"The Quality Store" The Glory of Autumn in Glowing New Silks WONDROUS show- _ ing of the most stylish silks. Brand new all of them the cream of what the market has to offer for Fall. Here you'll -2f ; '*§£s) find all kinds of silks, in- yP "* eluding Plaids and Stripes, now foremost in demand, in all shades and \ 1 f the most exquisite combi- \ J J nations. In fact our large \ II assemblage of silks con- V \ / tains every shade and hue \\ I I in Fashion's rainbow. \\ lf I Note this, too, that every ]/ VVT7 yard measures up to the usual high standard t— "Cook Quality." PLAID STLKS —36 inches wide, in Green, Brown, Navy, Copenhagen, Gold—all the popular shades and striking combinations —prices range from 51.25 to 52.00 per yd. STRIPED SILKS —3 6 inches wide—ln Blue, Gray, Brown, Green. Black and White in self and contrasting stripes—remarkable values at SI.OO to 82.50 per yd. 24-TNCH PI.AID AND STRIPED SILKS in a large range of the season's most handsome colorings at 75c to 51. 50 per yd. TAFFETA SII.KS—3 6 inches wide—a most comprehen sive showing embracing a full color range with prices at SI.OO to $1.50 per yd. FAILLE SILKS—36 inches wide—in Brown, Gray, Navy, Green and Plum—exceptional quality at $1.25 per yd. GROS DE LONDRES SILK—36 inches wide —in Green, Military Blue, Navy. African Brown. Bose, Putty, Battle ship Gray, Black and White at $1.50 per yd. ALL SILK MESSALINES —36 inches wide —in all the desired colorings—superior grade at SI.OO per yd. AND THESE SILKS TOO—«'repe de Chine, Poplins, Georgette Crepes, Chiffons and Crepe Meteor are here in a range of beautiful colorings at our usual modest price. SKINNER'S LINING SATIN—36 inches wide —guaran- teed for two years—in Black, White, Cream,, three shades of Tan, four shades of Gray, Navy and African Brown —at $1.50 per yd. TWO-SEASON LINING SATIN—36 inches wide —guar- anteed for" two seasons—in Blafk, White, Cream, two shades of Gray, Brown, and two shades of Tan—at SI.OO per yd. L. W. COOK PEANUTS FOR COTTON SEED The discouragement of the Ameri can cotton industries by the war has necessitated the substitution of other crops for cotton this year. This con dition has long been considered desir able by agricultural authorities. It has the disadvantage, however, of re ducing the production of cotton seed oil, and suspending the operation of large cottonseed mills, w r hich within the past Ave years have become im portant industrial establishments. In addition to closing the mills, the shortage of cottonseed oil affects many Industries. The Bureau of Plant In- 5 < mrni&n> Omul Opa/urfum& For years we have been stating in the newspapers of the country that a great many women have escaped serious op erations by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, and it is true. We are permitted to publish in this announcement extracts from the letters of five women. All have been recently received unsolicited. Could any evidence be more convincing? IHODGDON, ME. —" I had pains in both sides and such a soreness • I could scarcely straighten up at times. My back ached and I was so nervous I could not sleep, and I thought I never would be any better until I submitted to an operation, but I commenced taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and soon felt like a new woman."—Mrs. HAYWARD SOWERS, Hodgdon, Me. 2 SHELBY VILLE, KY. —"I suffered from a severe female trouble. • My right side hurt me badly—it was finally decided that I must be operated upon. When my husband learned this he got a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for me, and after taking it a few days I got 'better and continued to improve until I am now welL"—Mrs. MOLLIE SMITH, R.F.D., Shelbyville, Ky. 3 HANOVER, PA. —" The doctor advised a severe operation, but my • husband got me Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and I experienced great relief in a short time. Now I feel like a new person and can do a hard day's work and not mind it."—Mrs. ADA WILT, 303 Walnut St., Hanover, Pa. 4 DECATUR. III.—"I was sick in bed and three of the best physi • cians saia I would have to be taken to the hospital for an oper ation as I had something growing in my left side. I refused to sub mit to the operation and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound—and it worked a miracle in my case, and I tell other women what it has done for me." —Mrs. LAURA A. GRISWOLD, 2437 East William Street, Decatur, lIL 5 CLEVELAND, OHIO.— "I was very irregular and for several years • my side pained me so that I expected to have to undergo an op eration. Doctors said they knew of nothing that would help me. I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound and I became regular and free Zv/#* 1 from pain. I am thankful for such a good medi- 1/ t cine and will always give it the highest praise."— I yy | Mrs. C. H.GRIFFITH, 1568 Constant St., Cleveland,O. II Iy. Jlf K Write to LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. fc\ J ft) (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS., for advice. \\| iter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. MvßAVKmGtst*^ WEDNESDAY EVENING, dustry is now conducting: a series of experiments which it is hoped will overcome both disadvantages by sub stituting 1 peanut oil for many of the purposes for which cottonseed oil is now being used. It has been found that with slight modifications the cot tonseed oil machinery can be used for manufacturing peanut oil. The seed hullers can be made to shell the pea nuts. Peanut oil is already being manufactured extensively. One of its uses is a combination with olive oil for a second grade salad oil. Quanti ties of it have recently been shipped to Italy for that purpose. HXRRISBURG *£&£& TELEGRAPH Why I Married a Second Time By Dorothy Dh "Why did I marry the second time?" repeated the Man with the Cynical Smile, "because I am a gambler at life. Because I am an optimist In philosophy and a plung er in business and I took a second chance at happiness. "Heaven knows my first matri monial venture was disastrous enough. I married one of those wo men who seem made for the un doing of men, a beautiful, fair, starry eyed young creature, who look as soft and fresh, and tender as a June rose, but who was as hard and petrified within as a piece of New England granite. "I was young, romantic, with my head filled with visions of what life would be with a wife at my side who answered to my every ideal of mind and soul. I waked up from my dream to find out I was tied to a woman who regarded matrimony merely as a meal ticket, and a husband as a sort of human cash register to be worked for all she could get out of him. "That wasn't enough to satisfy her, or make the game interesting in those days, for I was just Getting a start in business and money was none too plentiful. In consequence our married life was as good an understudy of an earthly purgatory as you could wish to see. I, nervous, overworked, over wrought, fighting desperately and futilely against my wife's mad ex travagance and the flood of bills that were always threatening to over whelm me, and drag me down into ruin. She, furious because she could not have the jewels and clothes, and motors, and trips that she saw other women have, always reproaching me and flinging in my face the bitter accusation that I did not succeed as well as some other men did. ♦•lad When It Ended "At last it ended, as such a mar riage was bound to end, in divorce. She found an old millionaire that she befooled with her soft baby face as she had befooled me, and I thanked God for my deliverance when she went to Keno to get a divorce from me upon the trumped up charge of inhuman treatment, though the OTily cruel and inhuman treatment I had ever inflicted i*pon her was my failure to supply her with all the money she desired. "There are many faults that a man can forgive a woman, but the one thing that strips the last vestige of glamor from about her is to find her sordid, to realize that th* only thing she cares for it what she can get out of him. I had had a bitter lesson in feminine cupidity, and so for a long time after my wife left me I saw in woman only the vampire, a loathsome creature who sucks the very ilfe blood out of a man, and then, when she has left him worthless, passes on to another victim. "But after a while I got a saner point of view. I said to myself that because one apple on a tree was rot FOR EARLY AUTUMN k Smart Coat that can be Made With or Without the Pockets. By MAY MANTON 8748 Girl's Coat, 6 to 12 year*. Coats are sure to be needed with the first cool days. Here is an exceedingly smart one that is rendered very dressy by means of the sash, yet which is emi nently simple and easy to make. The fronts are plain, body and skirt portion being joined beneath the sash, but the back of the body portion is made over a lining and the outside is finished sepa rately to extend over the sash, BO giving a distinctive and novel effect. The patch pockets are fashionable, but they are not necessary and may be used or not a» occasion requires. The neck may be finished with a high collar or with a sailor collar and the high collar can be either buttoned up closely or rolled open slightly at the neck. For coats of the sort will be used a great variety of ma terials; broadcloth is always smart; the heavier poplins and ribbed silks are fash ionable; later, velvet will be extensively used and for every-day wear, serge and cheviot make excellent materials, with the sash of any pretty silk or ribbon. For the 8 year size will be needed 2% yds. of material 27 in. wide, yds. 36, yds. 44. 2 yds. 54, with 2 yds. 27 in. wide for the sash, collar and cuffs. The May Manton pattern No. 8748 is cut in sizes from 6to 12 year*. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper, on receipt of ten cent*. Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. THE YELIAJW FAMINE The present situation in the dye industry, due to the cutting off of shipments of certain color Ingredients from Europe, is responsible for some of the colors which are to be fashion able this Pall. Patriotic women who are interested in promoting American business interests have been advised to refrain from ordering the shades of brown and green which require yellow as a base. Yellow dye Ingredients are becoming scarcer each week, and a number of manufacturers are embar rassed by this situation. The women who will confine their Kali wardrobes to such colors as blue, purple, black and gray will render their countrymen and effective Ber wlca. ten it did not prove that all apples were bad, and because I had the misfortune to marry one woman with the soul of a money grubber, did not prove all women were mere bundles or selfishness and avarice. "Moreover, r am. as I said, a gam bler by nature, and so I determined not to drop out of the matrimonial game because I had lost out at my first throw, but to put down my last coin on the table and to call for a new shuffle and deal of the cards. "Risky, of course, but of one thing I was sure, and that was that noth ing could be as bad as what I had ben through, and I had the loser's desperate faith that luck was bound to change, and that fate must relent and be kind to me at last. Also I had that strange feeling of baffled happiness, of being denied something that was my right, of being cheated out of something that was my due, that those who have made miserable marriages always have. "Old bachelors look on even the most congeniei marriages and the happiest homes without a pang of envy or desire, but we whose mar riages have been failures are eaten up with the sense of what we have missed when we behold a man and woman being to each other what God intended they should be. Why He Tried Again shines so brightly as to the eyes of those whose own (Ires upon the hearth have gone out. Home never "The light of household fires never seems so dear to those who have tried to make a home and found it in ruins about them. No arms are so empty as those that have been stretched out to the little children that never came to them. No heart ever aches so for companionship as that which has held a once dear head upon it that has gone. It is the urge of what you have loved and lost, of what you have striven for and failed to get. that sends the unhappily mar ried back once more to risk the storms of matrimony again. "In the face of that longing, of that desperate need, of that de termination to wrest happiness from life at last, of what avail are even the warnings of one's own experi ence? One knows the danger, but one dares it. It is the great adven ture, and strangely enough, just be cause one has failed the first time, he is sure he cannot fail the second, and so with his fingers crossed, and his rabbit's foot in his pocket, he march es the second time up to the altar. "And generally his gambler's super stition is justified and his luck does change, and his second marriage is a sjuccess." The man with the cynical smile paused and lit a cigaret. "Doctor Johnson said it," he added. "You re member, he said that every second marriage was the triumph of hope over experience. As a diagnosis of the psychology of the second marriage that cannot be beaten —or amplified," Her Grandmother Robbed of $75,000 in Jewelry HHBHBb9££H99S 1 | > ! -»-.'. v . . \ . '■) R " < 4 .;< p F j ■' ' •~~V->-.-i~.i*,<«' fe : . :j(i."W » • • » 1 >-' . • ] E ■'■'■ ■„ - '"" '' .- ' '"**'• ' l ' '' ; * j t5? Hi^S^WB4SS^ > MRS. PRESTON GIBSON One of the largest. Jewelry robberies in many years was that of Mrs. James McMillan, widow of the late United States senator from Michigan, at her summer home, Eagle Head, at Man chester-by-the-Seu, In Massachusetts, when valuables worth $75,000 were taken from the house. And It has be come one of the most mysterious cases on which detectives have had to work. One agency was called off after con siderable Investigation had been made. Mrs. Preston Gibson, granddaughter of Mrs. McMillan, was with her at the time. Mrs. McMillan kept her jewelry ir a safe near her room. Mrs. McMil lian saved some $6,000 worth of her jewels because she wore a $4,000 pair of earrings anu a $2,000 necklace to lied. Detectives said they could learn nothing about the case, but a state ment was made by a company which insured the valuables that $42,000 had been paid to Mrs. McMillan. IMMIGRANT BIRDS Few persons realize that birds, like human beings, are ever on the lookout for new and desirable homes, and may frequently be induced to immi grate if sufficient attractions are of fered. The United States Reclamation Ser vice has lately begun an attempt to Induce desirable birds to live upon the lakes of Its irrigation projects. It Is meeting with gratifying success in many instances. The feathered set tlers seem to like their new homes, as well as do their human neighbors. A pair of Kentucky cardinals taken to Boise, Idaho, took up their home In evident content and reared their young last year successfully. This year sev eral pairs of them appeared In the vicinity, each of which has raised a family during the past summer. It would be Interesting to know If the additional birds who came this sum mer were the young birds who had been hatched the year before or others who had been influenced to join a colony by learning of the liberal quan tity of sunflower seed provided as food. A Splendid Showing of COMFORTS & BLANKETS It isn't a bit too early to prepare for the cold nights—we have a surprisingly large selection of COMFORTS and BLANKETS, embracing a wide range of prices —and we guarantee everyone to be made of new materials, in sanitary factories. Bedding Values That Are Hard to Equal AND YOU CAN BUY THEM ON OUR CHARGE ACCOUNT PLAN Gray Cotton BLAN- blue or gray, at $4.00 pr. sides, heavier weight KETS, double bed size, ex- Fine White BLAN tra quality, $1.50 and KETS. with blue or gold COMFORTS, covered . borders, wide taffeta bind- with fancy full weight pair. ing> heayy weight and fu n sateen, plain color lining, Gray or White Cotton double bed size, $4.00 pr. $3.00. BLANKETS, with pink White and Plaid Wool COMFORTS covered and blue borders wool nan BLANKETS, full large w ' th c l u f fa f nc >' finish 83 OD Mir sizes and heavv weight, at f". een J& ,n sateen P a,r ' $5, $6 and $7 pair. lmln S' at Blue, Tan or Gray Plaid Wool Filled COM BLANKETS, large dou- , COM FORTS, of fancy FORTS, made of fine qual ble bed size and heavv awn .' P' ain color lining, j t y dimity ,wide fancy silk wLErJ SO JT maximum warmth with borders, kt $5.50. weight, at jM.oO pair. minimum weight, $1 .09. t, _ TT ttr • i & Fancy China Silk COM- Extra Heavy Weight COMFORTS, covered FORTS, with plain color Plaid BLANKE TS, in with fancy lawn, bordered borders, ribbon tied, at $7. Easier SPECIAL Burn's Stoves Housework Thursday SiHSxHSS /"%•! ker, made in several different I .Ml |% >— —sizes, including pipe, upward V/A WU ( from $26.50 V * ■==-' Grand Ringgold Heater a „ . .. . . I iww !*■« ■ i I I i' good, handsome double heater, offers you the opportunity to get , . T. - including all necessary pipe an improved Reliance Vacuum and !|| I til | l| Or* /"V Sweeper on the small club dues of i' |!|l- || k «C K| 1 SI.OO per month and SI.OO enroll- f : i Ff|i,|j ! j|| | ifl » C#Vr ment fee, $7.00 in all. You'll find i III' 'J 'ij r its operation so easy and satisfac- | Kj j 1 jj.fi Ajjjy tory that you will wonder how you L' ' ; *sffi§T|| f}j) ever did without one. USE THE if | | Ij! |i|Jj." TrW Kj JbL. COUPON —Sweeper will be deliv- J ll'lllo IL TriapfYou Wkh I SOLID OAK ROCKER, well put to- 3 EASIER HOUSEWORK CLl'B gether, unusually comfortable and l/jSjfaf, """' ""TOKV made with a genuine leather seat that j^ anie Is removable; a good SB.OO value; spe ™dress &A Q R Enclose SI.OO Registration Fee 4 |J \_r Burns & Company 28-30-32 South Second Street FEEDING YOUR CHHIjDREX Wherever three or four young ma trons are gathered together, there, sooner or later, the conversation will drift to the proper feeding of little children, especially babies. Each moth er will have her pet authority and the names of specialties and title of books on diet will fly around the circle. Those of the group, however, who have two or more children of their own are apt to be more conservative in their opin rules and formulas, than the new be rules and formulas .than the new be ginners. They have learned that each child is a study by itself and that what suited one is by no means sure to suit the next. Said a mother of five recently, "I have been obliged to revise all my theories with each of my children. I started In as an enthusiastic follower of a well-known specialist and my first child throve wonderfully on exactly the diet laid down in his book. My second child could not tolerate it at all, and I think we should have lost her had not rnft- mother Insisted upon giving her beef juice, almost drop by drop, to begin with, long before, ac cording to medical authority, she should have had meat in any form. I have come to believe that only two things are absolutely essential, and In variable in the treatment of the feed ing problem—common sense and ex quisite cleanliness. I carry my desire for the latter to such a point that I have separate cooking utensils for the children's food. These are all of enameled ware, the smooth sanitary surface of which affords no lurking place for germs. In summer the final rinsing water for these utensils con tains a dash of soda. An enameled ware double boiler takes care of all the milk heating. Children's milk should never be really boiled except In cases of illness when H is to be used to check dysentery. Three sizes of enameled ware saucepans answer to prepare the other food. "All my children (but I know that mav not mean all children) digest cooked fruit much more easily than the raw. Even fresh peaches should [be stewed. Cooked slowly in an enam eled ware saucepan they will keep 'their color and be almost as tempting I Lime Starvation Causes Tuberculosis In the Medical Record (New York> of December 18. 1000, Or. John F. Russell says: "The condition which la recognised aa preceding the active development of tuherculoala In the adult mav be considered an due to lime starvation. * Among Inorganic substances lime salts appear to be of special physiological Importance. • but If the aalts are not In organic combination. It Is dlfflcnlt to suppose that the cells can appropriate them for food." Tears of widespread us* confirm our belief that the success of Eck man's Alterative In tuberculosis Is due largely to its content of lime, in such combination with other valu able Ingredients as to be easily ap propriated by the cells. Doubtless this has had much to do with the results In many cases which appear to have yielded to It. As It contains no opiates, narcotics or habit forming drugs, it Is safe to try. lour druggist has It or will get it. IScfcman laboratory, Philadelphia. Advertisement. OCTOBER 13, 1915. as in their natural state. The ques tion of potatoes for young children Just coming into a varied diet, is a grave one. Almost all children like potatoes, and when baked they are easily digested, but some children no not seem to assimilate the large per centage of starch in this vegetable. When this is the case substitute rice for potatoes. To cook the rice have the water boiling and drop in the rice very slowly, stirring all the while. I [OE S SHOP AGENCY I r ' ' " The New Labor Law The new Workmen's Compensation Act goes into effect January Ist, next. If you are an employer of labor you should be familiar with every phase of this most im portant piece of legislation. Wc are prepared to supply this act in pamphlet form with side headings for easy reference. Single copies 25c with very special prices on larger quantities. The Telegraph Printing Co. PRINTING—BINDING—DESIGNING PHOTO-ENGRAVING HARRISBURG, PENNA. Cook about twenty minutes. Then pour into an enameled ware strainer and finish the cooking by steam. Tn that way each grain of rice will be separate and yet perfectly cooked. One of the best foods for children in hot weather is junket. Warm the milK in the enameled ware double boiler, add a sugar and liquid rennet, pour into a glass dish and put on the ice to set. This is both very nourishing and easily digested." 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers