The star-independent. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1904-1917, January 11, 1915, Page 8, Image 8
8 f The Big "Q" Society | ! INAUGURAL BALL ! ♦ » * » T t Chestnut Street Auditorium 1 • ♦ | Tuesday Night, January 19th «> <• ❖ * * TICKETS, $2.00. ADMISSION BY TICKET AND INVITATION. * i v <• <• 1 J . COMMITTEE: % ♦ <• ♦ Chas. E. Covert, President. William A. 8011, Treasurer. •> ♦ Frank H. Hoy, ,Tr.,V. President. Howard W. Haker, Trustee. t J Cornelius B. Shope, V. President. Charles C. Hoffman, Secretary. * K); HOUSEHOLD ifi TALKS KPfefej' Henrietta D. Grauel To Make Crackers At Home r>o you ro member bow mother used to say, "Well, run get some crackers, then, if you are hungry," and we'd (ill our apron pockets from the plump lit tle jar that 'vaj always filled with the l-risp "piece." Children can't do that now for crackers have graduated into wafers mid instead of selling at five cents a pound or three pounds t'or a dime, in Jiulk, they are purchased in quarter pound cartons and served at tea. or to company. Next to cookies children enjoy rrackers for lunches and mothers will <lo well to reach down the old cracker jar and keep it filled and in their reach. The following is the commercial cracker easy to make and warranted to "keep" as long as it lasts: One quart or four cups of Hour, three teaspoons of butter, one-half teaspoon *mda, one teaspoon salt, two cups ot' j sweet milk or water. The milk makes 11 richer cracker, the water a crispor one, though the difference is so slight «s to be immaterial. Sift the dry in predients together, rub in the butter mid then the liquid, l'lace the dough on a mixing board and roll and beat and work it until it seems full of tiny eir cells, this will take about twenty minutes, lioll to a thin sheet and cut out in square? or rounds. Prick each one with a fork and place on pans so they do not touch, bake in a slow oven until they are cri-sp and hard but not brown. • When they are cool put them in a bag and hang up. J>o not keep in a box. MURDER OF SIX CHARIiKD Negro's Pardon Held Up by New Evi dence Oharleston, W. Va., .lan. 11.—Pre "vented from receiving a Christmas | ar don from Governor H. I). Hatfield. lie ■cause of an anonymous letter, W'yllc Lewis. a colored prisoner in the West Virginia penitentiary, i« alleged b\ de tectives of Colum'bus, 0., to have been iresponsible for the deaths of six per sons in Cohnrfhus in IS9G. According to affidavits Obtained by the detectives, Lewis is said to have admitted knowledge of the robbery of lire home of .John Wi'bbard, of ('oliim ihus, anil of setting lire to it. Hiii •bard, hi- wife, two children and two women relatives were cremated. Lewis is serving a life sentence for n murder committed fifteen years ago. Governor Hatfield receive! a letter ac cusing Lewis of the Columbus crime, and held up the ■, roposed ; anion, pend ing an investigation. AUTO BANDITS K<>B HOTEL "Wallet Containing $1,075 Taken From Underneath Landlord's Pillow Easton. Pa., Jan. 11.—'Between 2.30 and :: o clock yesterday morning two men occupying a light-colored touring ••ar drove up to the Great Meadows hotel, <ireat 'Meadows. N*. .1., and while one remained ou guard outside the other forced open a rear window anil entered. After going through the cash register in the bar room, the thief en tered the apartment occupied by John Reed, tiie proprietor, and wife. From under the pillow he extracted the land lord's wallet, containing $1,075. The thief used a searchlight, the rays of which awakened 'Mrs. Reed just as he was leaving the room. Site seized a r( volver and handed it to her husband, •who !tre.| three shots at the retreating 3>urglar. None took effect, and lie ran down the stairs anil joined his com panion [teed raised a window and aroused the neighborhood, but the mo tor quickly disap' eared. M Good Enough For the OMost Critical Smoker Sure thing! Watch the men who buy them! They know quality and ask for MO J A. J 10c CIGARS because they know they are all Havana cigars with 50 years' cigar making back A of them to guarantee best results from the use of choicest leaf. Made by J. C. Herman & Co. j Cracknels —"They taste like blotting jpaper," says the would-be humorist of the family but he always wants an i lother as an excuse for "just one more cup of tea," so his criticism falls short ' of its point. These may be made in any quantity I but the amount given here will make, J two or three dozen, enough, surely, for! a first attempt. j Scald two cups of milk and add four j tablespoons butter and let this cool. Then add two-thirds of a cake of com pressed or a half a cup of home-made | yeast, one teasjioou of salt, two table- | spoons sugar and enough well sifted 1 !flour to make a light dough, bet this! j rise until it doubles in size, work it down lightly and roll out thin, prick and stamp it out in rounds. Bake in a moderate oven. DAILY MENU Breakfast Fruit Spanish Toast Jam Muttered Finnan I laddie Hot Biscuits Coffee Luncheon Malaga ({rapes Chicken in Aspic torn 1 ritters Rice Croquettes Pine Apple Salad Wa fcrs "f ca Dinner Mock I art le Soup Crackers Relishes Smelts. Lemon Garnish Pork Tenderloin, Stuffed j Spiced Prunes Fried Celery Potatoes Xut and Apple Salad Custard Cups, Grilled Almonds Small Coffee LANCASTER TOBACCO MARKET New Crop Will Sell Much Lower Than Expected by Trade l.muca.ster, Jan. 11.—Judging by the present outlook, the new tobacco croip at Lancaster county will sell much I sooner than the trade expected, for re- j ports from various parts of the county >'aoiv that already a great many crops j have 'been sold. The prices range from N' . cents a pound to 10 cents for wrap per grades, and 2 to 3 cents a pound j tor fillers. More sold under 10 cents tiiau at in cents, however, and nothing hut an early recovery* o*f the cigar iu- ' dustry. of which there is no present ! evidence, will send prices above these! • figures. That the growers have settled down ! tn the conviction that tihev cannot get ' the 1 1 and 12 cents a pound they wore ! counting upon is evidenced bv the fact 1 ..that they are now selling at tfhe pres ent prices. To hold back when a mar- ' ket is open to them, waiting for a re vival ot tilie leaf trade, is to court still lower prices late in the season, which \ was the experience of manv of them ! with their 1912 and 191 3 crops. CROWD SEES MAN CUT IN TWO j Salesman Killed by Train at Erie Sta tion in Kearny, N. J. Kearny, X. .1., Jan. 11.—Charles McTaggart, a salesman for W. E. Mar shall A. Co., 146 West Twenty-third street. New York, was killed by an Krie passenger train in front of the station here at noon yesterday. His body was cut in two. The station plat form was crowded. A number of women fainted. McTjiggart was 46 years old and lived with his widowed mother at 19S Bong on avenue, Kearny. The train that struck him was on the westbound track. Ordinarily it uses the east bound nils, but repairs at the Passaic river bridge i caused the change. Although McTag gart's body was completely severed he j lived ten minutes. TTAftRTSBURG STAR-IN PEP KXI)KN T, MONDAY EVKNfNCi. JANUARY 11, 1915. WEIRTS srMfioWMCGMr# Mr/to# afme/ttravrw&tr f/v. (CONTINUED.) | Hp.ggerty departed. A silence set tied gloomily down on us. Quarter of an hour passed. The grim-visa ged po lice watched us vigilantly. Half an hour, three-quarters, an hour. Far ! away we heard the whistle of an out- ! going train. Would I had heen on It: From time to time we heard faint music. At length there was a noise outside <ho door, and a monment later , Hamilton and two others came in. VVheu he saw mo, he stopped, his eyes bulging and his mouth agape. "Dicky Cornstalk'.'" he cried helo lossly. "What the devil does this mean?"—turning to the police. "Do you know thiu fellow, Mr. Ham- I ilton?" asked the chief. "Know him? Of course I know him," answered Teddy; "and I'll stake my last dollar on his honesty." "Wh.it ?" We Heard KMm Exclaim. i Thanks, Teddy!) 1 began to b reat he. "But —" began the chief, seized with sudden misgivings. "It Is impossible, 1 tell you," inter rupted Hamilton. "I know this gentle man is Incapable of the theft. There is some frightful mistake. How the dickens did you get here. Dicky?" And briefly I toll! him my story, my ass's ears growing inch by inch as I went along. Hamilton didn't know whether to swear or to laugh; finally ' be laughed. "If yon wanted »o come, why didn't j you write me for an invitation?" "I shouldn't have come to your old ' ball, had I been invited. It was just the idea of the lark" "We shall have 10 hold him, never theless," said the chief, "till every thing is cleared up. The girl—" Hamilton looked at the Blue Domi no. "Madame, will you do me the honor to raise your mask?" She did so; and I saw Hamilton draw in his breath. Her beauty was certainly of an exquisite pattern. He frowned anxiously. I "I never saw this young women be i fore," he admitted slowly. "Ha!" cried the chief, glad to find I some one culpable. "Did you receive your invitation j through the proper channels?" asked Hamilton. "I came here to-nifrht," —coldly, "on the invitation of Mrs. Ilvphon-Ilonds, who sailed for Europe Wednesday." Here was an alibi that was an alibi! 1 was all at sea. Hamilton bowed: the chief coughed worriedly behind his hand. The girl had told me she was an impostor like myself, that her ten of hearts was as dark stained as my own. I could noi make head or tail to it. Mrs. Hyphen- Bonds! She was a law in the land, especially in Illankshire. the larger part of which she owned. What did it all mean? And what was iter idea in posing ?s an '.mpostor? The door opened aca;ti. "The patrol lias come," said the of fleer who entered. "Let it wait," growled the chief. "Uaggerty has evidently goi us all balled up. I don't believe his fashion able thief has materialized at all; just a common crook. Well, he's got him, at any rate, and the gems." "You have, of course, the reneral invitation?" said Hamilton. "Here is it."-*and she passed the engraved card to him. 'I beg a thousand pardons!" said Hamilton humbly. "Everything seems to have gone wrong." "Will you guarantee this man?" asked the chief of Hamilton, nodding toward me. "I have said so. Mr. Cornstalk Is very well known to me. He is a re tired army officer, and to my knowl edge a man with an Income sufficient 1o put him far beyound want." "What is your name?" asked the chief of the girl, scowling. It was quite evident he couldn't understand her actions any better than I. "Alice Hawthorne," with an oblique glance at me. I had been right! "W'hat is your occupation? I am obliged to ask these questions. Miss." "I am a miniature painter,"—briefly! Hamilton came forward. "Alice Hawthorne? Pardon me, but are you the artist who recently completed the miniature of the Emperor of Germany, the Princess of Hesse, and Mrs. Hy phen-Bonds?" "1 am. I believe there Is no fur ther reason for detaining me." "Emperor of Germany?" echoed the now bewildered chief. "Why didn't you tell all this to Mr. Haggerty?" "I had my reasons." Once again the door opened. A bur ly man In a dark business-suit entered. His face wae ruddy and his little grey eyes sparkled with suppressed Ire. He ; reminded ma of Vautrin, the only dlf f.erence being that Vautrin was French while this man was distinctly Irlgh His massive shoulders betrayed tre j mendous strength. He was vastly an i grv about something;. He went to the chief's desk and rested his hands upon | It. "You ate a nice specimen for a chief of police, you are!" he began. "And who the devil are you?" bawled the chief, his choler rising. I "I'll tell you who lam presently." We all eyed htm in wonder. What was going to happen now? "Which of you gentlemen ts Mr. Hamilton?" asked the new-comer gruffly. Hamilton signified that he was the gentleman by that name. "Some ladies at your ball have been robbed of their diamonds I under -1 stand?" j "About ten thousands dollars' worth." | "Look here, sir." cried the chief, i standing up and balling his fist, "I want you to explain yourself, and mighty quick. You can't come Into j ray presence in this manner." "Bah! You have Just permitted the cleverest rascal in tbe state to slip : through your butter-fingers. 1 am Hag gerty." The chief of police sat down sud i deuly. CHAPTER VII. The consummate daring of it! Why i the rascal ought to have been In com mand of an army. On the Board of I Strategy he would have been incom parable! There followed a tableau that I shall not soon forget. We all stared | at the real Haggerty much after the j fashion of Medusa's victims. Present ly the tension relaxed, and we all sighed. 1 sighed because the thought of Jail for the night In a dress-suit dwindled In perspective; the girl sighed for the same reason and one or i two other things; the chief of the vil | lage police and hl3 officers sighed be cause darkness had suddenly swooped down on them; and Hamilton sighed because . there were no gems. Hag serty was the one among us who didn't sigh. He scowled blackly. This big athlete looked like a de tective, and the abrupt authority of his tones convinced me that he was. Haggerty was celebrated in the annals j of police affairs; he had handled all sorts of criminals, from titled 1m- I posters down to petty thieves. He was not a man to trifle with, mentally or physically, and for this reason we were all shaking in our boots. He owned to a keen but brutal wit; to him there was no sttcli thing as sex among criminals, and he had the te nacity of purpose that has given the bulldog considerable note in the pit. But it was quite plain that for once he had met his match. "I don't see how you can blame me." mumbled the chief. "None of us was familiar with your looks, and he showed us his star of authority, and went to work in a business-like way— By George! and he liar, run away with my horse and carriage!"—starting from his chair. "Never mind the horse. You'll find it safe at tv>e railway station." snarled Haggerty. "Now. then, tell me every thing that has happened, from be ginning to end." And the chief recounted the adven ture briefly. Haggerty looked coldly at me and shrugged his broad shoul ders. As for the girl, he never gave her so much as a single glance. He knew a gentlewoman without looking at her twice. "Humph! Isn't he a clever one, though?" cried Hasgerty. in a burst of ai'miratiou. "Clever is no name for it. I'd give a year of ray life to come face to face with him. It would be an interesting encounter. Hunted him for weeks, and today laid eyes on him for the first time. Had my clumsy paws on him this very afternoon. He seemed so willing to be locked up that I grew carelesf. liifr: i dhe md bis accomplice, an erstwhile valet, had me trussed like » chicken and bundled Into the clothes-press. Took my star, credentials, playing-card, and invita tion. It was no.rr eleven o'clock when I roused the housekeeper. I tele graphed two hours ago." "Telegraphed!" exclaimed the chief, rousing himself out of a melancholy dream. (There would be no mention of him in the morrow's papers.) "Yes, telegraphed. The despatch lay unopened on your office-desk. You're a good watchdog—for a hen coop!" growled Hasgerty. "Ten thou sand in gems to-night, and by this time he is safe in New York. Yon are all a pack of blockheads. "Used the telephone, did he? Told you to hold these innocent persons till he went somewhere to land the ac complice, eh? The whistle of the train meant nothing to you. Well, that whistle ought to hare told you that there might be a mistake. A good officer never quits his prisoners. If there is an accomplice in toils else where, he makes them bring him in, ho does not go out for him. Ana now I've got to start all over again, and he In New York, a bigger cata comb than Rome ever boasted of. He's not a common thief; nobody knows who he is or what his haunts are. But I have seen his face; I'll never forget him." The chief tore his hair, while his subordinates shuffled their feet un easily. Then they all started in to explain their theories. But the de tective silenced them with a wave of his huge hand. "I don't want to hear any explana tions. Let these persons go," he com manded, with a jerk of his head in our direction. "You can all return to town but one officer. I may need a single man," Haggerty added though fully. "What are you going to do?" asked the chief. "Never you mind. I have an Idea; It may be a good one. If It Is, I'll telephpne you all about it when the time comes." He stepped over to the telephone and called up central. He spoke so low that none of us overheard what he said; but he hung up the receiver, a satisfied smile on his face. Haggerty Looked 1 Coldly it Ml. The girl and I were free to go , whither we listed, and we listed to return at once to New York. Ham ilton, however, begged us to remain, to dance and eat, as a compensation for what we had gone through; but j Miss Hawthorne resolutely shook her I head; and as there was nothing in the world that would have induced me to stay without her, I shook my head, too. It seemed to me I had known this girl all my life, so closely does misfortune link one life to another. T had seen her for the first time less ' than eight hours before; and yet I was j confident that as many years, under | ordinary circumstances, would not ! have taught me her real worth. "Mrs. Hyphen-Bonds will never for give me." said Hamilton dismally, "if she hears 'that I've been the cause, indirectly and innocently, of turning you away." "Mrs. Hyphen-Bonds need never know." replied the girl, smiling in scrutably. "In fact, it would be per fectly satisfactory and agreeable to me if she never heard at all." To Be Continued. / 1 \ The above story "Hearts and Masks," will be shown at Photo- I I play Theatre in motion pictures in the near future. ■» DONATIONS IN DECEMBER Children's Industrial Home Receives Number of Gifts The Children's Industrial Home has acknowledged donations to the insti tution during December from the fol lowing: David Evans, Mrs. Alonzo Lehman, Masonic Lodge No. 629, Jacob Ruder, Shearer Manufacturing Company, Mrs. Emma Doehne, Mrs. K. White, Dives, Pomoroy & Stewart,, D. Bacon Com pany, Augustus Wildmau, Mrs. Ceoirge Kcifv, Mrs. J. B. McAllister, Bates & Company, A. H. Kreider & Company, F. W. Wool worth, Luther Miinter, R. K. Bates, J. K. Hangiest, Samuel Erb, Mrs. M. Ramsey, Mrs. William Lauben stein's class of Messiah Lutheran Sun day school, Miss Clara Bell, E. Heffel iinger, Forney school building, Mrs. Al. Selignian, Fast End Bakery, Harrisburg Baking Company, Miss Mary Cameron, Mrs. J. J. Ogelstby, Mrs. Elsie Middle ton, Mrs. Gilgair, Mrs. W. H. Metzrjiar, '/Aon Lutheran church, M>rs. Helen DuJl's Sunday school class, Thomas VVeirnian, James W. Barker, Lewis M. Neiffer, Bowman & Co. TKENTINI ILL, PLAY CLOSES Philadelphia, .lan. 11.—Because of the illness of Mile. Emma Trentini, the singer, ihor engagement at the Lyric theatre, where she has been appearing in a new operetta, "The l'eawant Girl,'' has ended abruptly. Mile. Trentini fainted on the stage at the Saturday matinee. She sang at the Saturday might performance, but it so weakened her that her physician 7117- fuuzg shrd Ushrd shrilltshrdlutt STAR-INDEPENDENT CALENDAR 1 FOR 1915 May be had at the business office of the Star-Independent for or will be sent, to any address in the United States, by mail, for 5 cents extra to cover cost of package and postage. The Star-Independent Calendar for 191 B is another of the handsome series, featuring important local views, issued by this paper for many years. It is 11x14 inches In sire and shows a picture, extraordinary for clearness and detail, of the "Old Capitol," built 1818 and destroyed by fire in 1897. It Is in flue half tone effect and will be appreciated for its historie value as well as for Its beauty. Mail orders given prompt attention. * Remit 15 cents in stamps, and ad dress all letters to the STAR-INDEPENDENT 18 20-22 South Third Street . Harrisburg, Pa. AMUSEMENTS MAJESTIC To-morrow evening, Lecture by Armgaard Karl Graves, the super spy- Friday evening only, Ethel Barry more, in her new play, "The Shadow.'' ORPHEUM Every afternoon and evening, high clas« vaudeville. COLONIAL j Every afternoon and evening, vaude ville and pictures. Armgaard Karl Graves ; Armgaard Karl Graves, called by the i British press "the greatest spv of tho J century, ' because of his great' work as I a member of the German Secret Serv ice, will be at the 'Majestic to-morrow evening, and will give a gripping and sensational talk of the facts leading up <o the great Buropean struggle, and of the.connection the secret service of the warring nations plays in the turmoil. Dr. Graves is the author of "Secrets of the German War Office," a book now in its tenth edition in this country, and the sales of which in the British Empire alone have aggregated more than three quarters of a million copies. In it Pr. Graves, although the book went to press as early ns last June, predicted the big war, and since the outbreak of hostilities he has made a number of predictions or forecasts which have been, and are daily, being borne out in their entirety. f>r. Graves does not pretend to be a seer or an astrologist; the fact remains that he has foretold things and in every instance his predic tions have been carried out to the let ter. It will be an interesting treat to hear Graves when he talks here and the opportunity afforded to learn some of the real facts of the war should not tie passed by. Adv.* Ethel Barrymore Ethel Barrymore, in a new play, en titled "The Shadow/' will come to the Majestic theatre for one performance on Friday evening, January 15, her lo cal appearance being one of the few engagements preliminary to her mid winter season at (he New York Empire theatre. "The Shadow" is the work of Pario Nieeodemi and Michael Morton, the former is the author of severnl French successes produced by Madame Rejane, and the latter best known as the author of "The Yellow Ticket." Mis.s Barrymore's new play was orig inally written in French for the use of the famous European artiste, but was obtained by Charles Prohman for Miss I Barrymore \s use here at the present time, owing to the war conditions now prevailing in Paris. In its French orig inal the play was called "L'Ombre" and the Erglish translation has been made by Mr. Morton. Charles Froh man, needless to add, has surrounded Miss Barrymore with a notable com pany of players. Bruce Mcßae, re called for his earlier association with Miss Barrymore in "Sunday,"' "Lady Frederick," "Cousin Kate'' and others of her notable successes, has the lead ing male role in '' The Shadow.'' Other roles are in the hands of Grace Ellis ton, Ernest Lawford, Edward Fielding, Amy Veness and Vera Pole. The scenes of "The Shadow" are laid in the wealthy residential and art districts of Paris. Adv.* A 1 G. Field's Minstrels Al. G. Field is noted for his stage productions, but in all the years of his managerial reign he has put forth noth ing so timely as the closing stage pic ture which ends the entertainment. This scene is the ending of the 'Panam- Pacific Exposition number, with a great deal of Joe Coffman and Bert Swor's "Oh Yes" comedy to spice it. A bur lesque on the war with Mexico is also appropriate at this time. Field's Min strels come to the Majestic next Mon day, matinee and night. Adv.* At the Orpheum New things vaudevillian burst on our I vision at the Orpheum this afternoon j and a glance over the names that com- % J !If You Are Looking § For a Pure Beer— f % X * Made of the finest Malt and Hops—Sparkling Fil- $ | tered Water—and Purest Yeast—bv the best Sani- f t tary Methods. Order DOEHNE Beer. 5 DOEHNE BREWERY BeU 82fl L Independent 318 * *B* *9* prist- the new lineup ot' talent, m enough to convince one Hint the enter tainment is up# to prove n mire-fire hit. It s a triple headline bill, with four other choice Keith hits supporting them. Not the leant of the attractions is Bert I.amont s Cowboy Minstrels, a troupo of seven westerners, who offer a festival of fun and harmony in a delightful stage .setting representing a realistic glimpse of the romantic West. A sec ond feature attraction is entitled "A Breath of Old Virginia," Joseph Hart's newest production, that is described by critics as being the season's most suc cessful scenic noveltv. This net is admirably mounted ami played by a cast of five prominent Broadway names, headed by Miss .rune Keith, latp feature of "Stop, Thief." Another act of headline importance is that of the Moneta Five, an exquisite vocal and instrumental act. Three women and two men comprise the quin tet and their offering, which is staged along the most modern lines, is an ar tistic treat. Smith, Cook and Brandea, two men and a woman, are to appear in a clever comedy variety net of singing, talking and dancing; the Three Gaud sclimidts will offer a spirited turn of l''r ver f un ani ' sensational tumbling; iola Gillette and Ned Monroe will pre sent a comic opera skit called "The Silent Opera.'' One or two other clever turns will complete the roster. Adv." At the Colonial Harmony will be the charm of the new vaudeville show that conies to the Busy Corner for the first half of the week. It will be supplied toy the Men delsohn Koui, ihe clever musicians and I tnllers, who the management was sue ; cessful in securing for a return engage ment. The boys created an impression when they were last at the Colonial that is bound to make them welcome there this week This time thev have an entirely new repertoire of selec tions. '"Lora," the girl in the parrot, will likely prove an interesting uovel.- ty; Hayes and Thatcher will present a nifty musical comedy skit, and Johnson and Crane will have something enter tainiug in the wav of a song, dance and patter skit. "'End of Bridge," an excellent three-part, moving picture at traction, -will also be a part of the pro gram for the first three days of the week. Adv , Oldest Resident of Gap Dies | Gap, Jan. 11.—William 'Hamilton, 01 years old, the oldest resident in this section, died 'Saturday nigOvt from gen eral debility. He retired from active life several years ago, toeing engaged in the fruit and farming business. IHe was one of tfhe organizers of the Lea coi'k 'Methodist church and is survived toy three Children. Quick Relief for Coughs, Colds and Hoarseness. Clear the Voice—Fine for Speakers and Singers. 35c. GORGAS' DRUG STORES 16 N. Third St. Penna. Station Cumberland Valley Railroad In Effect May 24, 1914. Trains Leave llarrlaltury— For Winchester and Martlnaburw. at 5.05, *7.60 a. in., *3.40 p, in. For llagerstown, Chamberaburg and intermediate stations, at *5.03, »7 50 •11.53 a. m.. *3.40, 6.32, •7.40. 11.00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanlcsburg at 9.4S a. in.. 2.11. 8.27 # 30. 9.30 p. m. ' For DlUnbui-g at 5.03, *7.50 and *11.61 a. m.. 2.18, *3.40, 5.32, 0.30 p. m. •Dally. All other trains daily exnan* Sunday. J H. TONQE.^^ H. A. RIDDLE. G. P. A. S~pt BUSINESS OOLLBCHB& / liBG,. BUSINESS COLLECTS 329 Market Street Fall Term September First DAY AND NIGHT > '' Big Dividends For You Begin next Monday in Day or Night School SCHOOL OF COMMERCE IRS. Market Sq., Harrisburg, Pa.