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1 1 Another Sensational Jewelry Sale Began To-day at the "Different Kind of Jewelry Store" / The Entire High-Grade Jewelry Stock and Fixtures of L. Wolf, of Sunbury, Pa., Will Be Placed on Sale at a Straight Reduction of ■ ONE-HALF The Original Wolf Prices I W We have just made the Stock contains almost every conceivable piece of jewelry, watches, diamonds and cut glass that is sold by only the highest grade The people who have favored us with their patronage since the opening of this "Different Kind of Jewelry Store" have per -4 s- f ect confidence and know that every article of jewelry we sell is just as we represent it to be. I PICTURE OF THE I, WOLF STORE FR . TWif♦ ? P n KJ u ° ne3 T" Guarantee sta ™ s ba ' k °\ ever y artl ? le we sell We give you our word that this sale of the .L. Wolt stock will be the greatest sale from a quality and value standpoint ever held in this city. BUY EARLY WHILE THE STOCKS ARE AT THEIR BEST. Diamonds Watches Silverware Toi I Never before in our Here you can take your The selection of Silver- The most remarkable Solid Gold Rings! of Do you need a clock? maiiv years of experience- o-rVutest Tvatches ware is so large and varied assortment of Toilet Sets every kind, style and de- There never was a more of selling diamonds have well-known make'is repre- that almost every taste we have ever seen. Here scription - hundreds of "timely" opportunity pre sented, Elgin, Walthani, mav be suited. Most of are Toilet Sets of Parisian them including the fa- sented than during this we been able to oiler such Rockford, Illinois and c .. Ivory and Sterling Silver, mo . u l . anc l great sale. You'll find wonderful values. Large other established price C 0< " *„ KS 01 mg with or without cases. and B. makes—plain rings every ki n( i 0 f i, cre assortment-highest grade mftted Tn 77 Br"' stones only-see these. need of a Watch.'this is tama S. ve. uare value that will be .in- remarkably low prices ever solid mahogany clocks in your opportunity to save. which is second to none. equalled for many a day, oftered in this city. the newest designs. One-half L. Wolf's Prices One-half L. Wolf's Prices One-half L. Wolf's Prices One-half L. Wolf's Prices One-half L. Wolf's Prices One-half L. Wolf's Prices Our Money-Back Guarantee . J Watch Our Windows The P. H. Caplan Money-Back Guarantee means 9J/IQtJ. JN. K^CIhICtTLK-O. ■ wi " y . ou tO , watch °«r sensational bargain ' ' / windows at all times but especially during this sale. ■ that e\erv article sold must give unfailing satisfaction i Mflp[/ __— _ / , Some of the greatest bargains ever heard of at $3, $2, ... .. .... I -SiE STREET STORE I $1 and 50c will be displayed in our windows. WATCH or we refund your money without question or quibble. 206 MARKET STREET THEM U. S. Steel Will Share Millions With Workers New York, April 19. Steel mill workers will receive after May 1 the highest wages ever paid in the indus try as the result of another increase of 10 per cent., to go into effect that day. The Steel Corporation, the Republic iron and steel Company, the Youngs town Sheet and Tulie Company and the Prior Mill Steel Company announced Ihe increase yesterday, and it is ex pected that the other leading corpor ations will take similar action. Chairman E. H. Gary, of the Steel Corporation, said in a statement: "In view of the continuance of prosper ous conditions, it lias been decided to make advances in the wage rates of our iron and steel companies about 10 per cent.,'to take effect May J." The increase of 10 per cent, put into f \ Martz Bros., 21 South Third Strec; Eg^ Bopar Hardware Co., 1316 North Third Strce WEDNESDAY EVENING, HARRIBBURG tfSjjftfr TELEGRAPH APRTL 10, 1916 I effect by the corporation on February 1, added about 115,000,000 to the an nual payroll. It is estimated that the second advance will increase the an nual total of wage payments approxi mately $18,000,000 a year. Common ; labor will receive $2.43 a day, com -5 pared with slightly less than $2 a day ; last January. The latest upturn, in case of independent concerns which I have announced the rise, will apply to i men who are not on a salary, it is said. IOWA TO VOTE OX SUFFRAGE , (inventor Calls For Decision on State Amendment Special Ij the Telegraph Des Moines, la., April 19.—Gover nor Clarke of lowa, has issued a proc lamation providing that a constitu tional amendment for woman suffrage Ibe voted on at the primary election 1 June 5. John T. Bretz Is Now Commander of Company D, Bth Regiment of Guard - i: l&L. CAPTAIN JOHN T. HTSETZ Company l)'s New Commander. Company I), Eighth llegitnent, Na tional Guard of Pennsylvania, one of I larrisburg's crack military companies, is now commanded by Captain John T. liretsc. In general orders issued yes terday from the State Guard head quarters announcement, was made of the appointment of Mr. Bretz to suc ceed Captain Jerry .1. Hartinan, whose i commission has expired. ; FIKIO I/OSS HEAVY By Associated I'rest Paris. April 19.—A Lisbon dispatch to the Matin says that the loss occa | sioned by the burning of the naval ar senal at I.isbon is very heavy. Sclen | title equipment, including naval charts and i hronometers, was destroyed. The government Is Investigating circum stances which indicate the (Ire was j incendiary. PISCISS PREPAREDNESS By Associated Press Cincinnati, Ohio, April 19. Pre paredness through physical education is the general topic to be discussed by the delegates attending the twenty i third annual convention of the Anierl- J can Physical Education Association, which began here to-day. jyPhir Library TablaJ MiNVT» /'* a Mir%.i4TBRT BOOKS t» MAGAriNESi^^Ac^^j Her Husliand'.s Pur.sc, by Helen R. i Martin. (Doubleday, Page and Co., | $1.35.) The popularity with which the j [ dramatized version of Helen R. Mar- | j tin's "Barnabetta" has been received I j in New York is an added reason why' this most recent book from the pen j of the local authoress should prove a| j big seller. Once again Mrs. Martin 1 ! depicts the speech and customs of jthe Pennsylvania Dutch, that people ! so strangely thrifty and at the same j I time cruelly indifferent to the rights j |of their wives and daughters, in the | delineation of which characters the | ! dramatization of "Barnabetta' ' has i | proven a stimulative delight to many ■ j jaded New York theatergoers. Margaret Berkeley, in "Her llus j band's Purse," is a cultured and I I gently bred Southern girl who marries; onu of the new type Pennsylvania I Dutch, lawyers living in a small town' Iby the name of New Munich. His people are to her strange and difficult j ;to understand, different in every ! particular from the easygoing, hos- j j pitable Southerners whom she has j hitherto known. Her difficulty in ad- ! justing herself to her new environ-! ment is increased by the domineering! manner of her husband and his two vulgar sisters, and in relieving herself | of their tyranny the young wife i I rudely shatters her narrow-minded j husband's conception of all that a i dutiful wife should be. The characters in the book are in-i tcrestlng and true to life, but the view- 1 ! point on marriage therein expressed j lis rather antagonistic to the old-; | fashioned Idea of love and marriage ] which is still fortunately adhered to l j in a large majority of cases. Tlie Master Detective, by Percy James Brebner. (E. P. Button and! | Co., $1.35.) "The Master Detective" Is a wit- i sharpener in a series of short and I extraordinary detective stories. It brings back to the reading public an eccentric character named Christopher' Quarles, a professor of philosophy, who works out all his cases on n deductive basis, queer and uncanny. Assisted by a young Scotland Yard detective, the prof<>»«or undertakes only those cases which have proven j baffling to others. All of the stories are told in a brisk | manner, instead of trying to confuse' the reader with much detail. The! ; book gives all the detailed informa tion at the start and if the reader! I becomes involved in Quarles' method j jof deduction, it is because the old J j gentleman uses a method all his own. ! The Utile IjhI) of flic Rig House. j by Jack London. (MacMillan, $1.50.)j Recently converted into book form. : this powerful love drama that, was | I running in serial form in one of the i I magazines Is without doubt one of| the most comprehensive and master- Iftil pieces of fiction that Jack l.on-l ■iou has written. Although the I characters are patently impossible in their splendid superlativeness, the book is full of the joy of living and i teeming with romanticism and wild 1 adventure. Fascinating: in the power of imagi nation and visualization, the author has made of his three leading charae ; ters, two men and a woman, living, breathing beings that suggest the superman and tlie aupervoman. Pick Forrest, is a landed proprietor of ; great wealth and many ideas, a very | German military government for effl- I i-iency, and a boy in his play mo | nients. His wife, Paula, is a goddess ; with human traits, mistress of all she surveys and a queen among men. Graham is the third party, a sort of Prince Charming, "world-bitten" yet sweetened by experience. The situa tion becomes complicated in the house of unconvention, with the primitive strength typified in the .author's own personality inculcated into the very heart of the plot. The wife falls in love with the Prince. Both man and wife are. paradoxical mixtures of glorious manhood and womanhood, the acme of physical per fection, with bodies and minds both steel-formed. Unexpected indeed is the outcome of the complications which arise in the Big House. The little woman, game to the core, solves the problem in a way to bring teavs to the eyes of a strong man. The characters are generously drawn and j there is nothing petty about the plot I —all is treated on a big scale, with a I big concept ion. EDITOR VERSUS BURGBAR "Did you ever hear about the burglar that broke in on the Arkansas editor? The editor was unarmed, so jhe engaged the burglar in hand-to hand conflict, and it was only after a terrific struggle that he was able to rob the burglar."—Jack Ijait in The American Magazine for May. A NEW MAGAZINE Out of the superabundance of magazines and literary periodicals that throng the bookstands and news dealers, a new publication has this month raised its patriotic head. Its name is George Washington's Maga zine and it is published by the Wash ington Magazine Company, N. Y., with "Uncle Sam. Junior," as editor. Devoted wholly to an exploitation of things patriotic, its .editorial policy according to its own announcement, is to make it essentially a means of communication between the boys and girls themselves, a periodical to be edited by them and with contribu tions from them. It advises in Its first issue that every boy and girl in America who is a real patriot enroll as a cadet in the U. S. Junior Naval Reserve in order that they may be a part of an organ ized movement to put our country In the place where she belongs in the matter of defense in time of need. An Interview with Marjorle Sterrett, the little Brooklyn schoolgirl who conceived the idea of doing some- tiling to help her country, and whose idea lias resulted in the contribution of over $17,000 by the boys and girls of the country, gives some idea of her home life and the spirited love of country that urged her to act upon patriotic impulse. NOT ENOUGH EVIDENCE The jury asked to see the bottle in a Western booze case and a half-hour later they returned and announced a decision: "Your honor, we, the Jury, find that there is no case against the defendant, as there is not enough evidence to go araund'-—The Silent Partner. MEI,Lr\ ASKS COMPENSATION Special In the Telegraph New York, April ,19. —Charles S. Mellen, former president of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Rail road Company, sued that company in the Supreme Court yesterday for $138,222.89. Sixty thousand dollars of the amount was for two years' pay under an agreement whih Mr. Mellen said he made with the company to pay him $30,000 a year for live years. The alleged agreement provided that Mr. Mellen should meet with the offi cials of the company whenever they wished to confer with him or needed the benefit of his advice. j| Sensible Cigarette ; BETTER mCALOMEL 1 Thousands Have Discovered Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets Are a Harmless Substitute i Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets—the sub | stiiute for calomel—are a mild but sure laxative, and their effect on the liver la j almost Instantaneous. They are the re suit of Dr. Edwards' determination not Ito treat liver and bowel complaints 1 with calomel. His efforts to banish it i brought out these little olive-colored tablets. These pleasant little tablets do the good that calomel does, but have m, bad after effects. They don't iniurn the teeth like strong liquids or calo mel. They take hold of the trouble and quickly correct it. Why cure the liver at the expense of the teeth? Calomel sometimes plays havoc with the gums So do strong liquids. Bums. It is best not to take calomel but to let Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets take its place. Most headaches, "dullness" and th-it lazy feeling come from constipation ami a disordered liver. Take Dr Ed wards' Olive Tablets when vou ' feel I "loggy" and "heavy." Note how the • "clear clouded brain and how they i "perk up" the spirits. At 10c and 25e per box. All druggists. Tlie Olive Tablet Company. Colum . bus, Ohio. REDUCED FARE BY SEA BALTIMORE TO BOSTON $15.00 $15.00 EACH FRIDAY DURING APRIL Send for Particulars. .Merclinntn mid Mlnrm Trim*. Co, W. P. Turner, (i, I*. A„ llalto., Mil. HARRY M. HOFFMAN (Suceeaaor to J. J. OgeUby) UNDERTAKER 810 North Sri'oaii Street Resorts ATI.A XTIC CITV, IV. J. ATLANTIC "A Progresiioe Holel in a Progreulet Retort" , On the Beach Front. FIRE PROOF •00 rooms. 249 with private bath, each equipped with hot and cold fresh and in water. Orchsatra of .uloiitv G lod Golf every Day in the Year rk*M A»l«atic City 1455 Owaenkii Mana ( «naat The Event of the Si/ason— Atlantic City's Fashion Show. April 18 to 24. Try Telegraph Want Ads ■>? 9