4 TO-MORROW THE BIG BARGAIN DAYI^ ITte ©>{oet" 3(a GLOVES 1 ' CORSETS I Women's Kid Gloves, sl.lO Pair p * r & °\ . CORSETS;PaU ,nodel : 59c Two-clasp tan, white and black; self embroidery Lady Ruth CORSETS j | \XT VJ /~>L OIL OK T> • (l*ced In front)—the latest Fall O"! Women S Kid Gloves, $1.20 Pair • model; extra for Friday Two-clasp white, black and tan. Self and three-row _— embroidered backs. — Women's Kid Gloves, $1.75 Pair Women's Early Fall Knit Underwear, Including the latest ideas in gloves. Tan. gray, also Vests or Drawers. Special, white and black with contrasting embroidery back. 9GI* an( l This also includes capi, and glazed washable kid gloves. MOC O V C Women's Washable Capeskin Gloves $1.35 Pair FLANNELETTE GOWNS In the popular tan, sand, pearl or white. One-clasp. Special Sale Prim Friday, to-morrow Very mannish. an( J Extra Heavy Pure Silk GLOVES , N , e , at b, v c an<l u,litc : i >lnk "H' l wte stripes; —i_ _ _ _l double yoke; cut extra large. Black, white and colors; self and black ___ ____________/ stitched backs OUC Lisle Gloves; white or black; pair 250, BUTTONS GALORE Every thing NEW in Buttons is here; as _ . . ~ "" B usual the prices are the LOWEST. Friday To-morrow Specials —— HOSIERY TIIREVI> J CIJARK ' S 200-yd. SEWING 2Q Women's Silk Boot Stockings, 290 Pair These are the fiber silk hose noted for wear. They come in black or white. All sizes and 50c BRASSIERES; embroidery ng perfect. trimmed £OC Children's School Stockings, Pair i Extra long legs, double knees, heels and toes. s 50e CAMBRIC DRAWERS; embroidery Fast black. Sizes 6% to 9%. trimmed; cut extra large AOC Women's Silk Lisle Stockings _____ White or black; extra fine: double heels, $1.50 OSTRICH FEATHER BOAS; black, CQ soles and toes; real 35c value; OJS _ white nnd colors 01/ C Friday, pair ^ _______ Women's Thread Boot Silk Stockings, 39c AXD 50c CORSET COVERS—Fine nainsook, dainty 500 Pair £^ 1 7o y 4 rl,nnlCd ftont n,IU ba ° k: 25c Extra flne—high spliced heels and toes. sizes •>> to JO Black, white and ALL desirable colors. Ground A CTD 4th and Floor x IvlVjl X O Market Sts. WP&I RCBELd Wl NHKMXMNUBHMMMRMM ■uuuiiwMW— DEPENDANTS GET ! COMPENSATION Two Awards on Claims Pre senting Unusual Features . j Made by Mackey Dependents are awarded corapen-! nation in decisions filed late to-doy by Chairman Harry A. Mackey, of the | State Workmen's Compensation! Board, in two claims presenting un usual features. In both there were i refusals to consent to operations and removals from one hospital to another where operations otok place. Death ! occurred in both instances. In the case of John and Annie j Csermack, Pittsburgh, against the H. C. Frick Coke Co., the claimants were stepfather and mother and de-j —■ YOUR VICTROLA H is here for you -on easy terms Any one of the many styles sls, $25, S4O, SSO, $75, SIOO, $l5O, S2OO Club Terms j * 6 "^^ly^ 0 B SIO.OO Down. S $10.66 Monthly 9 ' oo bothekt 312 Market Street ACHIEVER lOc CIGARS All the richness of the incomparable Vuelto Abajo leaf in the filler of these cigars. The filler is shipped from this famous Havana-pro ducing district in Cuba to our factory in air tight barrels to prevent any loss of the leaf's bouquet. Here is a 10c cigar worth the price. MADE IN FIVE POPULAR SIZES Made By C. £. BAIR & SONS THURSDAY EVENING, pendent of an employe of the com | pany. The mother refused to per- I mit an operation which was urged and had the man removed to another | hospital wheer an operation took place. It is held that the refusal to consent to an operation does not j amount to refusal of medical or | surgical aid and does not defeat right Ito compensation, the decision saying |in one part: "There is no obligation | on the part of the injured to submit himself to an operation, the result of . which is so problematical that his life is at stake." j In the second case, Christian Sims, i of Windber vs. The Homer City Coal and Coke Co., the deceased refused }an operation and insisted upon being I removed to another hospital, where a bone was transplanted. The question j was whether the man died as a direct j result of the original injury or be cause of his refusal to be operated : upon at the first hospital. Mackay j holds that the claimant is entitled to compensation saying that there is "no | evidence to show but that the same | result would have followed an opera -1 tion earlier at the first hospital." Wealthy Police Commissioner Not Sure on Ram Question '■ W>?X\-* •<*£*£* i-- ' * 'Jmmmmmmsmmm J JAME.S COVZENS* Detroit, Oct. 12. James Couzens, multi-millionaire and former asso ciate in business of Henry Ford and now police commissioner of Detroit at a salary of $5,000, is not clear in his own mind whether the Sunday saloon and the all-night saloon con stitute a crime. "In the matter of morals, there can be no compromise," he declared. o-day. "Crime must be stamped out." Couzens, who broke with Ford over the preparedness issue, after Ford had declared against it, succeeds John Gil lispie, who resigned as police com missioner. Couzens admitted that he contemplated many reforms in the police administration of Detroit If 1 Had Eczema I'd Bic*ply wash It away witb that dootlilng liquid. D.D.D. Prescription. Tb first drops instantly stop that awful itch. We cannot absolutely guarantee a cure every time but we do say tbis. If the first bottle does not relieve you, it will not cost you a cent. Try D.D.D. Soap too. It will kven your skin healthy. Gorgas, the druggist. 16 N. Third St.-P. U. H. Station; J. Nelson Clark, druggist. IT IS TIME TO MAKE 1 MENTHO-LAXEKE SYRUP Anyone Can Make a Full Pint of Laxative, Curative Cold and Cough Medicine Cheaply at Home. Everybody is subject to colds and coughs at this season. Be prepared! Have on hand a full pint of Mentho- Laxene syrup that checks and aborts colds, relieves coughing and gradually brings permanent relief: The full and best benefits are derived if you begin taking it at the very outset of a cold or cough—because you can check or abort the cold—and save many hours of distress and perhaps ward off pneu monia and other serious results of a neglected cold. Mentho-Laxene is pure, contains no opiates or narcotics. It is pleasant, penetrating, healing and curative be yond any preparation you can buy ready made. Full directions and guar antee are with every bottle of Mentho-Laxene. It will more than please you or The Blackburn Prod ucts Co., Dayton, Ohio, wil refund your money. Hundreds of thousands of bottles of Mentho-Laxene have been sold and not over 50 people have wanted their money back. That tells how good it is. HAKRISBURG TELEGRAPH WHAT IS YOUR WORTH TO WORLD Own Fault if There Is No f Place For You in Scheme of Life By Beatrice Fairfax "So long as we love we serve; so long as we are loved by some one, I would almost say that we are in dispensable; and no man is useless while he has a friend."—Robert Louis Stevenson. "There isn't any place for me in life. Nobody wants me," a sad little girl I know sighs over and over. To her mere living is a desperate burden that she is hardly willing to carry. To her and all the other morbid souls who cannot find a place for them selves in the scheme of existence I want to talk to-day. "So long as we love we serve," and the beloved "R. L. S." whose own handicap of desperate ill health did not prevent him from leaving the world books which are a veritable anthology of cheerfulness. If there seems to be no place for you in life, isn't it because you are failing to give out to life any affec tion? The girl of whom I speak looks upon men as ravening wild beasts. Her attitude toward the whole scheme of existence is one of criticism. She sees nothing any where to like or admire or approve. If she meets some one who is kind and unselfish she persists in regard ing that person as a' strange excep tion to the general rule. Within herself she has created a world that does not know kindness or love or unselfishness. And having created that world she lives in it without try ing to give anything of help or ser vice to the tangible world that lies about her. She persists in regarding herself as an unhappy and lonely creature— and this in spite of. the fact that she possesses one friend whom she knows she can trust, one friend who is loyal and kind, one friend for whom she feels affection and in whom she can place faith. It never occurs to her morbid little soul that she owes something to that, friendship, that because someone worth while cares for her she has even at the moment of her greatest unhappiness a place in life, and that she is of use to the world, in fact and in potentiality, because she has the friendship of a fine and admirable soul. Every human being has a definite place in the scheme of things. It may be tiny now—perhaps it is going to be tiny for always, but at least it iR a place; no one else can fill it, and the individual who is put into it is a link in a chain. Just being alive carries with it a certain responsibility. How does any of. us know that any other human being can do the work we find to hand? How does any of us know that anyone else can do the work we shirk in the mere fact that we fail to look for it? None of us can look ahead so much as an hour; none of us knows what to-morrow will bring. It is possible that just by being at a given place at a certain time we may prove of in estimable value in the scheme of things—but more than this we all owe to life a state of "preparedness." To educate yourself so that you may be of service to the world in general and of value to those who care for you is a part of your duty. Even though you feel friendless and unnecessary in the scheme of things you have no guarantee that the state of affairs is going to last in a world of change. How then dare you throw away your chance to make ready to be of value to life? Being of service to the world is in itself valuable. It is the responsi bility of life. No one has a right to sit around and think how miserable and lonely and unhappy and abused he or she is without recognizing the fact that there are plenty of people in like state. ABOVE LOCH L/OMOXD Yes; it's up above Loch Lomond That I'd like to be to-day, In the highlands of my homeland— Ah, it's long I've been away! And though cannon roar about me, I can shut my eyes and see The green grass above Loch Lomond, Where my pastures used to be. In the morning bright and early I can see my sheep agraze, And the purple of the heather Is veiled over by the haze. And my dog walks close beside me, And the gentle breezes blow O'er the fields above Loch Lomond; Ah, it's there I'd like to go! How the bullets whistle past me! How my comrades stumble, fall! While the powder smoke hangs heavy Like some ghostly funeral pall. I can hardly see the sunlight Through the blur of brown and gray; For my heart is In the highlands Of my homeland far away. There's a crash!—did something strike me? There's a throbbing In my side,... God—l see it—blue Loch Lomond! Clear as glass it is—and wide! Am I falling? Am I—dying? Ah, this looks like home to me.... My green fields—above Loch Lomond! * • • Is It heaven that I see? —Margaret E. Sangster, Jr., in The Christian Herald. HOW TO HANDLE CELERY Cultivate every ween, for this helps to make a quick growth and helps crisp, tender celery. As soon as the celery Is 12 to 15 inches high some way of bleaching should be pro vided. Paper, straw and boards are good for bleaching early celery or cejery that Is ready for market before the hardest frosts; then follow with dirt for lato or winter celery. Celery that has had a good frost on it is sweeter than that which has had no frost. It takes 1000 feet of lumber for each 1000 celery plants. The boards are strung end to end on each side of the row. Two men. one at each end of a board, slide the board under the leaves and raise it up; then the one on the other side is pet up In the same manner. Each man has some wire hooks about six Inches long and one of these Is put across each end on the top of the two boards which holds them In place. I always bank winter celery with muck as high as we can get It, says C. E. Beckwlth In Farm and Home. When shipping celery from the field, as soon as the celery Is bleached good it Is cut, trimmed, washed and tied 12 to 16 plants In a bunch, size- con sidered, and packed In cases holding 8, 10 and 12 bunches. 1 Actual Size of Briquettes || I Gamble Coal Briquettes 1 | Are Not An Experiment I J' The Days of experimenting with coal briquettes are past. Gamble J Coal Briquettes, made of river coal, are a perfect substitute for high-priced II The response to our first announcement was so great that increased de ll livery facilities were made necessary. Hundreds of Harrisburg homes are g| now burning Gamble Coal Briquettes and are convinced that they can be used Wt for every purpose for which coal is now being used and besides effect a ' j *2 Gamble Coal Briquettes positively give greater heat do not burn §| clinkers —less ashes—burn freer—fire can be started more quickly and H will hold heat and fire longer than the best grades of coal. A trial order is all that will be required to convince the most skeptical .a person. Phone or mail us your trial order today—NOW. Bell Phones 3549J and 1302J—C. V. Phone 135. 1 %Ton $1.75 £125 $3.25 lTons6.oo 1 Above prices include delivery to your home. Slight extra for delivery out side of city limits. TERMS CASH. k ■ 1 The Gamble Fuel Briquette Co. | 805 Kunkel Bldg. Plant, Ninth and Dock Sts. 1 - Noted Doctor Accuses Girl of Blackmail St r - m<*.. '■■■ ■ JOSEPH C. IK DUC 1 Mom If mrt. r/v-r jK(S Conclnnati, Oct. 12. —The arrest of Mifs Margaret Gorey, a trained nurse, charged with blackmail, in the office of Dr. C. A. L. Reed, .a prominent physician here, has revealed a se ries of attempts to obtain a confes sion from Miss Gorey by means of the dictaphone. One of those attempts was successful, according to the police. In a statement, directly following the arrest, Dr. Reed saiel Miss Gorey had sought employment from him. She had been refused, unci following repeated attempts to Induce him to employ her, he said, sho had threat ened to begin a suit against him on a charge of immoral conduct. Dr. Reed stated that Miss Gorey had oonfessed while tho police were oil tho other end of the telephone de vice and werf listening tc the entire conversation He said she knew the charge to be false but that she knew he could not prove It was false. The doctot saio Fh' offered to set lie for $20,000. Otherwise, he said, ato demanded $25,000 ir. cast- she \vm forced to begir. suit She Is a relative of n prominent Newport, Ky.. clergyman. Dr. Reed Is' a former president of the Ameri can Medical association and a close friend of ex-President Taft. OCTOBER 12, 1910. SAVE THE GREEN TOMATOES When frost threatens make haste to gather the green tomatoes that are left on the vines. Many of them will color and ripen and bring a larger price than when every vine is bear ing heavily, says the editor of Farm and Home. There is also a good de mand for green tomatoes for preserv ing. Tomato vines -vy'iich are well loaded with fruit should be pulled up by the roots and hung in a lignt warm cel lar. The fruit will continue to ripen until all but the smallest have colored and it is frequently possible to pick ... j 3uy >rc FIRST il, artistic, imarkuble | 1 XvXv I JUH**. t | An instrument that due to its resonant Olympic Spruce ! sound board produces the richest, finest tone imaginable— —That has an action pronounced perfect by skilled kg' pianists everywhere— —And all at a splendid price saving! teaWll For a real piano—one that will never betray in the future the money it saves in the present, buy • ' - *** CABLE-NELSON Come in soon with a friend. Try your favorite piece. You're welcome any time. SPANGLER MUSIC HOUSE, 2112 North Sixth St 1 "■ tomatoes at Christmas from such vines. Another method of keeping green tomatoes Is to wrap each fruit sep arately in paper and pack them care fully in boxes. Most of the larger fruits will color up nicely, and while they have not the flavor or quality of vine-ripened tomatoes, they prove very acceptable when there is noth ing- better to be had. We have kept them until Thanksgiving in this way. A bushel or two of green tomatoes wrapped old newspapers will give the family a daily treat for a month or more.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers