12 r | i] Look for the name " Kayser" in the , hem of the silk gloves you buy. This is your protection against the unknown glove, the cut-price or sale glove. The guarantee ticket is additional assurance that Kayser Silk Gloves will give you the utmost •ervice. Read the guarantee ticket carefully. It was Kayser, the pioneer silk glove maker, who originated the double-finger-tips. Kayser has so developed and perfected the silk glove that this broad guarantee is possible. Two clasp are always 50c, 75c, SI.OO, $1.25 and up; twelve and sixteen button lengths are always 75c. SI.OO, $1.25, $1.50 and up. The name "Kayser" is in the hem, and with each pair is a guarantee ticket that the tips will outwear the gloves. Kayser Silk Gloves cost no more than the ordinary kind; whether two clasp, twelve button or sixteen button lengths Kayser's always represent the best value at the price. The name Kayser is in the hem and with each pair is a guarantee ticket that the tips will outwear the gloves. Owv»t. Juliw Kaytrr 4 Co. | SAVE-A-CENT j 5 Soft Scouring Compound J The mighty FOUR cent punch at dirt ' 'i !; It's good FOUR all cleaning !; J It's bad FOUR all dirt ;j It's wonderful FOUR washing the hands j! $ It's fine FOUR housecleaning !; !■ Does more work than powders—does not waste !• | Only FOUR Cents j! At Your Grocers i; - W kola some - Polata Bread Ditccd from our oven / / // JmZMSW PWe j Co your taXe VN/ fI J RuKU Pentrook RAas i>Anrnfiif <7 'here's a Differen Coa/J 1 A va«t difference. You may be burning more coal than Is necrs- % sarr, because you are not burning the kind eepeclally adapted to your # I requirements. a Talk the matter over with n»— we'll steer yon right on the par- J I tienlar kind of. eoal you ought to be using—and supply you with the % ! beet heat-glvlng fuel yo» can buy. Costs the same —and goes further. g J. B. MONTGOMERY 7 | DM—rlthn phone ird and Chestnut Street* f „ Try Telegraph Want Ads Try Telegraph Want Ads THURSDAY EVENING, WOMEN'S I THE STRUGGLES OF A WIFE By Virginia Terhune Van de Water CHAITKR XXVI (Copyright, 1916, Star Co.) Horace Webb, climbing the steps to his apartment, met his daughter coming downstairs. "Hello:" he greeted her, "Where are .you off to?" i "I'm going to dinner at the Dak jins, • she explained. -isn't it a beastly night?" I Well, the snow has stopped, but it s very cold." he told her. "Are | you warmly wrapped?" " Ves — an( l 1 can take a car at the corner to within half a block of the house," Grace replied. "All the same I wish I could afford a taxi." "Good night!" her father said, go ing upstairs. Any reference to their reduced circumstances always silenced him, his daughter reflected as she went, on her way. She did not wonder. She had reached the corner and i was standing in the biting wind waiting for an uptown car, when an automobile slowed down at the crossing near her. She stepped to one side to let it pass, and as she did so the driver, catching a glimpse of her face, threw on his brakes so suddenly that his machine swerved and slid past her before it stopped. She saw him lean out, but she pretended not to see him. In the instant when he was abreast of her she had recognized Henry Dayton, a. man she had met a year ago at a dance and whom she had not seen ! since. She had not- forgotten him, as his T\as the type of face not easily for-I gotten. Now she recalled vividly i the only talk he and she had had together. He had seemed to her es- I pecially delightful and she had also J thought him extremely good-look-, ing. Only a Memory He belonged, however, to the days! that were gone, she reminded her- ; self, just as Max Courtney did. i Even more so, in fact, for Courtney was a man in moderate clrcum-! stances who wanted to marry a rich | girl, while Dayton had means of his j own and was considered by design- j ing girls and their mothers a most j eligible parti. Now that she was | poor, she did not want to seem to seek him out. Therefore she stood with her side turned towards the automobile, in tent on watching the coming trol ley. She was glad to see the Broad- j way car approaching rapidly, and stepped forward to meet it. Neither by word nor look had she given any evidence that she had J. LINN HARRIS NOT REAPPOINTED Bradford Man Succeeds Pen- I rose Leader in Center County on Forestry Board J. Linn Harris, of Bellefonte, Pen rose leader In Center county, chair man of the Republican county com mittee for several years and candidate for member of the State committee, 1 was to-day succeeded as a member of | the State Forestry Commission by George B. Lewis, of Canton, Bradford county. The appointment of Mr. was announced at the Executive De partment to-day without any state ment. Mr. Harris, who had been a member of the commission for years, was last appointed by John K. Tener in 1911 and his term expired on July 31, 1915. Mr. Harris was an active member, of the commission and the failure toj reappoint him was generally regarded | about the Capitol as dropping of a Penrose man from connection with | the State fjovernment. The announce- j ment created some stir as for days there have been rumors that the partisans of the Governor have not been disposed to allow Penrose men to remain where they could help it. Reports that the time for "lining up" men on the Hill for the Governor had arrived were current last night and to-day, but denied generally by administration men. MONEY IX OI.IJ IRON City Gels Three Times as Much at Junk Sale Yesterday Than Year Ago Old iron which had been massed in the junk heap at the city pipe line shop was sold at an "old boss' sale yesterday by City Commissioner H. P. Bowman for nearly three times the price received just one year ago. Sixty-seven cents per hundred pounds ■was the figure at which the metal was sold yesterday to Adolph Katzman. A year a»% pt„ 20c. Schell's "Perl Forcing" Radish, long white, tender, ready to use 25 to 30 days after planting; oz., 15c; H lb., 30c. Special strain "Grand Itapids" Lettuce delicately tender and brittle, grows quick; package, sc; oz., 15c; Vi lb-, < oc - MANY OTHER GOOD THINGS ASK FOR A COPY OF OUR BEAUTIFUL CATALOG—FREE WALTER S. SCHELL QUALITY SEEDS ISOT-18MI MARKET STREET. HARKISBI HO, PA. Quick Auto Delivery—Open 111 P. M. Saturday*! other day* 0 P. M. Both Phones * times it seems to cause her a ureat deul of annoyance and she will peck at it or roll it out of her nest. 'Qin catastrophe may be anticipated moving the ogns from the nest with a ?;poon as soon as they are laid. When the third ejjg has been removed lor a short time it is generally safe to return them all to the bird, who then lays her fourth CKK and sits dutifully upon them for thirteen days, when they begin to hatch. Occasionally, birds will show a de cidedly cannibalistic appetite and eat their own egw. which is the sijin that their daily food is not rich enough. During the breeding season, especially, birds should be fed a paste of boiled egg and cracker in addition to their regular food. and they'll be as clean as before you started. Nomordust is a great time and labor saver. You can clean any room in half the time it now takes and you only have to sweep half as often, because you get your rooms so much cleaner each time. Makes rugs look like new —equally good for wood floors and linoleums. Take the advice of physicians, collect the dust—don't spread it —particularly if you have children, for they are most easily affected by germs. Get a 10c can of Nomordust to-day and try it. Money back if not mora than p>ease