12 ' » The 37th Anniversary Sale Closes Thursday SKIVS^^b\VVITCV?^A)IA\3QX i V i ~—*\ An Introduction of Exceptionally Queen Quality Shoes For • \ >; . f «/ 1 ' '1 AttractiveStylesinFurTrimmed, Fall and Winter k > ?*• V» IBBk ___ }y<jF\ '« Exact copies of French modes and modifications of the Russian Motiff, of StvloS Th&t Is WortH SccillCJ y bifurcated or with touches of rich crushed plush, go far toward making this " ■ //fjyll, j Fall showing of Misses'and Women's Suits the most comprehensive one wc f American women arc \ _ H- V 'JllllmWn have ever made. J HW famed the world over for tt 3 ! -f" vf" I There are many dressy and smartly tailored styles, in fine quality wool : )Pu t ' lC " beautiful feet. Thciea | 3 J 111 Ira W , • . , . , . , TU , AH son for this is America's lead- I 3 \ K infill I h / I velours, velours de lame, cords, broadcloths and poplins. Ihe range of prices / \ Hi # 3 \ m\ 11 It " ... ' V\ H ership in the creation of shoe /3i J 71111 11" is very interesting. % »! Jill J \V \ Fine Poplin suits, in green, navy, Russian styles in whipcord with a trim- wA xJu stales. I HI I II \ brown and black, side plaited skirts that af- tiling of wide silk braid; the collar and cuffs I 1 For more than twenty II J I U / \ ford ample fullness; sizes for misses and are rtmmed withl Hudson seal #88.50 I \K years. Queen Quality shoes 1 // . I / women * $16.00 Chiffon broadcloth suit m a style that de- \. \ f Sports suits of gabardine or serge, fasten- pends for its effect on a back plaiting, the > v " have led all other shoes for ine - close to the throat $20.00 collar is militarv and trimmed with fur, J * / , T t ,„ _ „. \ I The styles at $25.00 are so varied that it S3T<SO 4 Style and comfort. J / would , be hard describe them except in a SJlk braid and trimmed suits of ex- ~~ 7 And, Queen Quality styles 7 . general way. Genuine beaver is used on . • . V 7 \y \ many of the styles and silk braid forms the clusi\e designs arc shown at $30.00. The |jgggf £ or p a j| anc j Winter are gen- V J I A trimming on many others. The materials selection of styles is a broad one and the . . \'J V are gabardine, poplin and broadcloth. range of cloths is of the choicest. JfggSi Uinc triumphs. The six lji \ — shoes illustrated here are Ij \ "Lighting Week" Will Be Special Lot of NewT rimmed «§j| priced within the range of I tj Nationally Observed This HatsintheAnniversarySaleat *-r|| $3.50 to fj Week With a Sale $2.37 V nfl ' o • Large and medium size velvet *P VJ.V/V7 f Lindsav Oas Mantles at a oaving hats in black and col ors and / ( ) \ ▼ • i smart little turbans that regularly A <:line hp inoro thn.fi Gas companies throughout America are observing "Light- fy would sell at $3.95 and $4.95. We J" *7 \ >■ / ing \\'eek," beginning to-day. We enjoy a large patronage in * \ bought 50 of these hats specially merely beautiful to be a real yjsP the selling of gas mantles, and in order to protect the interests or our Anniversary Sale and success. It must susfcest the \ of these patrons we enter this "Lighting Week" occasion with XH?&XU AteS'hauThi || idea of comfort from the mo- Hi A Sale of Lindsay Gas Mantles JJ, !y t thTs Iwe 1 wee S k and WiU g ° ° Ut quick " ment of its fitting. The MSN i,!n<i'sa\ i.v- wu'ard Mantle*. This week! 2 r«>r aoe / \ new Autumn hat at $2 37 Queen Quality trade mark is IJndsay 20c Brlßhton Mantle. This week. 2 for 25c m* \ * r t fl m i.imisav 25<- Gaseo Mantle. This week, 2 for »oc SS» is a rare ottering. TOKgsai your guarantee of satisfac- / ■ Lindsay 30c Tungsten Mantle. This week, 2 for 35c f 1 Sterling Mazda Tungsten electric lamps will be sold dur- The Demonstration of Rengo Belt Corsets or ? lls direction. ' lng "Lighting \\ eek at a very special price. Will be Continued Throughout This Week A complete showing is now , In l.i, 20. 2s and 40-watt sizes. Extra special 2.if ir , .. . x . , , i j V 7 In 60-watt lamps 28? L very woman who is interested in corsets of better type X being made in our Shoe Sec- \n Olves, Pomeroy & Stewart, Basement. [at moderate prices will do Avell to attend this display. : ID == = Jl "One Arm" Driving Rule Silly, His Fiancee Says St. Louis, Sept. 27.—"1 think that's the silliest ruling 1 ever heard of," protested Miss Virginia Koch, of Washington Park. Webster Groves, whose fiance, J. Matt, is the first vic tirne of the order against "< ne-arm" auto drivers. Miss Koch waj in the machine with Matt when he was ar rested on the North and South road, near Clayton, on a charge of careless driving. He had one arm around Miss Koch, the deputy sheriff said. "Any way, 'Jim' can drive just as well with one arm." Miss Koch continued, "he always does. "He didn't really have his arm around me. We were driving along to ward the turn near Clayton, when a spark from his cigar fell on my neck, I WILLIAMS SHOE 5 So 4th Street AGENCY I Bringing Up Father # # $ # # (0) By McManus ✓ —a \ r \ T " 1 i "XOO THINK I ' —n *-• ' —" v / V /-J J HEf- OONT I - «FH r b A S W U-TA \ T. R^ K ) -v--- ssjssrJ (fj^ -2222. o-o-o- \ _w N ° 7. V , p OR \ou : \ TOtSVtiJV' r J -1 Al_~L.*L-L \ kid ME 7 I ANSV/E*. 7 ' "•«»« C-U-OV V. CITY A V , I \ UP-TO-B v aboard.. - . J T| y. I; I M i ll " : MONDAY EVENING, land I said: 'Don't "Jim." Throw your cigar away.' "And then 'Jim,' you know we're en i traued —threw his cigar away, and with jthe same hand reached around my [ waist and took hold of my arm and sort of pinched me." Two Men Lose Lives When Auto Turns Over Pittsburgh, Pa., Sept. 27.—Frederick S Peace. Western Pennsylvania sup erintendent of the Gamewell Fire Alarm Company, of New York, and Frederick Wilson, chief of the James town, New York Fire Department, were killed yesterday in an automobile accident a short time after leaving this city for Jamestown. Peace was killed instantly and Wil son died half an hour after the ac cident. Wilson came here with rns daughter. Miss Catherine Wilson, to place her in the Margaret Morrison School. Peace, a friend of Wilson, planned to accompany the latter on his return to Jamestown. At a sharp curve on the Butler Slippery Rock road the car skidded and upset. CENTENARIAN JOINS CHURCH Service Is Held at Daughter's Home in Williamsport Williamsport, Pa., Sept. 27. The Rev. J. H. Mortimer, pastor of Grace Methodist Church yesterday had the unique experience of receiving into church membership a woman 100 years old. She is Mrs. Anna Cately, Williamspcrt's oldest resident, who celebrated her birthday yesterday. It had been planned to take Mrs. Cately to the church, but, owing to her feebleness, the plan was changed and the services of reception took piace at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Har riet Potts, in the presence of a num ber of friends and official members of the church. Mrs. Cately was born in Lancaster county, near Strasburg. Her husband died in 186 4. [ S. P. C. A. Notes Many an earnest worker in Harris burg's S. P. C. A. may find it hard to enjoy with the latest animal friend to protect—the snake. According to Al len S. Williams, secretary of the Her petological Society of New York, the snoke is not the foe of mankind that women, at least, deem him. His ad vice is that every farmer and poultry raiser should keep a few snakes to protect his crops and chickens. Mr. Williams says in part: "The snake is the natural friend of man and it is only prejudice, super stition and error that makes it other wise. Rats, weasels and other rodents destroy crops and are the natural en emy of domestic fowls. Snakes are the natural enemy of rodents. To the cereal crops alone in the United States, rodents cause an annual loss of SIOO,- 000,000. If only harmless snakes were left alone, and not brutally killed at every opportunity, think what, an immense saving this would be to the farmers, if snakes had only half a chance the loss to farmers and poul try raisers would be reduced to prac tically nothing." Among the snakes advocated by Mr. Williams for protective use Is the milk snake. This snake is too small to kill young chickens or eat eggs, but it kills the young rodents and by nul lifying reproduction would soon safe guard the crops and poultry. Another snake to cultivate friendly BABJUBBTJRG fTELEGRAPH! relations with is the chicken snake. It gets its name because it frequents barnyards and is erroneously sup posed to kill the chickens. The truth is that it kills rats and weasels, espe- 1 ■cially the young ones. "Almost any of our nonpoisonous snakes of northeastern United States," says Mr. Williams, "may be profitably used. None of them with the pos sible exception of the mountain black snake is large enough to do any dam age to poultry." Many of the humane societies have recorded themselves as against the ; shipping of American horses to Euro pean battlefields and the practice has brought forth much verse. In "Our Dumb Animals" for September, Wil liam J. Acker writes in part: If They Could Speak If they could speak, those dumb beasts, us they lie On battlefields where war has laid them low; I What would the horses tell us ere they die? With bittre grief do these mutes suf- I ferers know? | Not glory lures them to the battlefield, Nor foolish pride that rails at fancied wrong; They arc but thoughtless beasts and can but yield The while they feel the fetters of the thong. But then me thinks those eyes so filled with pain Ere yet the glaze of death has robbed their sight. Have known full well how hellish and how vain That carnage is as argument for right. Green meadows would they call the fields of glory. And brave ones those who help make strong the weak. And love and service then would be the story Of those dumb beasts, If they could only speak. r TRAVELETTE By NIKSAH SEVEN SPRINGS v : Seven Sprlngß, North Carolina, went to sleep a hundred and fifty years ago, and to-day, a bit aroused from Its lethargy, Is rublng its eyes and looking about to see what has happened in the meantime. It beholds a resort hotel sitting on the hill which overlooks it like an alarm clock on a mantle. Seven Springs might attribute its awakening to the rattle of this timepiece had alarm clocks existed before It started napping. As a matter of fact, It was the honk! honk! of an automobile that recalled It to twentieth century conditions. For Seven Springs was largely lost to the world until the automobile be gan pushing into the out-of-the-way corners. For it is in eastern North Carolina, a hundred miles back from the sea, where the flat land* begin to break into hills. Old Scotch and Eng lish settlers pushed into this region, when the nation was young, and plant ed villages here and there. As the na tion developed It passed them and they were allowed to drop Into a doze. As SEPTEMBER 27, 1915. the purest blood of the early settlers they still remain, unaffected by the interchange of races. In Seven Springs there Is no man whose eyes are not blue. It Is claimed that these people are purer Britons than are to be found to-day in the land from which they came. This Rip Van Winkle of a village looks about itself and beholds the gnarled and the patriarchal trees that shadowed it in the long ago. From their branches flow great streamers of moss, gray as the beard of the Druids. An cient houses, many of them hewn from the logs of Its native trees, stand moss- | covered in the shade. Trim gardens where grow marigold and four-o clocks, are bordered by boardark hedges of the long ago. Nearby are the seven bubbling springs from which the vilage takes its name. There is a bit of a marvel about these springs, according to the men of science who have come here and analyzed their waters. The seven come from the earth In a space no big ger than a slttlngroom, yet each, when torn to pieces and forced to show Its parts, proves to be of a nature different from the others. These same scientists have attempted to bottle these waters and sell them to the outside world, but this is impos sible. If they have medicinal value and any man would get its benefit, he must come here to drink. This is the conspiracy of circumstan ces that brought the automobile to tills out-of-the-way place and aroused the slumberer. REVENUE MEN UNDER FT RE Two Arrests Made and Two Stills De stroyed in West Virginia Huntington, W. Va., Sept. 27. A running fight between revenue officers and alleged moonshiners during a raid on stills in the mountains of Mercer county was reported by United States Marshal William Osborne, who has re turned here. The officers seized two Btllls and destroyed nearly 1000 gal lons of mash. Charles Graham and Dennis Wood were arrested and brought here, but three other men escaped after firing on the Marshal's party. The officers replied, but none of the shots took ef fect. BOY KILLED BY WAGON Reading, Pa., Sept. 27. —Cyrus, two year-old son of Frank Benslnger, of near Huff's church, this county, was instantly killed by a wagon loaded with lumber. He was playing with a pet dog in front of his h6me. ■ ITHF-. r '■ VWDERBILTHOTEL THIRTY FOURTH STREET lAT PARK AVENUE, ■NEVYORKj, The most (conveniently situated hotel in New York, At the Thirty-third Street Subway . WALTON H. MARSHALL Manager » i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers