| here not nlnnr brrauir prices are lower* but because qualities are i oßig Monday Surprises in New Fall Millinery j Si Prices Are For Monday Only !: In accordance with our usual practice, we shall place on sale Monday all odd lots I j j> of hats remaining from Saturday's selling. There's no telling, perhaps, the very «; j; hat you want will be included in the event. «! !; Come, anyway, for you will have your choice of spic and span new models, rang |; ing in value from 75c to $6.00, which we will group in this sale, for Monday jj j; only, at j» 39c to $2.50 j i| Soutter's lc to 25c Department Store jj j; Where Every Day Is Bargain Day j; Ij 215 Market Street Opposite Courthouse j! TQ\W cS Husbands of Others By BEATRICK FAIRFAX If some girl you know had a beau tiful gold bracelet, would you sneak Into her home, steal the Jewel and then ilaunt it in the face of the world with the serene feeling that the brace- j let was yours because you had taken! It ,and that no punishment would ever befall you? Absurd suggestion— is it not? Well, then, if the stealing of a mere bauble would brand you as a thief to be shunned by decent people and to be ehut in prison to repent of your crime, how can you expect that the theft of love and honor —the stealing of a nan's protection and affection is to go unpunished? There is no more contemptible crime in all the calendar of shameful deeds AMUSEMENTS MB Don't miss your last chance to see this big show ol' Orpheum quality. s The Scotch Highlanders Four Other Big Acts MOX., TI ES, anil WED. THE SULLY FAMILY PRESENTING The Information Bureau MULLEN and COOCAX THREE OTHER BIG ACTS World's Serlen Ilaseball Scorn by Innings. MATINEE, 2.30—10 c and 15c. EVENING, 7.30 to 10.30—10 c, 15c j and 26c. * jl I ' fy a TO-ni°ht Monday Night Only, Oct. 11 Last Time DAVID BKLASCO CHARLES Fit OHM AN Presents Prewenta I ' . Otis Skinner Fraßce JL Sta " j In bio new plav ,hc Mo,t 5, ° ,,b 1' pla r of the "C«k .he Walk" „ jc odj . Ily HENRY AIITHIR JONES I'llil IV VVIEIV PKICIJS aSc to *2.00 PRICES 25c to 92.00 Tuesday Night Only, Oct. 12 J Orpheum Theater, Monday Evening, SELWYN A CO. PRESENTS October .... The Play That Han Everything M | T | A Tjwnrp MLLDA | *LJ» XI I 1 i'i rv Heat rice Harrlnon, 'celllntt Robert i w Parker, baritone; St. I.egere, plnnlNt. i j TICKETS—SI,W(, *1.50. *2.00, $2.50. I || Aj 1/ |J BOXES—SI 2, *lB and *2O. \r W Mall ordera accompanied by re. I i nilttance and Ktaniped envelope HU SK «T« TO.rnv ! before the opening of public Male i | in the order of receipt. ! ... Public Sale Openn at Bo* Office | j; I RICES to *1.501 October 22. Wednesday, Sjh e t Oct. 13||l POPULAR MATINEE—2Sc AND 50c SEATS TO-DAY 1 WILL W. WHALEN'B PRONOUNCED SUCCESS ILL STARRED BABBIE A COMEDY DRAMA OF AMERICAN MFI WITH June Congreve AND EXCEPTIONAL CAST NIGHT PRICES 25c—B<le—75o—*1.00 I I SATURDAY EVENING, than stealing another woman's hus band. It is a black sin, too—and ahead of it stretches, link by link, a chain of shame and disgrace. Do any of you girls who give your j love to a man who has sworn to ! "love, honor and cherish" another wo man until death," ever look at your affair with that man In the clear light of reason and common sense? I think not. The only light in which you ever consider it is the murky haze of your wilful blindness or the violent gleam of your uncontrolled desire. Now, for a few minutes, turn your face to the light and with me look squarely at the situation you are mak ing. Don't flinch when you see it in all its distorted ugliness. Keep on looking until your brain has recovered AMUSEMENTS \ DOI BLE BILL TO-DAY CHARLIE CHAPLIN In his latest release. "SHANGHAIED" T«o refill. "THE DOCTOR'S SECRET" | —WITH— the DlntinKulrihed lloyal Actresk, | BETTY NANSEN In Five Reela. MONDAY AND TUESDAY, MARY PICKFORD —IN— "LITTLE PAL." Paramount. Profenaor Wallace play* from • 'till 4..'10, and from 7 'till tl. MIMM Merchant play* froiu 10.30 'till - and from 4.30 'till 7. 1 «■ '■ sanity and power enough to control your feverish and cruel little heart. Look at the wife from whom you are stealing the priceless jewel of lovo and trust in the man she married. Tou are going to tear her home of love down about her head. You arc going to wreck her home itself. A few years ago she was young and pretty as you are now—or perhaps she was "understanding" and sympa thetic and so attracted the man who is now the greatest factor in her life. She gave him her youth, her ener gy, her love, her life itself. And he tired of her. Do you dare take her whole joy in life away from her? Her husband has been the center of her universe for years. Do you dare throw her whole world off its orbit and leave it smashed to atoms at her feet? Do you dare blot out the sun shine from her life forever? Can you steal your happiness and make another woman pay for It in agony? What of the Outcome? If you dare—if you toss your head and cynically murmur, "Every one for himself and the devil take the hindmost," aren't you afraid that your invitation will be accepted? You will be condemned and shunned by decent people. Your friends will pity you, I but despise you too much to be kind j to you in your state of social leprosy. I You will be sneered at and subjected to insult. Your parents and family I will be outcasts, too, because they are of your blood—and how they will suf i fer as they join in paying the toll for |your stolen happiness! ! Can you bear all that? Can you ' boar knowing that you have hurt the career of the man you love so un wisely? Men will not feel that they can trust him in business when he have proven so untrustworthy in the most sacred relation of life. He will be dropped by many and have to drop the rest whose wives will refuse to recognize you ? I Does even this fail to daunt you ? I Then face the cruelest fact of all— 'the man who turns from the wife who has given him soul and spirit and love, ■ will even more surely turn from the I girl who has only the last to give. [ Face desertion. For that will be your | portion as surely as you forced it on ! another woman. j If the wife who is bound to him by i ties of love and honor and decency— iby ties of home and children, per | haps—by custom and habit —cannot hold him, how can you expect to do so who have broken all of these bonds? Some day he will see a face that is younger and fresher than yours. It will have the mystery of the un known. Off after it will go your "light of love." There will be noth ing but an outworn passion to hold him to you. And that is a weak cable soon broken. He will no longer have ; society to fear. He will have no shred | of manhood and honor to bind him. ' He sacrificed them all for you. j Off he will go after his newer fancy, i and you will not have the one con ! solation given the poor wife whose 1 life you spoiled even as some younger I woman is spoiling your marred and '■ shameful existence. Society will not (offer you sympathy and help. In i stead it will laugh and sneer at the thief who was not clever enough to hold her stolen property. And in your wretchedness and shame you will be alone. I)ou't He Misled "But he is going to marry me," you i say. "His first marriage was ail a mls i take and he realizes that I am the one i love of his life." | If this is so—and there is about i one chance in a hundred that it is— : don't let him come into your life until ■he is free to marry you. And even ■ then, could you ever trust a man who j AMUSEMENTS LOOK SPECIAL (HII DHE\*S MATINEE 5c i Wltli a Statuette of Chaplin —FREE— to every boy and jtlrl from 1.30 on until our big; nupply |H gone. See blm to— ! Shanghaied ALSO •THE BLINDNESS OF VIRTUE" Matinee, 5-lOc—Eve., 10c-15c Coming Moniluy ESS AX AY'S II I,IE FEATURE "In the Palace of the King" HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH COALDALE WANTS ENOUGH TO DRINK Interesting Complaint Filed With the Public Service Commissioners The borough of Coaldale, Schuylkill I county, has tiled a complaint with the j Public Service Commission, alleging J that the water supply furnished that i borough by the Panther Valley Water | Company is inadequate for domestic ; and tire purposes: that on from two to four days of each week for the past year or more, a lack of water has frequently existed for hours at a stretch, and sometimes for periods of from ten to twelve hours each day there is no water in certain parts of I the town. I R. B. AlcKee, a resident of Steuben township, Crawford county, lias insti tuted a complaint against the Penn sylvania Railroad Company, charging ,that the company has recently made certain changes in its line which neces j sitated the removal of a siding which he had up to that time made use of, and whicii said company promised to replace when the changes in the grade had been completed. The petitioner asks the assistance of tne commission to secure the restoration of the siding. A FASHIONABLE AUTUMN FROCK _ An Interesting Design Showing Quaker Collar and Cuffs. By MAY MANTON 8745 Long Waisted Gown for Misset end Small Women, 16 and 18 years. Truly js the present a season of inter esting contrasts, and here is a girl's dress, eminently picturesque in its lines and cut, that is finished with demure collar and cuffs which seem to belong to the Quaker maiden in her plain attire. The effect is good, however, and when the effect is good, fashion may be content. The frock is very charming either for silk or for wool fabrics and it can be made as it is here, of one material through out, or, with the skirt and the over-bodice of one material and the under-bodice and sleeves of another, and since combination* are greatly in vogue, this latter effect has many possibilities. Here, one of the new cr§pes, Combining silk and wool, is trimmed with soft chiffon velvet, and the collar and cuffs are of white washable satin. A totally different effect could be obtained by making the over-bodice and the skirt of plaid taffeta and the under-bodice with sleeves of Georgette crSpe or crfipe de chine and the collar and cuffs of the same or of organdie. The skirt is in two pieces and i 6 joined to a yoke, and this yoke in turn is joined to the plain bodice, the closing of tne blouse and the yoke being made at the front, while the over-bodice is adjusted over the blouse and closed at the left shoulder. For the 16 year size will be required 9% yds. of material 27 in. wide, 6% yds. 36, yds. 44. with % yd. 36 in. wide for the collar aud cuffs, x yd. 27 for girdle •ad bands. The May Manton pattern No. 8745 is cut in sizes for 16 and 18 years. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of tkis paper, on receipt of teu cents. Bowman's sell Way Manton Patterns. had made love to you when bound In honor to another woman? Your whole life would be one long miserable fear of the day when he would serve you aa you had helped him serve your predecessor. You would be torn by suspicion of every woman who touched his life—even at its mere edges. You would know that there were qualities of falseness and deceit of self-indulgence and of pitilessness for a woman once he had tired of her in your lover's nature! You will grow wretched waiting for the inevitable' day when he would tire of you and set off on another dis honorable wooing. You would murder your youth and charm by your very fear of loss of power when once they w ere gone. But the chances arc ninety-nine against one that you will ever be given the title of "wife" by the man who has come to know that you do not hold It sacred. The price you must pay for the love of another woman's husband is higher than extorted from any other thief —it is peace of mind, honor, posi tion, family ties, self-respect, honor able love and a home and children. All this you pay for a little period of delirious love making—and at the end you reap remorse, desertion and life long misery. Can you persuade yourself that it is worth while. No—l am sure you never can. You have faced the light. You have looked the theft you con templated square in the face and you shrink. If you have one grain of "de cency and one pf common sense you cannot steal another woman's hus band. Be sure of that. , I Peculiar Old White 1 I Mare She Was! 1 • • I ET S ambit ion was to "get there." May be it was in- W Stinct that prompted her to travel at breakneck J® speed, for every trip over the wide countryside was bi an "Errand of Mercy"; carrying her owner—the doc • ■ , tor—to the "sick bed" of her kin. * . . . ' A little peculiarity all her own, was that of increase ing her speed on each hill she encountered—and the ■ CSJ steeper the hill, the faster she galloped, only at the f°P» stopping to give her head a meaning shake; ad s' just her proud poise and break into a steady pace • again. 0 f Right here in this building we're all "running up hills" j ■ order that the store may be completed in a short- (3 ened period. |j 1 S, O ur purpose is to "get there"—ours is an URGENT * I ERRAND OF SERVICE. | • • | The sooner work is finished, the better for all. Work | men who realize this can be found wherever you look gj about the building, and many lunch hours are cut h | short by their own design. ® | I J CALX, 1991 ANY FHONE FOUNDED 18 0 Armed Men Scour Hills For Mail Car Robbers By Associated Press Wheeling, W. Va., Oct. 9. Hun dreds of armed men scoured the hills of Harrison, Pleasants and Dodridge counties during the night in search of the highwaymen who early yester day robbed Baltimore and Ohio pas senger train No. 1 at Central Station and got away with unsigned bank notes. Every available clue was fol lowed by shenrTs, United States deputy marshals and posses of citi zens, but information reaching here this morning was that no real pro gress had been made. Washington, D. C., Oct. 9. Post office inspectors to-day after Investi gation of yesterday's holdup on a Baltimore and Ohio train near Central Station, W. Va., said that less than SIOO,OOO In currency was gotten by the robbers. First reports placed the amount of currency in transit between Keep Your Eyes on the Store Windows The public eye likes interesting sights. And next week —beginning Monday—the city will be full of them. They will be in the show windows of the en terprising merchants. They will be in the garb of near and dear friends— friends introduced to you through the advertising col umns of the newspapers of this city. The Show Window Display is part of a continent wide demonstration in the interest of better business. Just as the merchants of this city are vieing with each other, so is the city as a whole in competition with hundreds of other cities in the United States and Canada. On behalf of the merchants and the newspapers we invite you to inspect the store windows next week. You will have no trouble distinguishing the displays for they will bear signs reading: INTERNATIONAL NEWSPAPER DISPLAY WEEK We Sell These Standard Products- All Advertised in the DAILY NEWSPAPERS The Store Window* Will Be Well Worth Seeing OCTOBER 0, IQIS. the treasury and western banks at more than $500,000. Investigation develops that no such large amount was on the train. Predicts Coal Price Raise of $3 a Ton Coal prices may be boosted from $2 to $3 per, ton before the end of the year according to announcement by an official of one of the big coal hand ling companies in this city to-day. The war in Europe which has been responsible for the recall to the colors of their mother countries many of the foreigners who were employed in the coal fields and the shortage of cars are declared to be the couse of the prob able rise in cost of fuel. Railroads it is said are able to fur nish but sixty per cent, of the number of cars necessary to handle the sup ply. M. R. Millerg sales agent for the United Ice and Coal Company has ex plained the situation and the possi bility of a rise in prices in a letter sent out to patrons. "The Palace of the King" to Be Shown in Pictures A stupendous production, depicting a love story of old Madrid and the picturesque court life of 350 years ago is "In the Palace of the King, - ' Essanay's new six reel photoplay, dramatized from the famous novel l>y F. Marion Crawford, and which will appear at the Colonial Theatei- on Monday and Tuesday. Five thousand persons were engaged by Essanay tu take part in this photoplay, which, critics say, is one of the best ever pro duced. Besides the thousands of men and women employed in the film, hundreds of blooded horses and thousands of dollars worth of beautiful costumes were used to lend the necessary real istic color. Of special interest is the cast of players, most prominent of which are Richard Travers, F. J. Ratcliffe, Ar leen Hackett, Lillian Drew and Nella Craig.—Advertisement. 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers