8 The Best Remedy For AD Ages and proven so by thousands upon thousands of tests the whole world over, is the fambus family medicine,— Beecham's Pills. The ailments of the digestive organs to which all are subject,—from which come so many serious sicknesses, are corrected or prevented by Heewms Pills Try a few doses now, and you will KNOW what it means to have better digestion, sounder sleep, brighter eyes and greater cheerfulness after your system has been cleared of poisonous impurities. For children, parents, grand parents, Beecham's Pills are matchless as a remedy For Indigestion and Biliousness S«M everywhere. In boxes, 10c. t 25c. « The directions with every box ere very valuable—especially to venen, HOUSEHOLD TALKS Henrietta D. Grauel A reader requests a recipe for mak ing Viennr. bread, and as this is some what celebrated and justly popular the writer has secured the really Viennese directions. It seems there are three reasons why this bread is so excellent, it is; the oven, the bakers and the yeast. The yeast is called "St. Marxner Pressheffe,' its composition is differ ent from our yeasts. Perhaps some of our readers will be in possession of its secret and share it with us. As for the ovens; they are heated hours be fore the baking commences and then they are wiped out with wet straws and the bread is put into the hot steam ing vapor and therein lies the explana tion of the delicious crust of this won derful bread. As for the bakers —well, nil women admit men are better bread makers than they, and they should be for their strong arms are well-fitted for the kneading process and they have more time than women have for the tedious work of bread making. The Vienna bread that we make at home is made with eight cups ot' flour sifted with one tablespoon of sugar and one teaspoon of salt. Make a hol low in the flour and pour in one-half a cake of dissolved compressed yeast and two tablespoons of melted butter. Mix this to a stiff dough with luke warm milk and work it well with your "knuckles. When it seems smooth and full of air blisters pat it into a ball and rub it over with a little butter ■nnd put in to rise. After about three hours work it again and divide the dough into rolls as long as you like them. Butter each roll and lay it in a folded cloth bringing each side of the ■•loth up around the loaf, but not over it. This is to make the loaves rise upward and not spread out. Set them agiflnst one another in a pan and let rise again until very light. Then lift them info the baking tin deftly so ' « p 13 Doses 10c Trial Will Convince U ;$0 Doses 2.> c Li)"° At All Druggists For Headaches, Neuralgia Quick—Safe—Sure What Have You fo Sell? Why not convert into cash articles for which you have no use. You may have just the thing that someone else is seeking and anxious to purchase. You ask, "HOW CAN I DO THIS?" The ques tion is easily answered. Place a "For Sale or Ex change" ad in the classified columns of THE STAR INDEPENDENT—Then watch the RESULTS. Again and again we are told that ads in our classi fied columns are effective. TRY THEM Bell Phone 3280 Independent 245 or 246 * DOEHNE BEER and ALE Brewed by a Master Brewer Order lt--Phones}hdestiß DOEHNE Brewery Vienna Bread | tliev still hold their long shape, brush | over the tops with water ana make j j three incisions across top of each loaf, j i Then brush surface of all loaves with | water and close the oven. These loaves i are very light and bake in half thej ! time required for ordinary bread and i i require a hotter oven. ■ Vienna rolls are made the same way. j QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS "Will editor of Efficient Housekeep- j I ing please tell me how to pack steel and j I iron cooking utensils so they will not I rust while in storage for several ; ! months?" Reply.—Prying pans, broilers and i I similar articles will not rust if coated j j with suet. Warm the fat and rub it; j on the articles, then wrap them in pa- j j per. It is not a very agreeable task, J | but it is the only precaution I know, j Can any reader suggest a better wayfi * » • j "Please tell me names of curtain j | materials suitable for dining room win- j I dnws in a country house; something un- | der 30 cents a yard? I want to send ; for samples and do not know what to i j write for." Reply. Figured madras, chintz,: stamped cotton, figured Swiss and cur tain nets all come in this price. When i writing for samples ask the same ques ' tion you asked in your letter to us and j , add that you want to know the width of j ' samples sent as this is a thing to be taken into consideration with the price. » » » "At a company breakfast or tea j where do you place the coffee and tea! cups, in front of the hostess or on a! i side table?" Reply.—The tea and coffee service I should be in front of the hostess and ■ the cups, sugar and cream holders and |so on should be on a tray. It is no J longer correct to have the empty cups placed beside the plates as it once was. Moreover the guest keeps the first cup | that is given her unless requested to pass it on. Questions and Answers " oil are thoroughly familiar with | public questions, of course?" "I know 'em all by heart,'' replied Senator Sorghum. "'But I must admit j that as time goes bv I don't feel quite \ \ so certain abou-t some of the answers." | —Washington Star. Do Not Gripe We have a pleasant laxative that will i do just what you want it to do. jtexoSE Qxd&dtie&j We sell thousands of them and we have never seen a better remedy for the ! bowels. Sold only by us, 10 cents. Ueorge A. <JOI y«». HARRISBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT,' TUESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 23, 1915. PARROTof CD. HAROLD ) Aufhor of Hie The Place yHon^moons.clc. COPYRIGHT 3Y 17f£ DOB&J-flEflRILL COfJflHtlY W CONTINUED I Warrington laughed and shook the dust from his beard. "It's a great ~1 j —— "Two Rupees!" James Paused and Turned. world, James, a great, wonderful j world. I've just two rupees myself. In j other words we are busted." "Two rupees!" James paused and turned. "Why, sflhib, you have three hundred thousand rupees in your pocket." "But not worth an anna until I get to Rangoon. Didn't those duffers give you anything for handling their lug gage the other day?" "Not a pice, sahib." "Rotters! It takes an Englishman to turn a small trick like that. Well, well; there were extenuating circum stances. Tney had sore heads. No man likes to pay three hundred thou sand for something he could have bought for ten thousand. And 1 made them come to me, James, to me. I made tlilm come to this god-forsaken hole, just because it pleased my fancy I believe I'm heaven born, after all. The Lord hates a quitter, and so do I. I" nearly quit myself, once; eh, Rajah, old top? But I made them come to me. That's the milk In the cocoanut, the curry on the rice. They almost had me. Two rupees! It truly is a great world." ''Jah, Jab, Jah! Jah —jah—jah— ja-a-a-h!" screamed the parrot. "Cha loo!" "Go on! That's the ticket. If I were a praying man this would be the time for it. Three hundred thousand rupees!" The man looked at the far horizon, as if he would force iiis gaze beyond, into the delectable land, the Eden out of which he had been driven. "James, I owe you three hundred ru pees, and I am going to add seven hundred more. We've been fighting this old top for six years together, and you've been a good servant and a good friend; and I'll take you with me as far as this fortune will go, if you say the word." "Ah, sahib, I am much sorry. But Delhi calls, and I«go. A thou and ru pees will make much business for me in the Chandney Chowk." Presently they became purple shade? in a brown world. CHAPTER 11. . A Man With a Past. The oriental night air was stirlcss. it was without refreshment; it became a labor and not an exhilaration 'to breathe it. A pall of suffocating dust rolled above and about the lrrawaddy flotilla boat which, buffeted by the strong, irregular current, strained at Its cables, now at the bow, now at the stern, not dissimilar to the las. rock ing of a deserted swing. This sensa tion was quite perceptible to the girl who leaned over the bow rail, her handkerchief pressed to her nose, and gazed interestedly at the steep bank, up and down which the sweating coo lies swarmed like Gargantuan rats. *. dozen torches were stucl" into the ground above the crumbling ledge; she saw the flames as one sees a burning match cupped in a smoker's hands, shedding light upon notn'ug save that which stands immediately behind it. She choked a little. Her eyes smart ed. Her lips were slightly cracked, and cold-cream seemed only to provide a surer resting placo foi the impalpar ble dust. It had penetrated through wool and ltnen and silk, intimately, un til three baths a day had become a welcome routine, providing It was pos sible to obtain water. Water. Her tongue ran across her lips., Oh, for a d(lnk from the old cold pure spring at borne! Tea, coffee, and bottled soda; nothing t*>at ever touched the thirsty spots In ber throat. She looked up at the stars and they looked down upon her, but what she asked they could not, would not, an swer. Night after night she had asked, and night after night they had only twinkled as of old. She bad trav eled now for four months, and still the doubt beset her. It was to be a leap In the dark, -with no one to tell her what was on the other side. But why this insistent doubt? Why could she not take the leap gladly, as a woman should who had given the affirmative to a man? With him she was certain that she loved him, away from him she did not know what sentiment really abided In her heart. She was wise enough to realize that something was wrong; and there were but three months between ber and the Inevitable decision. Never Deiore naa sne Known other than momentary indecision; and it irked her to find that her clarity of vision was fallible and human like the 'rest of her. The truth was, she didn't know her mind. She shrugged, and the movement stirred the dust that had gathered upon her shoulders. "A rare old lot of dust; eh, Miss Civet wood? I wish we could travel by night, but you can't trust this bloom ing old Irrawaddy after sundown. Charts are so much waste-paper." "I never cease wondering how those poor coolies can carry those heavy rice bags," she replied to the purser. "Oh, they are used to it," carelessly. The great gray stack of paddy-bags seemed, in the eyes of the girl, fairly to melt away. "By Jove!" exclaimed the purser "There's Parrot & Co.!" He laughed and pointed toward one of the torches. "Parrot & Co.? I do not under stand." "That big blond chap behind the fourth torch. Yes, there. Sometime I'll tell you about him. Picturesque duffer." She could have shrieked aloud, but all she did was to draw in her breatb with a gasp that went so deep it gave her heart a twinge. Her fingers tight ened upon the teak rail. Suddenly she knew, and was ashamed of her weak ness. It was simply a remarkable likeness, nothing more than that; it could not possibly be anything more Still, a ghost could not have startled her as this living man had done. "Who is he?" "A chap named Warrington. Bui over here that signifies nothing; might just as well be Jones or Smitb or Brown. We call him Parrot & Co He's always carrying that Rajputans parrot. You've seen the kind around the palaces and forts; saber-like wings, long tail-feathers, green and blue and scarlet, and the ugliest little rascals going. This one is trained to do tricks." "But the man!" impatiently. He eyed her, mildly surprised. "Oh. he puzzles us all a bit, you know. Well educated; somewhere back a gentle man; from the States. Of qourse I don't know; something shady, proba bly. They don't tramp about like this otherwise. For all that, he's rather a decent sort; no bounder like this rol ter we left at "Mandalay. He never talks about himself. I fancy lie's lone some again." "Lonesome?" "It's the way, you know. These poor beggars drop aboard for the night, merely to see a white woman again, to hear decent English, to dress and dine like a human being. They disappear the next day, and often we never see them again." "What do they do?" The question came to her lips mechanically. "Paddy-fields. White men are needed to oversee them And then, there's the railway, and there's the new oil country north of Prome You'll see the wells tomorrow. Rather fancy this Warrington chap lias been working along the new pipe line. They're run ning them down t« Rangoon. If he's with us tomorrow, I'll have him put the parrot through its turns. An amusing little beggar " "Why not introduce htm to me?" "Beg pardon?" "I'll take 11 the responsibility. It's a whim." "Well, you American girls are the eighth wonder of the world." The purser was distinctly annoyed "And it may be an impertinence on my part, I but I never yet saw an American woman who would accept advice or act upon it." "Thanks. What would you advise?" with dangerous sweetness. "Not to meet this man It's irregu lar. 1 know nothing about him. If you had a father or a brother on board. . . " "Or even a husband!" laughing. "There you are!" resignedly. "You laugh. You women go everywhere, and half the time unprotected." "Never quite unprotected. We never venture beyond the call of gentle men." "That is true," brightening. "You In sist on meeting this chap?" "1 do not insist; only, I am bored, and he might interest me for an hour." She added: "Besides, he may Annoy the others." The purser grinned reluctantly. "You and the colonel don't get on. Well, I'll introduce this chap at din ner. If I don't . . ." "I am fully capable of speaking to him without any introduction what ever." She laughed again. "It will be very kind of you." Whek he had gone she mused over this Impulse so alien to her character. , An absolute stranger, a man with a past, perhaps a fugitive from justice; and because he looked like Arthur j Ellison, she was seeking his acquaint- I ance. Something, then, could break ' through her reserve and aloofness? She had traveled from San Francisco | to Colombo, unattended save by an j elderly maiden who had risen by grad | ual stages fiom nurse to companion, ; but who could not be made to remem- I ber that she was no longer * nurse. In \ all these four months Elsa had not made half a dozen acquaintances, and of these she had not sought one. Yet, she was asking to meet a stranger whese only recommendation was a sin gular likeness to another man. The purser was right. It was very irregu lar. "Parrot ic. Co.!" she murmured. She searehed among the phantoms moving to and fro upon the ledge; but the man with the cue was cone. It was reauy. uncanny. Elsa Chetwood was twenty-live, llthely built, outwardly <reposeful, but dynamic within. Education, environ ment and breeding had somewhat smothered the glowing Area. She was a type of the ancient repression of woman, which finds its exceptions in the Aspaslas and Helens and Cleo patras of legend and history. In fea tures she looked exactly what she was, well-bred and well-born. Beauty she also had, but It was the cold beauty of northern winter nights. It compelled admiration rather than invited it. Spiritually, Elsa was asleep. The flre was there, the gift of loving greatly, only It smoldered, without radiating even the knowledge of its presence. Men loved her, but in awe, as one loves the marbles of Phidias. She knew no restraint, and yet she had passed through her stlrless years re strained. Her independence was in herent and not acquired. She had laid down certain laws for herself to fol low; and that these often clashed with the laws of convention, which are fet ish to those who divide society into three classes, only mildly amused her. Right from wrong she knew, and that sufficed h»r. So Be Continued. , NEW USE FOR ALLIGATORS Dayton Plans to Use Them as Sewer Cleaners Dayton, 0., Feb. 23. —The city .of Dayton is planning to introduce an in novation in the Importation of alliga tors to clean out the city's sewers. A contract probably will be signed this week with a man from Florida, who will have charge of the enterprise. The idea is to start an illigator head first through a clogged sewer. Being unable to turn around, he will keep on going until he reaches a manhole, where he will be taken out. Attached to the alligator is to be a roipe, the other end of which is tied to a scraper. This will open the way for flushing and the even tual cleaning out of the sewer. NECK BROKEN LAST FALL Wilmington College Student in Coma tose Condition—Death Looked For Wilmington, Del., Feb. 23.—Though he has made a gallant light for life since last Octoiber, Robert bay field, the Johns Hopkins football player whose neck wan broken in a game at Bethle hem, is in a comatose condition and the end is believed to be near. Until the plucky youth, 19 years old, went into this condition he declared he would get we'll. At the home of his father, Walter A. Layifield, vice president of the Atlas Power Company, yesterday, the serious condition of the young man was con firmed, and his parents have practically given up hope of his recovery. LADIES! DARKEN YOURJRAY HAIR Look Years Younger! Use Grand mother's Recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur and Nobody Will Know The use of Sage and Sulphur for re storing faded, gray hair to its natural color dates back to grandmother's time. She used it to keep her hair beautifully dark, glossy and abundant. Whenever her hair fell out or took on that dull, faded or streaked appearance, this sim ple mixture was applied with wonder ful effect. But brewing at home is mussy and out-of-date. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for a 50-oent bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," you will get 'this old recipe which can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair and is splendid for dandruff, dry, feverish, itchy scalp and falling hair. A well-known downtown druggist says it darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one strand at a time. By morning the gray hair dis appears, and after another application or two it becomes beautifully dark, glossy, and abundant. —Adv. ?:ftermuaa Golf, Tennis, Boating;, Bathing;, and Cycling Tours Inc. Hotels, Shore Excursions. Lowest Rates. ™ S. S. "BERMUDIAN" Faateat, n»wnl and only atraiuer land ing; paasennern at the dock lb Bermuda without transfer by tender. WEST INDIES 8. 8. Guiana and other Steamer, every fortnight for St. Thomas, St. Croix, St. Kitts, Antiqua, Guadeloupe, Dominica, Martinique, St. Lucia, Bar bados, and Demerara. For full information apply to A. B. OIITERBRIDGE «V CO., Asenta Queheo S. S. Co., Ltd., 20 Broadway, Men York, or a*y Ticket Aseat. - STEAMSHIPS. New York to HAVANA 4 ®ffiK n Sailing, Thursday, and Saturday*. NASSAU Weekly service from New York and direct connection, with Havana. MEXICO Regular Sailings Fleet of large steamer, built in America and tailing under the American Flag. |; Sp.ci.l lon. including any or all of tha tbn. point. may b« arranged. Excellent service, apaciau. paiifnfer quarter.. Booklet., rate, and schedule, will ba promptly supplied on application. NEW TORK ai CUBA SAIL S. S. CO. (Ward Line) CsasriOHtss, Fiw 14 E. R., New T.rk Or any Railroad Ticket Office or Authorized Tourist Agency IT PATS TO USE STAR INDEPENDENT WANT ADS. DYSPEPSIA ME! NO INDIGESTION. GAS. SOURNESS PAPfS DIAPEPSIN Time It! In Five Min utes Your Sick, Upset Stomach Feels Fine When your meals don't fit com fortably, or what you eat lies like a lump of lead in your stomach, or if yon have heartburn,' that is a sign of indi gestion. Get front your pharmacist a fifty cent case of I'ape's Diapepsin and take a dose just as soon as you can. There will be no sour risings, no belching of undigested food mixed with acid, no AMUSEMENTS \ MAJESTIC To-night, Raymond Hitchcock in "The Beauty Shop." Friday afternoon and evening, Feb- 1 ruary 26, "Uncle Tom's Cabin " | Saturday afternoon and evening, A 1 , Wilson in "When Old New York 1 was Dutch." Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, j matinee Tuesday and Wednesday, , March 1, 2, 3, Howard Thurston, j magician. OBPHEUM Every afternoou and evening, high elai* vaudeville. COLONIAL livery afternoon and evening, vaude ville and pictures. VICTOBIA Motion Pictures. PHOTOPLAY Motion Pictures. BEGENT Motion Pictures ——_____________ Raymond Hitchcock To-night Discriminating playgoers of this vi cinity will welcome the announcement that the genial and ever-popular Ray mond 'Hitchcock will, appear at the Ma-1 jestic this evening under the direction of Cohan and Harris, in a brand new musical offering which has just con cluded a record-breaking engagement at Cohan & Harris' Astor theatre, New York. The new play is the joint work of Channing Pollock and Rennold Wolf, with an elaborate and tuneful musical setting 'by Charles J. Gebest. The droll comedian will appear in the character of one "Dr. Arbutus Budd," a special ist in the beautifying arts and pro prietor of a beauty emporium on Fifth avenue, New York. It is confidently predicted that the authors have evolved a strikingly appropriate role, whic'h will display the iniimitaible drollery and unique personality of the star to the best possible advantage. The splendid metropolitan cast of associate players are the same that played the New York, Chicago, Philadelphia and Boston engagements. The company numbers upwards of a hundred players, including the famous American Beauty chorus of eighty-five singing and dancing art ists. Adv.* "Uncle Tom's Cabin" Among the notable scenes of Kibble & Martin's "Uncle Tom's Cabin," whic'h is to be at t'he Majestic Friday afternoon and evening, is the St. Claire home, showing the tropicaJl garden with its fragrant magnolia aud orange trees, among which nestles the typical South ern plantation residence, the home of Little Eva; Legree's cotton plantation on fhe Red river with the cotton in full bloom; the wild rocky pass in Southern Ohio, and the ice-choking Ohio river bv moonlight. The transformation, entitled "The Celestial City" is said to ■be the most magnificent tableau over conceived. In offering his revival to our city Kibble & Martin not only claim that the scenic effects are superior to any ever attempted but honestly assure prospective patrons that the company is composed of the n.ost capable talent obtainable. ~ Adv.* Al. H. Wilson Al. H. Wilson, the singing German dialect comedian, will be seen at the iMajestic on Saturday afternoon and evening in a revival of "When Old New York was Dutch," brought up-to-date •by his manager, Sidney R. Ellis, who has provided additional new scenes and electrical effects. During the progress of the play the audience secures an in sight of the picturesque pioneer days of old New Yorii, two centuries ago, with heart interest awakened by the love af fair of a young German and a maiden of noble family. The play throughout will appeal to those who appreciate strong sentiment and a generous meas ure of romance. A natural feature of 'the performance will be the songs in jected at intervals by the star. The titles suggest that after being heard they will 'be whist-led and hummed long after *MT. Wilson's depa/ture. They are "When T First Met You," "Moon, Moon, Moon," "When the Roses in Spring Biloom Again" and "Mr. Bear." Adv.* Thurston, the Magician Thurston, the magician, presenting the largest and most spectacular per formance of his brilliant career, is com ing to the Majestic next Monday, Tues day and Wednesday with matinees on Tuesday anil Wednesday. His entertain ment, which is full of pure, wholesome comedy, mystery and magical drama, is one that appeals to ail classes because it is educational as well as amazing. Among his principal new mysteries for this season are "The New Woman," "Noah's Vision," "The Evolution of the Negro," "Aerial Fishing," "Ani mated Sketches," "Balaam and his Donkey," "The Chocolate Soldier" and "Creation." Adv* At the Orphoum A rattling bill of Keith novelties came to the Orpheum yesterday as an stomach gas or heartburn, fullness or heavy feeling in the stomach, nausea, debilitating headaches, dizziness or in testinal griping. This will all go, and, besides, there will be no sour food left over in the stomach to poison your breath with nauseous odors. I'ape's Diapepsin is a certain cure for out-of-order stomachs, because it tnkes hold of your food and digests it just the same as if your stomach wasn't there. Relief in five minutes from all stom ach misery is waiting for you at any drug store. These large fifty-cent cases contain enough "Pape's Diapepsin" to keep the entire family free from stomach dis orders and indigestion for many months. It belongs in your home.—Adv. extra sjiecial .holiday offering. George Washington decorations were in evi dence in attractive designs throughout the theatre and nothing was left undone to add to the joyousncss of t'he occasion in the way of a clever show. Music lovers fairly reveled in the magnificent vocal production of the Omar Opera Company. Some fifteen vocalists com prise this troupe of foreign opera sing ers and their united efforts result in whirls of harmony. Their performance consists of four of the best parts of as many big operas and in fach instance correct scenery and costumes are em ployed. The scenic effects are pictur esque and the vocal treat has never been excelled, if equaled, at the Orpheum. A second headliner, though of a wide ly different type, is the rich George Ade comedy excellently enacted (by Milton Polleck and company. The com edy is called "Speaking to Father," and it is a scream from start to finish. 'George Ade, the famous humorist, who wrote the playlet, can point with pride to this ibristling comedy gem. The clever situations arid lines are certainly enhanced by the capatble company that handles them. Harry and Eva Puck appear in an original ami exreedinglv clever song, dance and patter skit: Hoey and ljee are hark in their usual I>ig hit of comedy and parodies, and in fact there isn't a dull minute during the entire performance. Adv.* At the Colonial .Reduced rates to "Poippyland" arc in vogue this week. You purchase your tickets at the Colonial box office for so small a price as fifteen cents and then proceed to this veritablo laud of flow ers and beauty. An abundance of pretty girls, clever comedians, delightful scen ery and spectacular light effects make this a catchy and appealing production. It willl likely create a new record for the Busy Corner. Billon Shallard and company, in an operatic act, wil prove an especial treat to music lovers. Sev eral other clever turns round out a rattling holiday show at tftiis popular priced vaudeville theatre. Adv.* Cut This Out Now If you don't want it to-day, you may next week. Send this advertisement and 5 cents to Foley & Co., Chicago, 111., writing your name and address clearly. You receive in' return three trial pack ages—Foley's Honey and Tar Com pound for cou,ghs, colds, croup and grip pe; Foley Kidney Pills, for weak or disordered kidneys or bladder; Foley Cathartic Tablets, a pleasant, whole some and cleansing purgative, just the thing for winter's sluggish bowels and torpid liver. These well known standard remedies for sale by George A. Gorges, 16 North Third street, P. it. K. Sta tion.—Adv. Woman Dies at Wilmington Marietta, Feb. 23.—Miss Sarah Cook, 60 years old, a former resident of Lancaster county, died at Wilming ton, Del., yesterday from heart disease. Her parents and one sister survive . f .-.-Li Directory of Leading Hotels of Harrisburg THE PLAZA (23-426 Market St., Harrisburg, Pa. At the Entrance to the P. B. R. Station EUROPEAN PLAN (| T. B. ALDINGEB, Proprietor The Metropolitan Strictly European I For something good to eat. Every* thing in season. Service the beat, Prices the lowest. HOTEL VICTOR No. 26 South Fourth Street Directly oppualte Union Station, equipped with all Modern Improve, ■lent*i running water In every ruoni inc bath | perfectly aanltnryi nicely lurnlabril throughout. Ratea moderate. European Plaa. JOSEPH GIUSTI, Proprietor. BUSINESS COLLEGES /" 1 > begin Preparation Now Day and Night Sessions icheol ef Commerce, 15 S. Market Sq., Harrisburg, Pa. mmm —^ ll&u,. hJbiISXiSS COLiMlr^ 32'J Market Street j Fall Term September First I OAY AND NIGHT 1 > . —■ Cumberland Valley Railroad In Effect May 24. 1(14. Tralna Leave Harrlabur*— For Winchester and Martlnsburg, U MS. *7.50 a. m.. *3.40 p. m. For Hageritown. Chambarsburg and Intermediate stations, at *5.01. *7.1% ; 1.53 a. m., *3.40. 5.33. *7.40. U.»« p. m. Additional tralna for Carlisle ang Mechanlcsburg at n.48 a. m.. I.li. 1.27. 30. 9.30 p. m For DUlsburg at 5.03. *7.5 v and •«.»» a. m., 2.18, *3.40, 5.32, £.lO p. m. •Dally. All otbar trains dally exoepf Sunday. J H. TONGU. H. A. RIDDLB. a P. A. Sapt ,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers