10 f "\fes Jane. 11l f answer heie^^|^|||||| Yes, steps saved. Brea^^ if often health. For the doctors say 1 ; Hi| t%l l there's no more wearing grind than W i r2j.(| |pM I constant tramping up and down stairs. J r3:j|t^jJ;|s Save yourself—fifty cents a month a % is all that an extension telephone costs. | Call the Business Office today. | The Bell Telephone Co. A ft. S. B. W.itts. Local Mgr « \ § VValnut St. j | i «?• -mw:;wmi»!. *• «kssk: " " ■ 7 X : : I ~4i. r^ 1 "* ::1: i 1 1 fpjs * r: >- ifll V I I ***•£ ~ ' \ X^ H*-"' PARK SIDE HOSPITAL 1900-02-04 Market Street Opeu to maternity eases of all reputable physicians. Trained nurses in ;itteiidau<*e. Both plioucs. MAINE MEMORIAL JUNK Shell Loaned to Merideu as Memento Found in Scrap Ueriden, Conn., Nov. lit.—The Jin. l 1 ii>« in the scrap h?.ip of a junk dealer \ «>f a relic >jl' tlie battleship Maine, loaned to this city by the United ales government a~ a memorial to the men killed when the vessel was sunk j at iTavana, has caused an investigation j 1> (>. A. K. ami Spanish War Veterans. ( The relic is a large shell taken from the ship. « 'harle.- M. Runge said he ' bought it from a storehouse keeper for ! rap. Congressman Reilly, who helped ' "" " 11 " 1 Directory of Leading Hotels of Harrisburg Hotel Columbus Absolutely Fireproof ■to Rooms and Baths European Flan Maurice E. Euss, Proprietor Third and Walnut Sts., Federal Square The Lochiel Corner Market and Third Streets Entrance oil Third Street EUROPEAN PLAN Kooius provided with Heat, Hot and Cold Water. Baths free to guests W. H. BYERLY, Prop. HOTEL DAUPHIN * ;JOO MARKET STREET European P'.an. Kates SI.OO per day and up. Hooms single or en suite, with private ,baths. Mintmeon, 11.30 to 2 p. in.. 3.V Dinner daily, 5 to 8 p. m., 30e bpecial Sunday Dinner, noon to H p. m„ 75c A la carte service, ii a. in. to 12 p it ' HOHTIM, A MIIIULE, Proprietor* ' The Metropolitan Strictly European For something good to eat. Every- | tiling in season. Service the best. ' Prices the lowest. HOTEL VICTOR No. 25 3outh Fourth Street Directly opponltc I nJou Mmlui, j rqulppi'd It Ii all Modem luiprote- i meiata; running wuler In every rooaii line bath; perfectly ounitary; nicely t iirululled tlirou|;hoiit. Bates moderate. j European I'lao. JOSEPH GIUSTI, Proprietor. THE BOLTON Market Square Large and convenient Sample Rooms Passenger and Baggage Elevator. Elee j trie Cars to and from depot. Electrio 1 Light and Steam lleat; Rooms on suits ) or single with Baths. Rates, $2.60 per day and up. 3. U. « M. S. Butterworth, Props. THEPLAZA 4 23-126 Market St., Harrisburg, Pa. At the' Entrance to the P. R. R. Station EUROPEAN PLAN F. B. ALDINGEB. Proprietor get the memento, said yesterday that lie would urge the government to de mand its return unless the city at once i laces it in Hubbard Park, us was in ' teuded. Foley's Honey and Tar Compound for Croup Croup scares yon. The loud hoarse I croupy cough, choking and gasping for I breath, labored breathing, call for im mediate relief. The very first doses of j I Foley's Honey and Tar Compound vvili j . muster tlie croup. It cuts tile thick j I mucus, clears away the phlegm and ! ! o; ens up and cases the air passages.} Harold Berg, .Mass, Mich., writes: "We I „'ive Foley's Honey and Tar to our chil- i dren for croup and it always act? quick- ' I lv." Every user is a friend. Geo. A. ; Uorgas, 1 6 Xort'h Third street and P. R. If. Station. Adv. j "LOST," TOOK ' NATURE CURE") Missing Woman Lived 3ix Weeks Alone in Woods West Falmouth. Mass., Nov. 19.—De i ! daring she had wandered alone in the , 1 woods for six weeks, living on acorns \ • and checkeiiberries as a '"nature cure," - Miss Martha Palmer, who has been; missing since September 12, lias re ': turned to civilization. She told Deputy j ; sheriff H. H. Lawrence, at whose home I she stayed over night, that she had I regained her health and enjoyed her j experience, but that the increasing cold ! ii' the nights had forced her to seek : i shelter. Miss P,.lme" is about 40 years of j age. Since her disappearance, saving that she was going for a stroll in the | woods, relatives have been unceasing in ' ' their search for her. / I Non-greasy Toilet Creain—Keeps the j | s'kln Soft and Velvety In Hough ! I Weather. An Exquisite Toilet Prep, i aration, 25c. UOItGAS DRUG STORES 10 N. Third St.. soil P. It. It. Station V ■- I BUSINESS COLLEGES. ~ ;i itbtr,. BUSINESS CO-UiitaiE . ! ;S'JSH Market Street Fah term September First I OAY AND NIGHT • ! <* «\ I Stenography, Stenotypy DAY and NIGHT SESSIONS Enroll Any Monday SCHOOL of COMMERCE 15 S. "arket Sq., Harrisburg, Pa. i Cumberland Valley Railroad j In Kftect May 2-1, lan. Trulnft Leave liarriaburK— For Winchester jiiU Maitinsburt a.l I 5.03, '7.50 a. in., *3.10 p. m. for llagcrstown, Charnborsburg and intermediatu stations, at *5.03. '7 50 *ll.jo a. 111.. '3.40. j 32. »7.40. 11 00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanicsburg at ».4S a. m„ 2.18 3vj b 30, y. 30 p. m. For Dillaburg at 5.03, *7.50 and M 1.63 a. m., 2.18, *3.40, 5.32, 6.30 p. in. •Dally. All other trains duly except Sunday. J H. TONGB. H. A. ItIUULK, G. I*. A. S upu TTARftTSBFPft RTAR-INDPJPENDENT, THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 19. 1914. "" Hesketh Pochard l _ r u-Lj--i- l • »». , r^-^-i_ r Q-x ' . Jl^.ww^ww-^ws^VV»>MWyW«< II^»MWWVVVVVWV^) Continued Then 7 don't sec how It helps jou, at all. Its coming cau't tnve anything, to do with the Atterson robbery, foi I the distance from here to the camp is too far to throw a packet, and the nb * %. Atttefc* "Cecil Atterson, I've got you!" »eu«*e of track? tunkes ir clear that At-j terson cannot have handed the loot I over to a confederate in the canoe ' Isn't that right''" "Looks that way." admitted .loe. "Then the canoe can be only a coin-! cidence." November shook his head. "I > wouldn't ko (|uite so far as to say! that. Mr. Quariteh." Once again he rapidly went over the! ground near the river, then returned i to the spot where Atterson had slept. \ following a slightly different track loi that by which we had come. Then! taking the hatchet from his belt, he' split a dead log or two for a fire and I hunc up the kettle once more. 11 guessed from this that he had seen at least some daylight in a matter that j was still obscure and inexplicable 10 me. "I wonder if Atterson has confessed to Hobson yet," 1 sitid. meaning to draw Joe. "He may confess about the robbery, but he can't tell any one where the bank property is, because he's been robbed in his turn." "Robbed!" I exclaimed. Joe nodded. "And the robber?" "'Bout five foot six. light weight, very handsome, lias black hair. is. I think, tin.ler twenty-five years old and lives in Lendeville or near it." "Joe, you've nothing to go on." I I cried. "Are you sure of this? How can you know?" "I'll tell you when I've got those t bank bills back." CHAPTER XI. Phedre Pointarre. IT was still early afternoon when we arrived in Leudeville. a few scattered farms and a single gen eral store. Outside one of the farmhouses .loe paused. "I know the cbap that lives In here." he said. "He's a pretty mean kind of a man. Mr. Quariteh. I may find a way to make him talk, though if he thought I wunted information he'd not part with it." » "Say. McAndrew," began Joe. "what's your price for hiring two strong horses and a good buebboard to take us and our outfit on from here to the Burnt Lands by Sandy pond?" "Twenty dollars." "Huh!" said Joe. "we don't want to buy the old horses!" The Scotchman's shaven lips (he wore h chin beard and whiskers! opeu- ! ed. "It would na' pay to do it for less." "Then there's others as will." "And what might their names be?" inquired McAndrew ironically. * "Them as look up Bank Clerk At- ] terson when he was here six weeks back." "Weel, you're wrang!" cried McAn- j drew, "far Bank Clerk Atterson juist : walked in with young Simon Pointarre ! and lived with the family at their new mill. So the price is twenty or I'll nae hearness a horse for ye." "Theu I'll have to go on to Simon Pointarre. I've heard him well spoken of." "Have ye now? That's queer, for w ! I be"— j "Maybe, then. It was his brother," I said Joe quickly, j "Which?" "The other one that was with An ' ! derson at Ked river." J "There was nae one. only the old muu. Simon and the two girrls." i "Well, anyway. I'll ask the Poin tarre's price before I close with yours.'* v | "I'll make a reduce to sl7 if ye agree j here and now." November said something further of Atterson's high regard for Simon Poin i tarre. which goaded old McAndrew to fury. "And I suppose it was love of Simon that made him employ that family." he snarled. "Oh. yes. that's comic, j Twas Simon and no that grinding las sie they call Pbedre! Atterson? Tush! J I tell ye. if ever a man made a fule o' i himself"— But here, despite MeAndrew's pro- ! tests. Joe left the farm At the store which was next visited , we learned the position of the Poin- I tarre steading and the fact that old J Pointarre, the daughters. Phedre and j Claire, and one sou. Simon, were at j home. The door was opened by a girl of ] j about twenty years of age. Her bright | brown eyes and hair roa(3e her very j good looking. Joe gave her a quick j glance. "I came to see your sister." said he. ' j "Simon." called (he girl, "here's a ] man to see Phedre." "What's your business?" growled a man's voice from the inner room, j "Why sent you?" "Can't tell that, but I guess Miss 1 Pointarre will know when I give her the message." "Well. I suppose you'd best see her. 1 She's down bringing in the cows, j ! You'll find her below there in the j i meadow." | Joe thanked him and we set off. A , ' twig broke .under my foot, and the 1 j girl swung round at the noise. "What do you want?" she asked, j She was tall and really gloriously ; j handsome. "I've come from Atterson I've just j ! seen him.'' said November. "There are many people who see him | ! every day. What of that?" "Hub! Don't they read the newspa- ■ per in Lendevill?? There's something | about him going round. I came think- | 1 ing you'd sure want to benr." said No- { vein be r. The color rose in Phedre's beautiful I i face. "They're saying." went on Joe. "that I I he robbed the bank where he is em- | ployed of SIOO,OOO, and instead of try ing to gel away on the train or by one of the steamers be made for the woods." Phedre turned away as if bored. "What interest have 1 in this? It en- j l nuies me to listen." "Wait!" replied November. "With the police I went and soon struck At* 1 terson's trail on the old colonial post road and in time come up with Atter- ; , son himself nigh Red river. The po lice takes Atterson prisoner, but they found nothing. Though they searched hini and all round about the camp, | i they found nothing." I "He had hidden it. I suppose." "So the police thought And T ! thought t.he same till"—November's j j gaze never left her face—"till I see his J eyes. The pupils were like pin points j In his head." He paused nnd added: "I srot the bottle of whisky that was in ilia pack. Tt.'ll go in as evidence." "Of what?" she cried impatiently. "That Atterson was drugged and the Bank property stole from him. You i see." continued Joe. "this robbery j wasn't altogether Atterson'sown idea.'' , "Ah!" "No. 1 goess he had the first notion I of it. when he was on his vacation six j weeks back. He was in love with a wonderful handsome girl. Blue eye* ! she had and black hair, and her teeth | was as good as yours. She pretended j to be in love with him. but all along she was in love with—well. I can't say who Ae was iu love with—herself likely. Anyway. I expect she used all her iufiuence to uiakc Atterson rob the | bank and then light out for the woods with the stuff. He does all she wants, j On his way to the woods she meets i him with a pack of food and neces saries. in that pack was a bottle of j drugged whisky. She asks hint where j he's going to camp that night, be sus- j pei'ts nothing and tells her. and off ' she goes in a canoe up Ked river till i she comes to opposite where he's lying j drugged. She lands and robs him, but i she don't want him to know who done j that, so she plays an old game to con ceal her tracks. She's a rare active j young woman, so she carries out her j plan, gets back to her carioe and home : to I>eudeville. Need I tell any more i about her?" Durlug Joe's story Phedre's color had j tlowly died away. ; "You are very clerer!" she said bit terly. "But why sbtiuld you tell me ! I | all this?" "Because I'm going to advise you to ! | hand over the SIOO,OOO you took from ■ Atterson. I'm tn this case for the i I bank." "I?" she exclaimed violently. "Do I you dare to say that I had anything i | whatever to do with this robbery, that ' j I have the $100,000? Bah! 1 know | ! nothing about it. How should I?" I ! Joe shrugged his shoulders. "Then ' I beg your pardon. Miss Pointarre, and | ! 1 say good bye. 1 must go and make i my report to the police and let them j act their own way." He turned, but , j before he had gone more than a step j or two she called to hira. ! "There Is one point: you have missed i i for all your cleverness," she said, j I "Suppose what you have said in true. : may it not be that the girl who robbed ; Atterson took the mopey just to return it to the bank?" "Don't seem to be that way, for she 1 ; has just denied all knowledge of the i property and denied she had it before j two witnesses. Besides, when Atter ! son comes to know that he's been j made a catspaw of he'll be liable to | turn kiug's evidence. No. miss, your 1 only chance la t to hand over the stuff j —here and now." "To you'." she scoffed, "And who j are you? What right have you"— j "I'm in this case for the bank. Old | McAndrew knows me well and can | tell you my name." "What is it?" "People mostly call me November j Joe." ! She threw back "her head—every at titude. every movement of hers was wonderful. To Be Continued. K3.00 —\ V. \\ YORK WIIKKTI UN—KS.UO ! Next Sunday. Pennsylvania Railroad. Special train leaves Harrlsburg ,">.45 a. m. A long day in the greatest American city. BOY KILLS LARGEST BEAR | Amos Shuck. 1-1 Yoirs Old, Bags Ani mal Weighing ><j!J Pounds Maueh Chunk, Pa., Nov. 19.—.Amos j Shuck, of Albrig'htsville, aged 14 years, j Tuesday shot a hear which weigihed ! 463 pounds When dressed. This is said | to be, the largest bear ever killed in that section. Whui'k is also the young est hunter ever known to have allot a 'bear in the vicinity. A deer was recently killed in the ! Kemmerer private reserve at the Hatch- 1 ery, in Penn forest township, Carbon i county, by an unidentified 'hunter, ami 1 t'he State police and other officers arc I investigating the shooting. The deer i was a tine specimen. Holiday opening and souvenir day, Saturday, November L't. Grand Union ! Tea Store, 208 North Second street. adv. NETS FAIL TO SAVE SUICIDE Chicago, Nov. 19. —'Life nets, placed j in the rotunda of the Oham'bcr of Coin ' merce building in to attempt to dis i courage suicides, proved unavailing yes ' ten-day. A well-dressed man, a/bout 50 year.-* of age, jumped from the fourteenth tloor, plunged through the s reen on t'he I eighth tloor and his lifeless 'body was entangled in the broken stands of the third floor siTeen. There the crushed form hung swaying until firemen with ladders took it down. Wife Dies by His Side Lancaster, Pa., Nov. 19.—(Harry .1. ■sinitfb, of Columlbia, awakened yester day morning to find his wife dead by his side. I't is believed that her foron cQiial tubes closed while she slept due to quinsy. 'X^ d—M I HOUSEHOLD TALKS Henrietta D. Graue! Utilizing the Waste Products (Continued from yesterday.) There are few women who have not I profited by the splendid bulletins oil j domestic science subjects that are sent '.out by the government. But it is not | given to all women to enjoy at first hand a demonstrated talk by one of j the government bulletin, makers. Armed, cap-a-pie, with white apron | spotless and steam cooker singing cheerily, Mr. O. 11. Benson, canning I specialist ot' this United States of America, yesterday canned spinach, rhu barb. peppers, endive, tomatoes, celery j and sweet corn at the State University j experiment station. This work is for every woman who i has a family and anyone can get full ! and clear directions in the pamphlets ! issued by the Agricultural Department, | Washington, D. by writing for them. Beside the ones about canning there I are several excellent booklets about household sanitation and cookery and so on, so write for the list and take your choice, we must "get to our mut ton,' which in this case happens to be apples. Perhaps you think November quite too late in the year to talk canning. It is not, almost all of us have some thing every week we would can if we were sure it would keep. Mr, Benson canned windfall apples as an experi ment and I want you to do the same, you will be delighted. Core but do not peel the apples, re move any decayed places. Plunge ap ples into scalding water, using a wire frying basket to hold them or even a cheese cloth bag. Let'apples remain iu boiling water three minutes, then plunge them into cold water. Now pack You Must Do It Now IF YOU WANT BEAUTIFUL FLOWERS Gorgeous Bright Colored Tulips, Sweet-scented Hyacinths, Old-fashion "Smokepipc" Daffodils, You Must Plant the Bulbs Now. There is nothing moro beautiful than a lied of Hyacinths or Tulips bursting forth their marvelous mass of blooms early in the spring lie fore any other flowers arc to be seen. Your money spent for tlicsu will give you much real pleasure. Brighten Up Your Home—Brighten Up "our Life, by Having More Flowers to Look At. Plant Lots of Them—Do It Now Before the Ground Freezes. HYACINTH all colors, sl.lO, 7."> c, 00c and 10c per dozen. $".(>(), ijiii.tio, $;5.7f» and S:t.OO per hundred. 1 TULIPS, NARCISSUS, CROCUS, SNOWDROPS. Walter S. Schcll QUALITY SEEDS 1307 1309 MARKET STREET Both Phones Auto Delivery I Can Collect S'JOO for Over-ride Trenton, Nov. 19.—The Court of Er rors uphold yesterday a verdict of S2OO awarded in the Passaic Circuit Court to Frederick Mallcry, a Passaic news paper man, for false Arrest, >< I'ter he Jiad been carried past his lio.nc town j tin; si|«|>les into (vide mmitiieil glass ,j»ir: Cover with a thin svrup (oi" onethir ■sugar ami two-thirds water) thai i boiling. Put 011 rubbers and lids :< 11 place in steamer for forty minutes. Th variety of apple nitiv decide the lengt of steaming as some will cook mm I quickly than others and some steumei aie more compact than the improvise ; ones most housekeepers use. The apples may al r o be pared aa sliced into vater that has been suite j slightly, to keep tlieni from discoloring I When all arc nicely slicod, ;is for pic I till sterilized ,iars'with tliem and cove | with the simple syrup, close jars an j steam as directed above and you wi jbe delighted with result when the Iconic from the steamer, .fust a nor [about using the canned apple; they <n i be sen ed with cream and stuigar just a they come from the jar, or be made int a salad with nuts, celery chopped fin and salad dressing. Or they may b | put into :i baking ilisli, sprinkled wit sugar, spice and butter and baked fo any meal in the day. They are fini i apple dumpling, and apple pies mad with them are as far superior to drie apple pies :ts the sun's radiance is t that of the moon's. Beside all tlies ways there is apple sauce, appl custard, apple whipped i.nto stiff white of eggs and sweetened anil called appl meringue and lust but not least appl pan dowdy. Tf you are interested in using th waste material in your home lutein write to the address given above for list of the books on cunning and sem for them. The work is simple, as yo can see. from this limited description but it is well worth our most earnes attention. on an Brie train to Patorson, whilJ asleep. When 12 cents additional fan was demanded he refused to pay am was arrestoil at the instance of the COII duetor, hut later WHS discharged. Artistic Printing at
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers