f /fliCMt% - f ! JJ. I M CaU 1991—Any Phone Founded 1871 | » >li|SiWy/ SPRING OPENING DAYS \ ' / Thursday—Friday—Saturday gi (vf~E2\ An event when all Harrisburg gazes into the Style Mirror for glimpses J ; \| of coming fashions. Thursday, Friday and Saturday will tully establish Si Spring shopping —it's essential with Easter lurking in the immediate 1 I IP" 1® lilik background —and Bowman's —with greater than ever assortments of iv : I# Pl\% apparel for your spring wardrobe; choicest ofyard fabrics and accessories; 9 1 ifl I \\\ in tact everything pertaining to Spring, with beautiful spring-like sur- y rrTOi ivV ft* roundings giving added charm —extends to YOU a welcome in its true g[ ! / i «> • T ' sense, and here let a word be said about the ever improving Bowman £ ' service, that will be profitable in selecting correct attire. <[ II si l 1 t< r< ~~ ? T Q . , Q v # To=morrow==And Every Day ± I ~~~~£re Handsomer and The l | | Lovelier Than Ever Of Millinery J ■» . This is not a boastful imagination, for comparison has born out the facts. - 9 Spring came to us in a brilliant assemblage of all that's new and practical— . * M suits that Harrisburg women can and will wear. "ie Greatest Showing f . Because it offers the greatest variety, and a very few can equal it in massive- I 1 But to grasp the real inspiration, we must step back into the thirties, when ncs> , Lagt mout h we "surprised Harrisburg in our advanced showing, and this * J wide skirts and high waist lines were the glory of designers, and at times it city is due anotlrer surprise to-morrow when the Millinery Department steps V seems that those same modistes must live in our daw for the resemblance is out in full spring dress. £ V rT Fifth Ave. Millinery ] ■g Present day occurrences, however, are influential to a marked degree, and ' _ CI " T the high neck effect: and buttons upon buttons, are suggestive of the military (_ yQflflOt DQ J\6W&r~" £ w a 11,1 ' Our representatives are continually in New \ork making personal observa- ■j- • ? This showing is authentic to the final word. —representative of all the latest tions, and just as soon as a new style ti end appeals it i.s nt NV i>> 1 1 .. , ' - ~ . c , , . .... . , here—almost to the dav, and alwavs it embodies the same new teatuies shown I 0 creations, and our preparations for this Spring display, justify us m saying that over voiider " • it will surpass any we have ever held. Q £ f 3 Distinguished I •§■ Snnnd ( • And it goes without saving that Bowman Millinery is in a class of its own. £1 V I' V/UUl'U# Here are striking creations that found their origin in the most fashionable and £ *"3 —, high-class Fifth Avenue Shops, by widely Z ? f JL licit SIIOW tllC Chanee known modistes; a number of which we be •3- O lieve famous Parisian designers would envy. jy\ 1 L Inthe Season ' s St y les Together With Our J&jgl% T Tliis in itself is adequate to weave an interesting story around, but let us a o +-5 /\« o (\/ , / \ \ 7 -3- only touch lightly on this feature. creations J V They're wonderfully different, to be sure, with a strong tendencv toward showing js most complete and _ 1 Z decided flares at the bottom edge. High waist lines are verv prominent, and authentic; >*°" 11 ® ° c "Je —lVyvy ? 1 , ,0 A +•, 1 4.1 1 i-iii trimming —feathers. We want \ou to see Y \ \y7 \°\ 1 belts alc used treelv; three-quarter length or slightly shorter. tlu . ( .ffeetiveness of this new idea. v/J Jl • In A Word, they are examples of approved style, and excellence of materials But we want you to sec them all. >», | and workmanship. Come in to-morrow. W , Jlr TAKE ALLEGED DYNAMITERS State Constabulary Arrest Two Charged With Murder of Six Greensburg, Pa.. Mardh 10. Through an alleged confession by a prisoner in the State constabulary bar racks here, the Slate police say they have apprehended the two men respon sible for the dynamiting at Superior on November 15. LSI 4. of the home of Noah Pinizzi. which resulted in rhe death of six j-ersons, including three of Pinizzi's children. According to the police, John Mc- Berney. Ala - John Kelly, who was ar rested in Younfcstown. 0., February 18. but whose arrest was ke;«t secret, ha? admitted complicity in tiie ■ rime and has involved Joseph Sheets. The latter was arrested yesterday a * Sujierior. The clue to Mcßerney's whereabouts i-ame through the arrest recently of a »ran on a charge of stealing brass from the Jamison Company's coal tipple near This man. it is asserted, said thai Mcßerney had taking part in the blowing up of the Pinizzi heme. Mcßerney's allege! confession, ac cording to the State constabulary, said that, following the dynamiting, he and Sheets spent the night sleeping in a coke oven and that on the next day they fired an old log house adjoining the" Pinizzi property. For years there had been a belief that in the cellar of tie old house was an enoromus treas ure of gold. SNOWBALL CAUSES DEATH School Girl Becomes 111 After Being Pelted by Boys Camden, N. J., March 10. —Thelma Howell, nine years old, a daughter of Mr. and >Mrs. Charles Howell, of 442 Spruce street, this city, died yesterday as the result of being struck on the head with a snowball. Cerebral men ingitis. superinduced by the injury, was the cause of her death. Ten days ago when the child was re turning from school, a crowd of mis chievous boys pelted her with snow balls. Several hours afterwards she be came ill. The boys who threw the snow balls escaped, and no arrests have been made. Amos Scott Dies at Lewlsburg Lewisburg, Pa.. March 10.—Amos Scott, 74 years old, former chairman of thf Union County Re üblican com mittee and director of the Lewiefburp Trust Company, died here yesterday, A widow and two daughters, Mvs. Rachel Beale, of Scranton, and Mrs. Walter Wilcox, 6i Lewisburg, survive. • • - \ ■> . „•> v... : - . HARRISBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT, WEDNESDAY EVENING. MARCH 10. 1915. JITNEY BUSES [X PHILLY 450 of Them May Soon Be Running in Quaker City Philadelphia. March 10. '"Pour hundred and fifty jitney buses on the streets of Philadelphia" was the pre-: diction made yesterday Dy Edwin W. I Hembright, 2025 Norri< street, the city's first "jitney.'' after just one week's trial of his bus on the North Broad and North Thirteenth street route, between Diamond and Chestnut streets. Beginning with the second day, Mr. Hanibright says, he has cleared $S a day above expenses, and is mak ing arrangements to put several other "jitnevg"' in seivice in the more con gested routes out of the downtown dis trict. "I can beat the trolley cars on speed'' Mr. Hambright added, "and I can beat the taxicabs on price; and there is no straphanging. "If 'jitneys' succeed in Philadel phia,'' he continued, "75 per cent, of the chauffeurs in the city will be run ning cars of their own by the end of the summer. It will be possible to go from the City Hall to the ball grounds by automobile for a nickel.'' So far the "jitneys" are operating without any passenger-carrying license, according to Mr. Hambright. The city authorities told him to go ahead, he savs, when he first broached the idea to them. Superintendent of Police Robinson says that he is investigating' to see if the "jitneys" come under any ordinance requiring a license. Inspect or W. E. Saxton, of the Bureau of Highways, said he had asked City So licitor Ryan for an opinion. COLOR LINE COUBTESY FATAL Trial for Alleged Murder After Tip ping Hat to Negress Norristown. Pa., March 10.—John Monohan, of Lamott, is on trial in Criminad Court for the murder of James Beattv, who suffered a fractured skull when Monohan struck him be cause he lifted his hat to a negreged misconduct so grieved Clayton Zimmerman, of Llewel lyn, yesterday that he took his own life with a revolver. His mother arrived at his room just in time to witness the deed. i TAFT AT PRINCETON Ex-President Addresses Polity Club at University Princeton, N. J., March 10.—Former President William H l . Taft spoke bcforp an open meeting of the International Polity Club of Princeton last night in Alexander Hall. The former President had been announced to speak on the subject of "Problems Before the Coun try," but he changed his subject to "The Presidency" because "my views might not coincide with tihe powers that be." Colonel Thompson, a prominent Re publican leader of Trenton, met Mr. Taft on his arrival and extended to him an invitation to go to Trenton la ter last night following his address here and speak at a Uepublican rally. Mr. Taft declined, but said: "Tell them for me that 1916 looks good to me.'' Huntingdon's Oldest Lawyer Dies Huntingdon, Pa., March 10.—Wil liam H. Woods, Huntingdon county's oldest lawyer, is dead in his 86th year. He was a grandson of John Wither spoon, one of the signers of the Decla ration of Independence, and an uncle of President Judge Joseph M. Woods, of th<» Huptingdon-Bedford-Mifflin dis trict. 5 DYING- MAN REFUSES TO TELIj Thinks He Will Recover and Ke< Assailants' Names Secret Atlantic City, March 10. —Alt hod dying at the city hospital from a fxj turfd skull sustained in an altercatl in the back section of the city, Geoi Smith refuses to divulge to the pol the identity of his uswailants. Ho j lieves that he will recover and dcclaj that he will then settle the matter] his own way. Peter Van, Charles Moore i Smith's wife have been arrested 1 suspicion that they were in giving Smith his injuries, but h«j fuses to sny whether or not they I guilty. JURY DOUBTS FORGERY I Finds a Verdict Ignoring Expert's E dence in Court Lancaster, Pa., March 10.—In a a on a $2,000 bond against J. F. & P. McLaughlin the defense alleged I gery, and experts testified that the I natures of P. W. McLaughlin i forged. The jury paid no attention to ( testimony, but found in favor of plaintiff, John J. Pennell, for $2.5 the full amount of the claim and inl est to date