as ship's doctor." | "How many men in the crew?" | "Eight. I think, or ten. It's a small boat and carries a small crew." "Then they don't want a ship's doc | tor. If I go I'll go as a sailor." 1 said I firmly. "And I want your word. Mac. ' not a word about me. except that I am ; honest" "You'll have to wash decks proba bly." j "I am filled with a wild longing to wash decks." I asserted, smiling at his disturbed face. "I should probably also have to polish brass. There's a great deal of brass on the boat.' 1 i "How do you know that?" When I told him he was much ex cited. and. although it was dark and the Ella consisted of throe lights, he Insisted on the opera glasses and was persuaded he saw her. Finally he put I down the glasses and came oyer to me. "Perhaps you are right. Ijeslie." he | said soberly. "Yon don't waut charity any more than they want a ship's doc tor. Wherever you go and whatever ; you do, whether you're swabbing decks in your bare feet or polishing brass | railings with an old sock, you're a I man." j Soon after that he took his departure, and the following day he telephoned i to say that if the sea was still calling me he could get a note to the captain recommending me. I asked him to get the note. Good old Mac! The sea was calling me. true enough, but only dire necessity j was driving me to ship before the mast —necessity and perhaps what, for want of a better name, we cnll destiny, for what is fate but inevitable law, in j evitable consequence. The stirring of my blood, generations I removed from a seafaring ancestor: tn.v ! illness, not a cause, but a result; Mc ! Whlrter. filling prescriptions behiud the glass screen of a pharmacy, and fit ting out. In porcelain Jars, the medicine j closet of the Ella; Turner and his wife, j Schwartz, the mulatto Tom. Singleton 1 : and Elsa I.ee; all thrown together, a ! hodgepodge of characters, motives. : 1 passions and hereditary tendencies, through an inevitable law working to j gether toward that terrible night of i Aug. 12, when hell seemed loose on a painted sea. The Ella bad been a roasting vessel til the South American trade. Tlie Arm of Turner & Sons owned the line of which the Ella was one of the smallest vessels. The gradual elimination of sailing ships and the substitution of steuiuers In the roasting trade, left the Ella, with others, out of commission. She was still seaworthy, rather fast, as such vessels go. and steady. Marshall Turner, the oldest son of old Kilns j Turner, the founder of the business, bought It In at a nominal sum, with the intention of using it as a private yacht, and. since It was a superstition of the house never to change the name of one of Its vessels, the schooner Ella, odorous of fresh lumber or raw rubber, as the case might be. dingy gray iu col or. with slovenly decks on which lines of seamen's clothing were generally hanging to dry, remained, in her metn morpbosis. still tHe Ella. Marshall Turner was a wealthy man. but he equipped bis new pleasure boat very modestly. As few changes :is j were possible wore made. He increased I the size of the forward house, adding i quarters for tlie captain and the two mates, and thus kept the after house for himself and his friends. He fumi gated the hold and the forecastle— n precaution that kept all the crew coughing for two days, and drove theni I out of the odor of formaldehyde to th I deck to sh To Be Continued Going 3,750 Miles to Wed | . Ha/.leton, Pa., Oct. 15.—Taking » 3,750-jnile journey to be a bride, Miss Jean M. Wetterau, of Hazletoa, a Get tysburg College graduate and former Hazleton High school teacher, left for New Westminster, British Columbia, ' where upon her arrival, October 24, she I will be wed to Dr. Fred M. Witich, a ! former Ha/.letonian, and also a gradu | ate of Gettysburg and Johns Hopkins | Medical Sihool, now in charge of a big j tuberculosis camp in the forests of the Northwest. Holds Up Nordica's Will Newark, N. .1., Oct. 15. —George W. Young, husband of Madam Lillian Nordica, the prima donna, who died at Batavia, .lava, last May, was yesterday temporarily restrained from proceeding in Monmouth county with the probate of the will, which Mr. Young claims, was made by his wife prior to the one filed in New York City, under the terms of which the singer left him nothing. The order was obtained' in behalf of Robert S. Baldwin. Try to Link Hungry Boy to Murder Hazleton, Fa., Oct. 15.—Believing that Adam Treounes, a Virginian boy found stealing food from dinner cans in the Jcanesville mines of the Lehigh Valley Coal Company, might know something of the murder of Lehigh Val ley Section Foreman Conrad Kuwedel, of Hazleton, in the woods near Oneida, September 26, railroad detectives in duced Alderman Heidenreich to commit Treounes to .jail for four months as a vagrant, to give the ollioers a chance to work on the case. Stop Those Early Bronchial Coughs They bang on all winter if not checked, and pave the way for serious throat and lung diseases. Get a bottle of Foley's Honey and Tar Compound, and take it freely. Stops coughs and colds, heals raw inflamed throat, loos ens the phlegan and is mildly laxative. Charles T. Miller, Ed. Enquirer, Can nelton, Ind., had bronchial trouble, got very hoarse, coughed constantly from a tickling throat, lie used only Foley's Honey and Tar Compound. Was "en tirely relieved. Wants others to know of Foley's Honey and Tar. George A. Gorgas, 16 North Third street and P. R. R. Station. s adv. Bed Cross Contract Let Washington, Oct. 15.—Contract for the construction of the uew American Red Cross building, to be a memorial to the women of the Civil war, was let by Secretary Garrison yesterday to the Boyle, Robertson Construction Compa ny. of Washington. Of the $700,000 fund for the building and site Congress appropriated $300,000, and many large sums were contributed by private indi viduals. The building will be within a stone's throw of the White House. Tried to Wreck Trolley Car Lancaster, Pa., Oct. 15.—Amos Mc- Oomsey, of Columbia, was lodged in the county jail yesterday, having been caught attempting to wreck a Conestoga trolley car near Chickios Park by plac j iug a i-ross-tie on the trafk. Within the j last few weeks half a dozen attempts ; have been made to wreck cars at the I same point, and McComsey has confessed ! to be the offender. Lynch Law After Respite Angleton, Texas, Oct. 15.—Joe Dur- I fee, a negro convicted of murdering I Mrs. J. M. Seitz, of Post City, was ta ! ken bv a mob here yesterday and | lynched. Durfee was to have been j hanged legally last week but* was re | spited for thirty days. Slips That Pass in the Night 'Belated Oity Man (after second un successful attempt to step passing fire engine)—Orl rite, then—Jbis—keep your bloomin' chestnuts.—ilondon Tat ief. You Too, Should ; never be without Caf-a-so Anti-pain | Tablets, the safe and sure remedy ' for Headache and Neuralgia. A remedy that never fails. | 12 doses for 10c 30 doses for 33c At all Druggists. Prepared by Hone Remedy and Supply Co., York, Pa. ! v . * \ Cumberland Valley Railroad In KCCect May ISM. . Train* lA-ave durrlakurv — For Winchester and Martinsburg, »; 1.03, *7.50 a. in, *3.40 p. m. For tt&gerstown, Chambersburg and intermediate stations, at *6.03, •7.6#, -i 1.58 "a. in., -4.1 U. &.3i. •J.W. n.ue p m. Additional trains tor Carlisle ant Uechanlcsburg at ».48 a. m, 2.11, 1.27 u.so, y.au p. m. For Dllisburg at fi.o3. •7.6n and *U.M I «. m„ :.18. *3.40. 5.32, 6.3r p. m. 'Dally. All other train* daily except Sunday. t H. TONOE. H A. RIDDLJ& Q. P. A kupt. STOP |; THIEF! : Novelized From the Great Play of the Same Name by George C. Jenks and Carlyle Moore Copyright, 1933, by (he H. K. Fly Company "Nix! Never again for me to New I York. Whnt else?" "Oh. she says." went on Nell. laugh ing still harder, "tlint her mother has lost her ear trumpet again." "Well, they can't say I took It—or ,vou either. That's one comfort." "No. But Miss Caroline says they' are afraid lier father lias done some thing with it and can't remember. I suppose he's getting it again." "(Jetting what again?'" "That disease with the long name, klepto—whatever It is. You know." "Uh hnhl If they don't put tin mlt- j tens on that old man he'll land in Jail yet." predicted .lack Doogan, shaking his head solemnly. tiif: end. I C.V.NEWS ' - —— 1 | HAIX HALTS KACIX(J Weather Kept Many Away From the Hagerstown Fair Hagerstown, Mil., Oct. 15. — Rain j necessitated a postponement of the har ness Ivor so racing program sit the Ha] gerstown fair yesterday afternoon, as j a result of which the races will be | called at 11 o 'clock to-day. The four running races produced ox j citing sport and several spills, the worst i occurring in the three-quarter mile race, i When several jockeys were thrown hcav■ I ily to tlhe travk ami badly bruised. The ! 'horses ran away, causing 'considerable! excitement. Jockey OHaippel had tfhe' good fortune to rifle three of the four ■winners during the afternpon and the misfortune to he set down for the re-! mainder of 'the meeting owing to dis I obedience to the starter at the scoring t ipost. Summary: 'Five-eig-hth mile dash, purse Sloo— Maid, W. B. Suggs. Ohappel, won; Chilton Chief, H. A. 'Griswold, \ Ijvons, second; Sati, 'Mulligan & Oelo, j Richards, third. M art c'M Beda, Will WndUell, Travel l/iglh't and Kidron also ran. Time, 1.02. Special race, 5 furlongs, purse SIOO j —General Warren, C. G. Pons, Ohap pel, won; Fanchette, A. W. Foul It, M>f- I Carthy, second: Chanticleer, F. W. Har mon, 'Lyons, third. Aguila. Dan l>n Xoyles, 7.. ,T. Weaver. Top Rock, Dor othy Prvor and Stanley ;H. also ran. I Time, 1.02%. Three-quarter-mile dash, ,jmrse SIOO —Moilie 'Richards, P. S. Shoot, diappel, won; Maxentius, C. H. Stoller. Meyers, second; Sunkist, J. C. Gragg. Jackson, third. Tiger Jim, Masola, Augie D. and Ourieux also ran. Time, 1,19. One-and-a-quarter-mile i(ash, purse slso.—Laird o' Kirkaldy, J. Mc- Carthy, 'McfCartlby won; Lew in, J. 'H. Ford, 'Garnet, second; Marigold. F. A. Heukman, Nichols, third. Virginia Creeiper, 'Haldeman and 'Miss Sherwood also ran. Time, 2.14. Woman Burned to Death S'hippensburg, Oct. 15.—Mrs. George Plasterer was burned to death Tuesday While making aipplebutter in the yard alt her home. She had carried some apples to the kettle and 'her dress caught fire. The accident, occurred at noon and Mrs. (Plasterer was in an un conscious condition until she died at 10 o'clock iti the nigfot. Her husband and daughter wero badly 'burned in their efforts to extinguish the flames. Soon Will Be Apple Day OhaTn'berrburg, Oct. 15.—The big day is coming. Tuesday, October 20°, is the tenth anniversary of National Apple Day, founded by James iHandlv, of Qiiiwcy, 111., and ratified and en dorsed bv Governors, consumers, horti cultural societies and trade bodies from ocean to ocean. King apple ascends the throne on National Apple Day and all . w'ho wish may do him honor. ' Medical Society Meets Carlisle, O.'it. 15.—-Officers wr\r« | elected yesterday and an interesting discussion on typhoid fever taken up 1 at the quarterly meeting of tlhe Cum ; berland County Medical Association 'held in t'he Y. M. ('. A. parlors at 2 o'clock. Dr. W. 8. Ruc'h, of Carlisle, ! was chosen president, and Dr. E. R. ! Plank, of Carlisle, secretary. Dr. D. S. Funk, of Harrteburg, read jan interesting paper on "Typhoid (Fever" which was discussed (by the I members present. Regular routine ibtisi j noss with this exception was transacted. The next meeting wil| be hebl in this I plaice on tho second Tuesday in Janu ary. Joins Insurance Company W«vne?boro, Oct. 15.—Clarence Hartsock. South Franklin street., clerk ( in the Philadelphia shoe store for the ! past two years, to j day went to Har ! risbllrg where 'he has accepted a po sition with the New York Life Insur ance Co., with ofticcs in the Union Trust Co. building on the square. George i\f. S.angler. West (Main street, is superintendent of the 'Harris burg district of the New York Life Co. and will in a short time move his fam ily t.o Harris-burg. Big Chestnut Crop • Gettysburg, Oct. 15.—'Adams county will have a <-ro

. F. Bobb's house on Bridge street on | Vv ednesday. Mrs. R. M. Kline is visiting rela I lives in Pishing ( reek Vallev. BOROUtiHK WANT >IOKE |>o\\ KR Home Rule League of the County Public Service Law Amended Members of the executive committee of the Municipal Home Rule -League j of Dauphin county, met in the hall of j the City Commissioners, in the court | house, yesterday afternoon and decided j to call a meeting of representative bor j ough councilmen and township super visors to be. held in the court house t on October 23, This session is called I tor the purpose of increasing the | league's membership. The members of the executive coin | mittee had hoped to have all boroughs j and townships of the county represent , ed at the meeting yesterday although | through some misunderstanding the proper notices had not been sent out. | The chief purpose of the league is to I urge the next Legislature to amend j the Public Service Commission Act, so , as to return the municipal officers eer ; tain powers which they formerly held | and which are now vested in the Coin- I mission. The following members of the execu tive committee were present/yesterday: J Charles w. Rank, W. P. Mills and P. •C. Campbell, of Millersburg; S, 8. | Straub, of Williamstown, and C. B. I Shelly, of Highspire. FUNERAL OF JOHN STOVER Died Monday Morning After an Opera tion for Appendicitis The funeral services of John Stover, of Stoverdale, who died at the Harris burg hospital on Monday morning, aft er an operation for appendicitis, was held at the Stoverdale church yester day afternoon. The Rev. Joseph Weir ick, pastor of the Stoverdale church, had charge of the services. Prayer was offered by the Rev. O. G. Romig, of Hershey, and the Rev. Mr. Brehnt, of Hummelstown. The pallbearers were William Hab byshaw, Ross Swartz, bandis Hoffer, Arthur Yingst, Ira Eshelman and Jo seph Snavelv. Burial was made iii the Stoverdale cemetery. ! £!'•■ ;• ViBUB"MM "W*■•Wt'i'Wi I When In Philadelphia Stop at the B 1 NEW HOTEL WALTON I ■ ■ Broad and Locust Streets § I Reopened after the expenditure B | of an enormous sum in remodel- mm Eg In®:, redecorntins: and refurnishing. § g IN THE CENTER OF EVEMMIC § M Near all Stores, Theatres and W 1 K Points of Interest. B ■ Every Modern Convenience H 500 Elegantly Furnished Room* j| European I'l&n P Rooms. without hath ....$1,90 up B ff Rooms, with hath $2 up. §§ Hot and cold running ® water In all roomn ■ I WALTON HOTEL CO. S J Louis Lukes. President-Manager. B r*mw "■ !'■ m\mm\ I—Muni mmj BUSINESS COLLEQEA : \ HBG,. BUSINESS COl,ld3trE 320 Market Street Fall Term September First OAY AND NIG-HT / Day and Night Sessions Positions for All Graduate* i Enroll Next Monday SCHOOL of COMMERCE 15 S. Market S«., Harrisburg, Pa. f