10 3&2b(V)en r^lnrems "Their Married Life Copyright by International News Sen Ice Warren opened the door with a | latch key and.they stepped inside and looked around the empty apartment. Helen had left the plaee closed up and the chairs were shrouded in linen cov ers. There was a musty smell in the air and the door that led into the k|tehen was closed. Helen thought ■tie .discerned a faint sound behind the] closed door, a sound of a men's laugh ! hplf smothered. She looked at War- i r«n In silence, but Warren walked over i to the door and threw it open. The ! dining room was just as Helen left it. • but a sound came from the kitchen ; heyond and Warren, followed by j Helen and Winifred, walked over and j threw open that door as well. Mary rose with a shamed expres- j flon on her round good natured face, i The room was strewn with the re- , mains of a spread and two men and another girl were sitting with Mary j around a table in the center playing «ards. Helen noticed plenty of her | best china in evidence and she looked »t Mary reproachfully. m Mary stood awkwardly looking at; Helen, as though she hardly knew. what fro say, and Helen walked into, the room while a dead silence reign-i ed. "It's late. Mary," she said evenly, ; "and you had better ask your friends ; to go now. She said this kindly and ! the visitors rose instantly and began to get ready to leave. With a whispered word to Warren, Helen left the room and. leaving her outer things on the bed in her room, she told Winifred to run into the front with daddy. She was a little uncertain as to how to approach Marv. Of course she had done wrong, and "yet it was hardly eleven, and any girl will take advantage at some time, j It might have been worse, and of j course Mary was not Nora. Out. in the kitchen Mary was 1 scrambling to put the dishes up. "Hiere were several beer bottles scat tered about, and Helen bad a suspi cion that their own beer had been taken to quench the thirst of Mary's friends. Taken by Surprise Where did this beer come from, Mary?" she asked finally. "Oh, Mrs. Curtis." began Mary, "I'm sorry; I didn't know you would »e after coming home to-night." "But what difference does that, make'.'" questioned Helen. "Did you take the beer out of the case in the I wintry ?" "Yes. ma'am," very low. "Why did you do it. Mary? Of course you know that it didn't be long to you?" "But, ma'am, you let me use other things in the house to eat. I didn't see any harm." "Don't you understand that I trust ed you, Mary, you took something that didn't belong to you?" Mary began to cry softly and hei big Irish eyes looked up at Helen pleadingly. She was so young, only a child. Helen hated to be severe with her, and yet If she were to be a good maid something must be done. Helen walked over to the dishpan and looked within. The New Suits With Furs And Other Outergarments We also have a few odd Coats in long style effect left from the Marks & Copelin stock. B'Coats left, values up to I SIO.OO Boys' Special Knee $27.50, for $l.O0 1 Suits, with two pairs of pants, .. : r-rrrr- for #4.90 Murts, values up to $2?.00. j for J}ts.9B $5.00 Blue Serge Dresses, HOO Skirts *1.98 Saturday ogc Waists for 3»e Raincoats values s7.so Sport Coats ... #3.90 lin stock, Saturday .... #2.T9 $2.00 Men's Pants, Saturday $2.00 Skirts, 8 left, Saturday for • *I.OO for 9«>ip! $12.00 Men's Suits, Saturday $3.50 Corduroy Skirts, Satur l'or #6.90 day 7X #l.?o UN&ER PRICED STORE - ] WORLD FAMOUS EMBROID jHSgj ERY PATTERN OUTFIT To indicate you are a regular reader you must present ONE Coupon like thin one, with 68 cents. -pHE WORLD FAMOUS EMBROIDERY OUTFIT b X aateed to be the best collection and biggest bargain m patten* ever offered. !t consists of more than 450 of the Toy latest designs, foj any one of which you would gladly pay 10 centa. best hardwood cm broidery hoops, set of high -it grade needles (assorted sow), gold-tipped bodkin, highly polished bone stiletto and fascinating booklet of mstruc boo» .iring all the fancy stitches so clearly illustrated sad that any school girl can readily become expert SEVERAL TRANSFERS FROM EACH DESIGN ONLY SAFE METHOD . All old-fashioned methods using water, benzina or injurious fluids are crude end out-of-date. This is the only safe method. Others often injure expensive materials. N. B. Out of Town Readers will add 7 cents extra for postage and expense of mailing FRIDAY EVENING, HARRIBBURG tfiwfo TELEGRAPH OOOBER 1,1915. I "My i good china, too, Mary," she said severely. "Yes, ma'am," assented Mary, weakly. "Wasn't the old good enough?" "Yes. but I"—Mary faltered. "Well," prompted Helen. "I wanted to show them the good china, it's so pretty." 1 Helen stooped to hide a smile and !as she did noticed the pall which i stood under the sink and into which ; the odds and ends were thrown. She i stooped lower and brought to view : the broken pieces of one of her Havi land fruit plates. "Oh. Mary," she said, "how could I' you be so careless?" "It was my friend, ma'am, he didn't mean to." | "I didn't let you know when we . were coming home." said Helen, "be : cause we came unexpectedly, but I ; didn't expect to find anything like j this." Mary hung her head. "There isn't anything more to be i said." went on Helen, "but the ! kitchen must be all put In order be i fore you go to bed." "Shall I cook something, ma'am?" "No. we have had dinner." And j Helen with a sigh turned away. "Re : member Mary you are never to touch ; the best china and there must be no i more night parties. I don't object to vou seeing your friends, but not in that wav. If I cannot trust you Mary, you will have to go and I will get someone else." "Oh. no," protested the girl, "don't send me away. Mrs. Curtis. Nora would never forgive me. and she would write home and tell my Peo ple, please don't send me away." Helen left to go back into the liv ing room after a few more injunc tions. The Respite "Well, when Is she going?" queried Warren. "Not at all dear, she is really, sorry ■ and after all she is young and fool -1! ish.^' ' warren smoked in silence and said nothing more. Winifred nodded her 1 head in an effort to keep awake, and • Helen lifted her in her arms with a | murmured endearment. •! "She is too heavy for you to carry, ' | protested Warren, rising and taking I the child from /Helen's arms. "I'll U carry her to bed." 1 "You'd better turn in yourself," he J said as he stood and watched Helen ' undress his daughter, "you must be 1 dead tired." f I "Wasn't it dear the way she met • 1 us?" said He!-.i irrelevantly. I "You were mighty glad to get her r I back, weren't you?" t j "Well so were you, weren't you, !dear?" ■ j "Just a little; gee, she is brown f j as a berry and fat," he said pinch ' lnsr the smooth little leg. ! | "And well," amended Helen, "and i 1 I hope we can keep her so. Don't be • j long, dear, "and he went out slowly, s j "you are too tired and need the rest. > I too." i i (Another Instalment in this inter esting series will appear here soon.) IN THE FASHIONABLE ONE-PIECE STYLE. A Smart Frock for Young Girls and for ! Small Women. By MAY MANTON 8768 One-Picce Dress for Misses and Small Women, 16 and 18 years. The one-piece frock or the dress made with bodice and skirt joined by means of a belt, makes a notable feature of the autumn fashions. This one is smart in its lines, yet absolutely simple and practical. It can be worn both upon the street and within doors. The fronts of the bodice are laid in one plait each and the fronts ; of the skirt also are plaited, so that there i are continuous long lines. The inverted plait at the back of the skirt is one of the very latest innovations, or revivals. In the illustration, Joffre blue gabardine is trimmed with collar and tuffs of white broadcloth and the broadcloth on the gabardine makes an exceedingly good effect. The patch pockets that are ar ranged over the belt are interesting. For the 16 year size will be needed 6% yds. of material 27 in. wide, 5J.6 yds. 36, sH yds. A 4, with Jg yd. 27 or 54 in. wide for the collar ahd cuffs. The pattern Nt>. 8768 is cut in sizes for 16 and 18 years. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper, on receipt of tea cent*. Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. Reading Girl Killed in Automobile Accident By Associated Press Reading, Pa., Oct. 1. —One girl Is dead and'four of her companions are in a hospital as the result of the wreck of their automobile on the Wyomlsslng bridge, located in a suburb, early this morning. The dead: Miss Mamie Fisher, killed instantly. The injured: Solomon Cook, this city, serious internal injuries; Jesse ' Houck, lacerations on face and body; Florence Painter, serious internal in juries; Mary Moore, serious internal injuries. Eye witnesses to the accident say that the car was traveling at a high rate of speed when it ran into the rail ing of the bridge. The car turned turtle and was burned. | SAILING VESSEL St'N'K By Associated Press London, Oct. I.—The sailing vessel Helen Beyon has been sunk. Her crew was saved. • iiswiilir NO INDIGESTION, GAS OB HCIOIIt Eat without fear of sourness, heartburn, belching or dyspepsia. The moment "Pape's Diapepsin" reaches the stomach all distress goes. If your meals don't fit comfortably, or you feel bloated after eating and | you believe it is the food which fills ! you; if what little you eat lays like a lump of lead on your stomach; if there is difficulty in breathing after eating, eructations of sour, undigested food and acid, heartburn, brash or a belching of gas, you can make up your mind that you need something to stop food fermentation and cure indiges tion. To make every bite of food you eat aid in the nourishment and strength; of your body, you must rid your stomach of poisons, excessive acid and ' stomach gas which sours your entire! meal —interferes with digestion and ! causes so many sufferers of dyspepsia, I sick headache, biliousness, eonstipa-i tlon, griping, etc. Your case is no different—you are a stomach sufferer, though you may call it by some other name; your real and only trouble is that which you eat does not digest but quickly ferments and sours, pro ducing almost any unhealthy condi- , tlon. a A case of Pape's Diapepsin will cost c fifty cents at any pharmacy here, and x will convince any stomach sufferer five v minutes after taking a single dose a that fermentation and sour stomach is j causing the misery of indigestion. ' r No matter if you call your trouble t catarrh of the rtomach, dervousness or 1 gastritis, or by any other name—al- j f ways remember that instant relief is ' , waiting at any drug store the moment it you decide to begin its use. 1 q Pape's Diapepsin will regulate any out of order storpach within five mln- t utes. and digest promptly, without any t fuss or discomfort all of any kind of 11 food you eat. —Advertisement. 1 „ THK Harrtsburg Polyclinic Ul»pen rary will be open dally, except Sunday, at 3 P. M , at It* new location, front and Harria streets, for tb« fre« treat mint of ibe worthy poor. —J j You Pay Less For Better Quality at Miller & Kades =HK, It's the Quality? That Makes These the Greatest ' It's Miller & Kades* quality, bp well as the reasonableness of Miller J..' j^ l j| & Kades' prices, that makes the complete and lasting satisfaction of * JnKjfe iJBESI' I 1 * I 1 WIUIIHP J Miller & Kades' customers an absolute certainty. MM St Here's Your Chance to Save $10; and ||IBI To Get a Kitchen Cabinet of Quality It has every labor-saving, waste-preventing feature embodied in Its |i| li construction that has heretofore and eisewftere been found In cabinets If ' hoard with sanitary metal shelf—entire upper section has sanitary white E enameled interior—rolling pin holder and non-corrosive metal rack a>. V '! with glass spice Jars —metal rack on each door—glass tea and coffee WfMJ'Hßlii a\ _ I jars—glass salt jar with glass cover to prevent rust—glass sugar jar ji j \ KBf i ! l\ with improved siding cap. mounted on swinging bracket —FULIj EX- ttlßtYli'llwMH i u» qy fl \\ \w\*(R. IftmS* HBIi! : I ! II TEN'S ION METAL SI.IDIXG TABfcE TOP—large utensil cupboard with L if'iL 111 if 1 sliding metal shelf—metal pan rack —kneading >K I R* \\ * %\Wi iff f' ) board—utensil drawer—linen drawer —metal bread U" 1 (I U E I ill!!' < [ '!l[M§SnMMHffifiPHfifiSH|^^^aa: and cake drawer. It's built of solid oak, splendidly I %<■ 11 I l|i !i!ll!P^ ! 3PP3SS3? tinished, and we'll deliver it on terms of t|/ X V fr \ (r C *11? White Enamel 'I Special For MeJkillt Tomorrow Cabinets B I Bathroom Stool, °* ca binet JSi HH 79c 79c fiß | • i LF JJ (f , . I i 4-- I „ rj _ i i • Another shipment just received of the i g\, , iulttlc wrl3.irS famous Little Red Chairs. Will be sold 111/* to-morrow only, for * "v MILLER & KADES Furniture Department Store M—, CASH 7N. Market Square CREDIT ! The Only Store in Harrisburg That Sells on Credit at Cash Prices I TT* When the Elements Have Hands and Feet Many natural philosophers of our time believe that the appearance of life upon this planet was a fortuitous occurrence—that It was as accidental as the fall ot a die, or as the profile of the rocks l —entirely the result of the blind hit-and-miss method of Nature as seen in the inorganic world. In the last analysis, according to this view we are all merely molecular accidents. Let us see in what sense, if any, this may be true. To come at the truth In It we must look upon the fortuitous and the accidental, not as they occur In a world of mechanical movements, but in a world of chemical reactions. The fortuitous among chemical bodies Is quite a different thing from the for tuitous among ponderable bodies. We might shake together the parts of a watch for all eternity and not i get that adjustment of the wheels and springs that makes a watch. If a thousand of brick are dumped upon the ground, is there any probability that they will take the form of a house? Or It the letters of the alpha bet are shaken up together in a bag, Is there the slightest cnance that they will arrange themselves into words and that the words will arrange them selves Into Intelligent sentences In all these things the parts have no at traction for one another, but among chemical compounds out of which liv ing bodies are built up, there rules the selective force of chemical affinity. The clouds are ever changing, but they never change into living rorms. The waves shift and pile the sands End lessly upon the shore, but the shore is always essentially the same. Gravity Is the ruling force. But among chenil cal bodies a new force Appears; chemical affinity is here the determin ing factor. The law of probability plays a secondary part. Spontaneous combustion, for instance, Is a molecu lar acldent only in a limited sense. The antecedent conditions may be In a measure accidental, but the chemi cal reactions that bring about the rise of temperature to the point of com bustion are not accidental; they inhere in the constitution of the elements. Life may be of spontaneous and fortuitous origin in the same sense; not a meer chance happening among unrelated bodies, but tne continuation of long-antecedent conditions brought about by that mysterious force we call chemical attraction. This rorce, as It were. glv«s the elements eyes, and hands, and feet, and power of choice, and determines the line of their activ ities. The scientific philosophers find no tendency or activity in living mat ter that they cannot match in the non living; hence to them there Is no dif ference between the two that experi mental science can grasp. But behold the difference to our consciousness. The difference lies In the purposive activities of one that Is absent from the other. There in no purpose in the facets of a crystal in Mie sense that there is purpose In tl • rorms and structures of living bodlt-. The hinge of a bivalve has purpose tnat is de termined by the needs of the organ ism: but what purpose have the lines of cleavage In Ihe rocks, or the con -1 tours of the hills, or tne courses of the streams All these things may I serve man's purpose, nut they arc I meaningless when regarded in their own light. There Is no significance in ,the whistle of the wind aDout your house, but a whistle of another kind there in the darkness would startle you. The sounds of Inanimate Na ture mean nothing, but all sounds that proceed from living, moving things are significant. There is no purpose in the glint of the dewdrop nor in tho sparkle of the diamond, but there its purpose in the flash of the firefly and in the beam of the glow-worm. John Burroughs, in The North Amer ican Review. Cockill Says Phillies Will Win World Series George Cockill. National League um pire, and former Harrlsburg Tri-State manager and Tech High football coach, wits in Harrisburg to-day. He stopped off on his way from Pittsburgh to Bos ton. During the season Umpire Cockill officiated in sixty regular games and two exhibition contests. He will be busy until the close of the season, Oc tober 5. George Cockill will take in the world's series. He does not expect to officiate at any of the big games. Asked who would win the world s champion ship. Umpire Cockill said: "Why, the Phillies, of course!" I S. P. C. A. Notes If no one else Is thankful for the recent "wet spell," the horses are, according to the agent of the Harrls burg S. P. C. A. Because of the in clement weather horses are enjoying an enforced rest which is doubtless as grateful to them as it Is money-losing for contractors. Horses, like people, work all the better for not overdoing and many a scraggy animal Is putting on flesh because of the rains. Senator Vest, in his "Eulogy on the Dog," says: "If fortune drives the master forth an outcast In the world, friendless and homeless, the faithful dog asks no higher privilege than that of accompanying him to guard against danger, to fight against his enemies, and when the last scene of all conies and death takes the master—there by his graveside will the noble dog be found, his head between his paws, his eyes sad but open In alert watchful ness, faithful and true evei) to death." It would seem that Harrisburg mas ters ill repay their faithful dogs. One of the recent prosecutions of the S. P. C. A. was because a man threw an ice tons at a dog arttl the prong dug a hole in its head. A garbage man also broke a dog's leg by hitting it with his can. In view of the thousands of horses being sent to Europe, it is comforting to learn from Edward Fox Suintsbury. an Englishman who has seen much of the war, that tliiß conflict is less dis astrous for horses than earlier wars have been. He writes: "I have Just found out on reliable information that by comparison with other wars very few horses are used in the firing: line. The motor wagons do nearly all the work and more and more are being used. lam speaking of the western front. Of course on the eastern front cavalry is much Used, Marie Dressier Brings Sunshine to Colonial in "Tillie's Tomato Surprise" "Funniest Woman in the World" in Her Funniest Comed> Is Causing One Long Continuous Laugh^ i * I - jraHHg Jj H ' A iv * *** 1 K \ I | J Rainy cas t no shadow tfTfUt ieS of the events that take place in Mari.- rw . . in town \t the Co- the picture have ever been published ftiane Dressier is in to«n. At me to according to Miss Dressier'* or ionial to-day .and to-morrow, this ders, before she posed the plcturfc. "funniest woman in the world" as she they never will. The various publlca 1* known | H appearing in "Tillies To- tlons on moving pictures speak-in flat mato Surprise a" d " 18 the BCream terins terms of the comedienne s new of her career in the tilm world. est comey effort, many of them show "TiMie'g Tomato Surprise" is a se- pictures of funny Incidents that take quel to "Tillies Punctured Romance" place in It, but none of them dar« and said t 0 be even funnier. No stor-I mni thu story.—Adv. but the horses and mules sent from America to Europe are not as a rule "food for powder." When horses are wounded every care is taken of them, both French and British Blue Cross veterinarians being ready to treat them. What I want you to xnow is that in this sickening war it is our poor, brave men who suffer—horses far less." .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers