10 AWOI|ANDffIS lliw M H ?mMI im^ Copyright, 1816, by (jaorg* Br rr MoCutchaon. CONTINUED ' 'lf was due to the most stupendous exertion of self restraint on my part that I said, "Well. I'll be Jiggered!" Her audacity staggered me. "Madame," I exploded, "will you be food enough to listen to me? I am not to be trifled with. Tomorrow some time I shall enter the east wing of this building If I have to knock down all the doors on the place. Do you under stand, madame?" "I do hope, Mr. Smart, you can ar range to break In about ft o'clock. It will afford me a great deal of pleasure to give you some tea. May I expect you at S or thereabouts?" Her calmness exasperated me. 1 ■truck the stone balustrade an em phatic blow with my fist, sorely peel ing the knuckles, and ground out: "For two cents I'd do It tonlghtr "Ob, dear; oh, dear!" she cried meek tagly. "Yon most be a dreadful woman!" I cried out "First you make yourself at home In my house; then you suc ceed In stopping my workmen, steal my cook and menserranta, keep us all ■wake with a barking-dog, defying me ro my very face"— "How awfnlly stern you are!" "I don't believe a word you say ■bout a sick baby—or a doctor! It's , all poppycock. Tomorrow you will fled j yourself, beg and baggage, sitting at the bottom of this hJU waiting for"— j "Wait!" she cried. "Are jrou really. 1 truly In earnest?" "Most emphatically!" "Then I—l shall surrender," she said ▼ery slowly and seriously, I was glad to observe. "That's more like it!" I cried enthu clastic ally. "On one cosdiUop," she said. "You must agree In ndrance to let me staj on here for a month or two. It—it 1: most Imperative, Mr. Smart" "I aball be the sole judge of that madame," I retorted, with some dig nity. "By the way," I Went on, knit ting my brows, "how am I to get Intc I your side of the castle? Schmlck says j he's lost the keys." A good deal depended on her answer "They shall be delivered to you to morrow morning, Mr. Smart," she said aoberly. "Good night" The little window closed with a bnap ; ■nd I was left alone in the smiling; moonlight I was vastly excited, ever i thrilled by the prospect of a sleeplessl night "Britton," I said later, "I want to bej called at 7 o'clock sharp In the morn lng." Noting his polite struggle to con ' ceal his astonishment, I told him of mj 1 second encounter with the lady acrose the way. "She won't be expecting you at 7,' sir," he remarked. "And, as for that | she may be expecting to call on you instead of the other way around." "Right!" said I, considerably dashed j "Besides, sir, would It not be safei' to wait till tbe tourist party has come and gone?" "No tourists ienter this place tomor row or any other day," 1 declared firmly. "Well, I'd suggest waiting Just thf same, sir." said lie. evidently inspired. "Confound them!" I growled, some how absorbing bis presentiment He besltated for a moment near the j door. "Will yon put in the telephone, sir?" he asked respectfully. Very curiously I was thinking of it' at that Instant. "It really wouldn't be a bad Idea. Britton," I said, startled into commit ' tiug myself. "Save us a great deal of legging It over town and all that sort of thing, eh?" "Yes, sir. What I was about to sug gest sir. Is that while we're about 11 we might as well have a system ol electric bells put in—that is to say, sir Mn both wings of the castle. Very convenient sir, you see, for all par ties concerned." "I see," said I, impressed, and ther repeated it, a little more impressed after reflection. "I see. You are a very resourceful fellow, Britton. I an: Inclined to bounce all of the Scbmicks They have known about this from tbr start and have lied like thieves. Bj Jove, she must have an extraordinarj power over them or claim or some thing equally potent Now I think ol It, she mentioned a grandfather. Thai would go to prove she's related in some way to some one, wouldn't it?" "1 should consider it to be more that likely, sir," said Britton, with a per fectly straight face. He must bav< b£en sorely tried In the face of mj Inane maunderlngs. "Pardon me, sir but wouldn't it be a tiptop Idea tc have it out with tbe Scbmicks to night?" "Excellent idea, Britton. We'll hav« them up in my study." CHAPTER VI. "Who is thia woman?** CONRAD and Gretel appeared with Britton after an uncon scionable lapse of time, par tially dressed and grumbling "Conrad." said I, fixing the ancient with a stern, compelling gaze, "this has gone quite far enough." "Yes. mein herr?" "Do you serve ine. or do you serve the lady m the east wluc?" - •> •-v " -?.~V v .jr - . ! • '> '< * . N 77 ' . *'*"*» •< * . 1 % ■-' •> :# . ■ *, -' ;: \ 4 * v * r . * ~ • : ' ;V C '- " ; /f i * HARRISBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT, MONDAY EVENING, APRIL 26, 1915. 1 am a very old man," he whined. "I do," said he, with a great deal more wit than 1 thought be possessed. "I have been talking with the lady this evening," said 1. "Yes, mein herr; 1 know," said he. "Oh. you do, eh? Weil, will you be good enough to tell me what Is the meaning of all this two faced, under hand conduct on yonr part? I want the truth from yo\}. Who is this wo man, and why are you so infernally set upon shielding her? What crime has she committed? Tell me at once, or, by the Lord Harry, out you go to morrow—all of you!" "I am a very old man," he whined twisting his gnarled fingers, a sugges tion of tears in his voice. "My wif< is old. mein herr. You would not b« cruel. We bare been here for sixtj years. The old baron"— "Enough!" I cried resolutely. "Out with it, man! I mean all that I sny!' "Tomorrow, mein berr, tomorrow,' be mumbled in a final plea. I sboob my head. "She will ecplaln every thing tomorrow," he went on eagerly "I am sworn to reveal nothing, meli herr. My wife, too, and my sons. W« may not speak until she gives th< word. Alas, we shall be turned out t< die in our"— "We have been faithful servants tc the Rothhoefens for sixty years!" sob bed his wife. "And still are, I suspect!" I cried angrily. Mr. Poopendyke's common senst came in very handily at this critical Juncture. He counseled me to let th« matter rest until the next morning when it was reasonable to expect tlx lady herself would explain everything However, we forced something oul of Schmlck before bis stalwart sons came tramping up the stairs to rescut him. The old man gave us a touch ol Inside history concerning Scbloss Roth hoefen and Its erstwhile powerful bar ons. About the middle of the nineteenth century the last of the real barons-1 the powerful, landowning, despotic barons, I mean— enme to the end of hit fourscore years and ten and was laid away with great pomp and glee by th« people of tbe town across the river He was tbe last of the Rothhoefens for he left no male belr. His twe daughters had married Austrian noble men, and neither of them bad a malt descendant The estate, already In a state of financial as well a; physical disintegration, fell Into the bnnds ol women and went from bad to worst so rapidly thnt long before the last quarter of the century was fairly be gun the castle and tbe reduced bold lngs slipped away from the Rotbboef ens altogether and Into the control o) the father of the count from whom I purchased tbe property. The count's father, it appears, was a distiller o( great wealth in bis day and a man ol action. Unfortunately be died befort he had the chance to carry out hi? projects In connection with the reha bllltatlon of Scbloss Rothhoefen. even then a deserted, ramshackle resort foi paying tourists and a Mecca for an tiqne and picture dealers. The new count, my Immediate pre decessor, was not long In dissipating the preat fortune left by bis fatber the worthy distiller. He had rue through with the bulk of his patri mony by tbe time he was twenty-flv« and was pretty much run down at th< heel when he married In tbe hope ol recouping his lost fortune. Tbe Scbmicks did not like him. They did not approve of him as lord and master, nor was it possible for them tc resign themselves to the fate that had put this young scapegrace into tbt elioes. so to sucak. of the grim old barons Rothhoefen. who. whatever elac they may have been in a high banded sort of way. were men to the core This pretender, this creature without brains or blood, this sponging repro bate. was not to their liking. U 1 am to quote £onrad. who became quite forceful in his harangue against the recent order of things. He, bis wife and his sons, he assured me, were full of rejoicing when they learned that the castle had passed from Count Hohendabl's bunds into mine. I at least would i>ay them their wages, and I might, in a pinch, be depended upon to pension them when they got too old to b« of any use about the cas tle. All attempts on my part to connect the lady in the eHst wing with the history of the extinct Kotbhoefens were futile. He would not commit himself. "Well." said I, yawning In helpleos collusion with the sleepy Gretel, "we'll let It go over till morning. Call me at 7, Britton." I went to bed, but not to sleep. It was very clear to me that my neigh bor was a disturber In every tense of the word. She wouldn't let me sleep. For hours 1 tried tq get rid of her, but she filtered Into my brain and prodded my thoughts into the most violent ac tivity. She wouldn't stay put. But finally 1 dropped off. I was aroused from my belated sleep by the sound of mighty cataracts and the tread of countless elephants. Too late 1 realized that the tourists were upon me! Too late I remembered that the door to my room bnd been left un locked! One hundred and sixty-nine were huddled outside my door, drink lng In the monotonous drivel of the guide who had a shrill, penetrating voice and not the faintest notion of a conscience. I listened in dismay for a moment and then, actuated by something more than mere fury, leaped out of bed and prepared for a dash acro«» the room to lock the door. On the third stride 1 whirled and made a flying leap into the bed. scuttling beneath the covers with the Rpeed and accuracy of a craw fish. Just In time, too, for the heavy door swung slowly open a second later and the shrill, explanatory voice was projected loudly Into my lofty bed chamber. "Come a little closer, please," said the morose man with the cap. "This room was occupied for centuries by the masters of Scbloss Rothboefen. It is a bedchamber. See the great ba ronial bed. It lias not been slept In for more than 200 years. The later barons refused to sleep in It because one of their ancestors bad been assassinated between Its sheets at the tender age of six. He was stabbed by a stepuncle who played him false." A resolute beholder spoke up, "Can't we step Inside?" "If you choose, madame. But we must waste no time." "1 do so want to see where the old barons slept." ' " To Be Continued Hard Pea Coal Drops 25c a Ton Wilkes-Barre Pea is now $4.95 a ton, and the drop in hard pea affects the price of other sizes with which it is mixed. Wilkes-Barre Xo. 2 Nut is now $5.65, Pill your bins now With range coal for next winter. These prices will advance July 1. H. M. KELLEY & CO. 1 N. Third Street Tenth and State Streets HOTEL IROQUOIS South Carolina Avenue <t Bcacb ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Pleasantly situated, a few steps from Boardwalk. Ideal family hotel. Every modern appointment Many rooms equipped with running water; 100 private baths. Table and service most excellent. Hates SIO.OO, $12.00, $15.00 weekly, American plaji. Book let and calendar sent free on request David P. Haliter Silna Wright Chief Clerk Mißagfr Calendars of above hotel can also be obtained by applying at Star-In dependent office. v _■ BUSINESS COLLEGES Y Begin Preparation Now Day and Night Sessions SCHOOL of COMMERCE 15 S. Market Sq., Harrisburg, Pa. *• • r N HBO. BUSINESS COLLEGE I 329 Market Street Fall Term September Flrat DAT AND NIGHT I 1 'Cumberland Valley Railroad In Effeot May 24. 1»14. Trails Leave Uarriabiu(— For Wlncbeater and Martina bur*, at 6.03, •".50 a. m.. *3.40 p. a. For Hageratown. Chambaraburg and intermediate stt.tiona, at *(.01, *7.54, •iI.SJ a. ill,, 5.32. *1.49, 11.0# p. m. Additional tralna for Carllila ana Mechanlcaburff at t.4S m.. l.lt, 1.31, g 30. 9.30 p. m. For DiUsburg at 5.03. *7.SO and *ll.tr a. m.. 2.18. *3.40. 6.32, t.30 p. m. •Dally. All other trains daily excep' Sunday. j H. TO NOB. iL A. RIDDLE. O. P. A- | The Daily Fashion Hint. | T--" Black taffeta gown, with skirt ol plaid taffeta. This Is one of the new models where there is an effect of ful ness in the skitt, while the tighter dro; skirt is retain s! as a foundation skirt FORD BUILDING OPENS MAY 15 New Establishment on South Cameron Street Nearing Complation The Kurd Sales Company's new build the Mulberry street bridge, just above the Mulbery street bridge, is nearing completion. It is expected to be ready for occupancy not later than May 15. They have been delivering from 18 to 24 cars per week lor some time past. Their allotment for the next two weeks is fifty cars. A Woman's Reasons Against Further Armament The "American Magazine" has been offering prizes for the best let ters on tha subject, "Shall We Armf" The publishers announce that the vote stands at the ratio of four in favor of increased armament to five against it. In the May number the prize-winning letters are published. Following is an extract from a strong letter against armament, written by Mary S. Mark hani, of Sioux Falls, South Dakota: "Shall we arm? My answer is in the eternal motherhood of all nations from an economic point of view. "For every man that lives a woman has gone through eight hours (I take an average rate) of the most intense and agonizing pain to bring him into the world, spent sleepless months in care and nursing througli the days from babyhood to boyhood, helped and stood bv him past the measles, mumps and broken bone age. till he becomes a 'big man' ot fifteen to eighteen years, when he usually has passed the need of mother's care, and safely reaches maturity, twenty-one years, when he can vote and fight like a man. "For every one hundrrd men shot down on the battlefield it means that eight hundred hours or thirty-three days of the most severe suffering has been passed through by women, just to bring them into the world. Fifteen centuries in time have been spent in constant care and devotion to bring those one hundred men to the fighting age, to be shot down. This is only one hundred dead. "Shall we make ready to kill! Would the economic manufacturer allow that much energy to be thrown away if he was paying two dollars ail eight hour day for itf But that's loss of money! If suffering is not considered, perhaps dollars ami cents may talk. Suppose for every man that is killed in battle, women were to demand five dollars a twenty-foilr-hour day for fif teen years, or $27,375 for her work in giving them one man to kill—s27,- 375,000 for one thousand men killed in one day. Would they still go on killing if it was paid in dollars? Would they still arm ready to kill! I won derj Nearly twenty-eight million dol lars per thousand to kill them. I won der! Would thevf And that might be for less than a day. Two houndred million dollars, perhaps, a week. Would they still killf Would they still arm ready to kill? I wonder! Would they?" Partners Who dig* a well, or plants a seed, A sacred pact he keeps with sun and sod: With these he helps refresh and feed The world, and enters partnership with God. —Edwin Markham in May Nautilus. Caught Patience —"Peggy has been singing your praises." Patrice—"Now I know you are not speaking the truth, because Peggy can't sing."—Yonkcrs Statesman. [fipPlt l * all in eettin* them started right. CUNKKY'S rbgulatr* and the sensitive organs and aak«a ,'.'..1 V tike ckicks thrifty snd strut. <iet a Pail or 'V A T Package and leed it all the lime. .. " .. I / COMETS STARTING FOOD W it is a wonderful aid in getting V, J ' HarrisDurg ana Everywhere J. Harry Stroup Insurance Agent 1617 North Second St STRIKE TIES UP CANAL Not a Single Boat Operating Between Mauch Chunk and Bristol Mauch Chunk, Pa., April 26.—The difficulty between the boatmeu on the ljehigh canal and the officials, which has existed almost constantly since the opening of the boating season, has reached an acute stage, and there Hs not a single boat in operation between : Mauch Chunk and Bristol. There are nearly 100 captains on the canal when all are in service, and about half that number havo 'been at the Coalport wharves so far this season, each leaving promptly with a load of coal for Bris' 1 or some intervening point. On reaching their destination they unloaded, tied up their boats and refused to return for another load un less granted an increase of ten cents per ton. This the company refuses to do. FIND NEW COAL MEASURES Long Life to Markle Mines Indicated by Water Bore Hazleton, Pa., April 26.—Geol ogists' declarations that under no cir cumstances could there be coal meas ures on the mountain "between £he G. B. Markle mines, at Jeddo, and the Calvin Pardee operations, at L«attimer, were disproven by drillers, who, in sinking a bore-hole for water for the Markle Company, Btruck a vein of coal at a depth of 200 feet. • Since the find is north of the Markle outcrop, it means the discovery of much more fuel, indicating a long life for the 'Markle mines. MURDER IN BLOW OF BAT Fourth In Month In Community Due to Sunday Fight Shenandoah, Pa., April 26. —Struck over the head with a baseball bat, Marty Kilbitis, quit a fight here last night" with a fractured skull, Anthony A. Nicholas and Anthony Pelpinis were arrested by Chief Cantly, Captain Man ley and Officer Ringheiser and commit ted to jail. Kilbitis was rushed to the State hospital in a dying condition. This will make the fourth murder committed in this vicinity within a month—one at Mahanov City and one at Park Place and one at Gilberton. Motorcyclist Killed In Beading Reading, Pa., April 26.—Losing con trol of a motorcycle he was riding for the second time, Howard Lebo, of this city, was. thrown to the roadway at Morgantown, near her", late yesterday afternoon, sustaining a fractured skull. He died at the Reading hospital last night. Add Building to Masonic Home Elizabethtown, April 26. —Reading 1 Masons visited the Masonic Home here and selected a'site for the Berks coun ty memorial home on the grounds. It will cost about $25,000. A contract was awarded for the structure, to be built of granite. Republican Leader Thirty Years Dies Pa., April 26.—Joseph Miller, 73 years old, for many years a Marietta business man, died yesterday. Active in local Republican circles, he was a member of the county committee for thirty years. Reading Builds Four New Bridges Reading, Pa., April 26.—The Read ing Railway Company has begun work on the first of four new bridges over or under streets at Sixth and Fourth streets and Schuylkill and Center ave nues, to be built next summer at a cost of SIOO,OOO. All will be of con crete. Berks Farmers Want Laborers Reading, Pa., April 26.—The Berks county farm bureau has received nu merous requests from farmers to help in field work. They say there will be a shortage of farm laborers this sum mer. 180,000,000 Russians on Water Wagon Tn the May "American Magazine" Captain Granville Fortescue writes an article. entitled, "Battling for War saw." It is an account of the great war on the eastern frontier of Ger many. Following is an extract: '' When Russia went to war the Czar with a stroke of his pen put one hun dred and eighty million people on the water wagon. And, believe me, this water wagon 'ikon' is no bluff. It is harder to get a drink in Russia to-day than it is at Lake Mohonk. How wise was this edict of the ruler of Russia is now shown in the condition of his army. Their fighting eeffctiveness is higher than that of the French and fully equal to the English, measured by the physical fitness of the units composing the forces. On the other hand, the German soldiers nearly all carry flasks of whiskey or other spirits. Ivan the Siberian knows this, and I fear that the famous edict is sometimes broken when a batch of prisoners is gathered in. The flasks are certainly contraband of war." Sir Charles Wyndham's Cabin Supper Room During his active management of the Criterion Theatre Charles Wyndham also had his private supper-room, where lie and a bright company of guests often heard the chimes at midnight. Situated some way at the back of the theatre, it was cunningly contrived in the semblance of the cabin of a yacht. So minute was the masterly production that light was admitted through port holes glassed in sea-green. Swinging lamps hung from the ceiling in case Piccadilly Circus, caught in a gust of wind, should give a sudclen lurch. For sideboard there were lockers such as one finds aboard a ship. Many a mer ry little supper was given here during the more than twenty years of Wynd ham's lesseeship of the Criterion. It was unique among managerial posses sions.—From The Strang Magazine. The Play The throngs that jostle in the street Are people in a play. The tragic and the humorous, The grievous and the gay; Youth and doddering dotard, Moonlight, storm or sun, Ring up the magic curtain, The play has just begun. Sweet melodies insistent r Pervade the mise en scene, Sunshine clothed in shadow, Snow white or willow green; Heroes, clowns and villain, Dusk drowns the weary sun,— Ring down the twilight curtain, The play of life is done. —Robert Loveman in May Nautilus. The Harrisburg Polyclinic Dispensary will be open daily except Sunday at 1 p. m., at its new location, Front and Harris streets, for the free treatment of the worthy poor. I! HOUSEHOLD TALKS Henrietta D. Grauel The Choice and Preparation of Mushrooms The mushroom family is so large that it is not tturprising we continually mistake near-edible ones for their savory and nourishing relatives. The fear of poison deters many of us from making use of the species that abound ih pastures and woods and it is an important matter to have the real standing of the fungi made clear. But ,jnst as all signs fail in dry weather, so do all mushrooms seem treacherous. It is claimed that repeated washing with cold water removes the dangerous quality from most varieties and that boiling dissolves out the rest. It is well known that water in which any sort of mushrooms are boiled is poison ous so there may be some truth in this claim, but the safest way is to only use a variety that you know positively to be harmless. Even with every precaution taken fatalities from this food are numerous and this is probably hecause the so called safe kinds are eaten in too gen erous quantities. There are many ways suggested to determine if poison lurks in the fungus, as dropping a piece of silver in the cooking food, but they are all futile. The cultivated varieties give little trou ble and the cheapest way to secure the good mushrooms is to buy them. They should be used as soon as pos sible after picking; they are first washed in cold water and then soaked in water containing enough vinegar to DOEHNE BEER Unrivaled for Purity and Flavor v / \ A builder of A Tonic strength for businessmen and and flesh overworked persons Produced by the Master Brewer DOEHNE BREWERY Bell 826 L Order It Independent 318 EVERY HOME Has Its Real Value The wants of many business people and home de mands are realized by its use. Let us act for and with you—now. Call at our office or Bell Phone 3280 Independent 245 or 246 MYSTIC HAMMERS The frost with little soundless wedges Oan pry the cliff apart; Yes, it can heave the ancient ledges And make the mountain start; So Love with stroke of delicate sledges Opens the flintiest heart. —Edwin Markhain in May Nautilus Wild Animals Trust This Man In the Interesting People department of the May "American Magazine" ap pears an article about Sol A. Stephan, who is doing a splendid work at the Cincinnati Zoological Garden. He knows how to perform a surgical opera tion on a tiger, cure a hippopotamus and take care of all kinds of wild ani mals. His work requires a rare kind of wisdom and ability. Following is an extract from the article about him: 'For thirty-five years Sol Stephan has presided over the Cincinnati Zoo logical Garden, and has been, therefore, foster father to every sort of wild ani mal which has been seen in a zoo on this continent. "Stand beside the cage of a fierce and monstrous lion suffering with an ingrowing clew, an abscess or a de cayed tooth. Could you suggest a safe and effective method of operating? Sol builds a false back for the cage, ten men pull it forward with ropes, it con stricts the lion until he Cannot stir, and the trick is accomplished. "Could you extend the life of the lust passenger pigeon in the world from a formal period of about eight years to Sn actual life of twenty-nine years and seven months! Sol Stephan did it; and he is now caring for a pair of European storks which have been his charges for over nineteen years, and for three Carolina parrakeets, the last survivors of their race in the world, each of which is over thirty years of age, and one of which is completely bald, so long has she lived beyond her allotcd span of summers. "Colonel Stephan raises every year several young lions, tigers, leopards, buffalo, camels, llamas, kangaroos and hundreds of the young of smaller beasts, birds and reptiles; but the proudest moments of his life are when i>e gazes at the flower of the Cincin nati Zoo, the marvelously perfect young giraffe Daisy, which he raised from birth. You can count on the fingers of one hand all the giraffe infants which the zoos of this continent have ever seen, and none bnt Daisy has lived more than a fortnight after birth. Dai sy is now four years old and the ad miration of every wild animal lover." he acid to the taste. This whitens them ami removes the bitter principle. The little button mushrooms ar® used for garnishes and the big caps are broiled or filled with fine forcemeat and baked in glass bells. For general purposes, after soaking ♦he mushrooms in the acid water drop them into boiling salted water and cook until they are tender. They require very littlo water but must be closely covered to keep in the steam; they will he tender in a few minutes. Some ways of servinjj them are: on toast, in purees, stutTcit with herbs and a rich sauce, baked, steamed, broiled and creamed. If you are so fortunate as to have A quantity of mushrooms that you are positive arc wholesome yon may make mushroom catsup, or dry them after they are steamed tender, or can them as you can corn. QUESJIONS AND ANSWERS "What is meant by a faggot of pars ley f—.lane," Reply.—This expression is frequent ly seen in French cookery books and means a mixture of parsley and other green herbs. You may use bay leaf, thyme, a bit of celery and a small green onion. It is intended to flavor meats and soups. Agaiu it may be just a bunch of parsley tied loosely. There are six varieties of parsley and all are used for garnishing and for flavoring. To-morrow—Pimentos. IT IffWlU.iLJ.il| UJLUJLULII. IIIIRJU HOTEL WOODWARD ; it ) ft ROADWAY ft* 33*2 3T I| Ontnh!n#« *v#rv convenience and B : II bom# Pom fort tad pommfidi # It I |Q *«lf to o*or>la o# refinement irlah- Ijj || Ibi td I* within mit i*iPh of th» I B -«l!nr>««f Rfftttona ROH«1. ahotmlnr I M and 1 rum* tie *entrea. 1 From J| Station tak* Seventh |j' ■ A »«im earn «o4 rrt off at Mtfc (L I |H *tr*M• walk twent* «tfoi «»at 1 PVncr Grand Central Terminal ' j take Rroad«r«v ear* and rat off I I •# Hi# door RATES Without h«»h. from H.M L With hnth. from *2 tlnrlr HI S Willi belli. from 13 riitivhl* A i TO. 08BBN f. H RIN'OHAU 111 £ \ ViHnr 1 In the Canter of Everything | N Re-modeled— Re-decorated—Re- x N furnished. European plan. Erery K K convenience. & R Rasma. without bath fi.s# X K Rmim. with bath M M X s Hot and cold running water In nil rooms. S We are especially equipped for 5) 3 Conventions. Write for full details. S; | WALTON HOTEL CO. | Lnb Lake*. ProMaat-lflaaafW j : : jgmvmmmvmmmmwsl jaw/riigiHia Qnick Belief for Coughs, Colds and Hoarseness. Clear the Voice—Fine fox Speakers and Singers. 25c. GOEGAS' DRUG BTOEEB IS N. Third Bt. Penaa. Station The Harrisburg Hospital is open daily except Sunday, between 1 nml 2 o'clock p. m. for dispensing medical advice and prescriptions to those un able to pay for them.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers