TORING FOODS IN THE HOME epartment of Agriculture Tells How tj Keep Veg tables Safe Washington, . Sept. 14. —Natural orage of late vegetables in the jme for use in fail and winter — practice which is advisable every ason —is especially desirable now iat the country is at war, says the nited States Department of Agri ilture. Natural storage is the least oublesome way of keeping food for iture use, it is pointed out, and ay bo practiced with little expense most homes, either in the country • in the city. Such storage is of lief value to owners of homo gar ?ns, but when vegetables suitable Ir storage may be purchased cheap t it may be practiced profitably by >nie other householders. The principal vegetables which lay be stored successfully are the >ot, tuber, and bulb crops, such as te maturing potatoes, carrots, par lips, turnips, salsify, onions, etc. ertain leaf and stalk crops such as ibbage and celery, and a few other roducts such as squashes, pump lbs, etc., also may be stored na irally. Natural storage of most vegetables iat may be kept may be in a cellar ruler a dwelling, or under an out iilding, in a special outdoor cellar, r in banks or pits. A few products ich as pumpkins and winter squash, squiring dry, fairly warm storage, ay be kept in unused rooms or osets, and a lew products may be ;pt in attics. Cellar Storage Room If a cellar under a dwelling or out iilding is clean, cool, and well-ven lated it may be used for storage ithout alteration. Many cellars, owever, are not well suited for oring vegetables because of poor sulation or lack of ventilation, id those containing a furnace for eating usually are too warm and •y. It is often possible to partition 1' a room either in one corner or at le end of such a cellar, where the sniperature may be controlled by leans of outside windows. Outdoor storage cellars possess all le advantages of the storage room i the basement and are superior in iany respects. It is possible to keep ich a cellar cool and quickly re lice the temperature of the stored roducts by opening the door dur ig the night and closing it in the lorning before the air becomes arm. In regions of mild winters ic outdoor cellars may be construct -1 almost entirely above ground of ood or other available materials, traw or dirt may be thrown upon le roof as insulation during es ecially cold periods. In regions of svere freezing th most popular pe of storage cellar is built large • underground and the roof has a eop covering of straw and earth, lanure, etc. Such cellars may be [instructed of wood, concrete, stone, r brick. Storage in I'its or Jianks Storage in outdoor banks or pits i the most primitive and least ex ensive method of keeping many £>getables and is fairly satisfactory here the ground is well-drained, his method does not compare in anve.nience, however, with storage i cellars since in periods of bad eather the vegetables are often eccssible with difficulty. The con duction of banks is begun by mak ig an excavation six or eight inches eep in a well-drained location and ning it with straw, leaves, or sim ar material. The vegetables (usu lly root crops) are placed on this ttor . i a conical pile. The sides and jp are then covered with straw and lives and this with two or three iches of earth. As winter ap roaches the earth covering should e increased, depending on the se erity of the winters in the locality, mall pits containing but a few ushels of vegetables will receive jfilcient ventilation if the straw be iveen the vegetables and the earth ovei;ing is allowed to extend through tie latter to the top 'of the pile, his exposed straw should be cov red with a board or a piece of tin eld in place by a stone as a pro- H'tion from rain. In larger pits ven dition may be secured by placing wo or three pieces of rjugh boards i stakes up through the center of ie pile of vegetables so that a flue is jrmed. This flue should be capped y an inverted trough formed by two ieces of board nailed together at ght angles. Where such banks are sed the best practice is to construct number of small ones so that a ufticlent quantity of vegetables to ist a few days can be obtained by pening each pit. The method may e modified by placing the vegetables 1 a long ridge rather than in coni al piles with earth dividing the klge into small sections. A section lay then bo conveniently opened r ithout disturbing trie remainder of ie stored vegetables. Most vegetables suitable for stor ge should not be harvested and lored until cool weather arrives or bout the time of the iirst killing :ost. However, Irish potatoes should e harvested as soon as they teach laturity, and if basement or outdoor ellar storage is available, they hould be stored immediately. They hould not be stored in banks or its until the weather gets cool, 'nions should be put in storage as jon as they are matured and thor ughl.v cured or dried. Detailed directions for preparing 1c several types of storages and for mulling the various vegetables liich may be stored are given in a scent bulletin, "Home Storage of egetables," recently published by ie United States Dpeartment of griculture. Copies this bulletin lay be obtained free by application > the United States Department of griculture, Washington, D. C. The Harrisburg Academy The Junior Department re opens September 21th. The Senior Department re opens September 25th. The school accommodates pu pils under three arrangements: First—As day pupils. Second—As live-day per week boarding pupils. Third—As regular boarders. All pupils are grouped in small classes. Each student receives private Instruction and supervision during study periods. For catalogue and de tailed Information, call at the Academy office or write the Headmaster. Arthur E. Brown. Harrisburg, Pa., Box 6X7. KDUCATIOITAIj School of Commerce AND larrisburg Business College roup Building, IB So. Market Square Thorough Tralnlng # in Business and tenogrsphy. Civil Service Course UR OFFER —Right TraliWng by Spe cialists and High Grade Positions. You Take a Business Course But Once; the BEST Is What You Want. Fall Term Day and Night School. Enter any Monday. IH, 486 Dial, 4393 FRIDAY EVENING, STATE GETTING MEN ON FARMS August Reports Show Good Work by Director Light ner's Bureau The State Bureau of Employment, a branch of the Department of Labor and Industry, succeeded in finding places for 2,793 persons, including some on farms throughout the state, during the month of August. Since the beginning of summer the bureau has sent 1,833 to farms, including a number of men released by manufac turing plants and contractors, ac cording to a report just made. The five bureaus received 4,421 requests from employers for work ers and 3,93 4 aplpications for work in August. The detailed report of the iive bureaus shows the follow ing: _ Harrisburg— Number of persons asked for by employers 578 Number of applications for positions 417 I Number of persons referred to | positions 360 Number of positions filled .... 326 Philadelphia— Number of persons asked for by employers 2,390 Number of applications for positions 2,650 Number of persons referred to positions 2,002 Number of positions filled .... 1,845 Johnstown— Number of persons asked for by employers 272 Number of applications for positions 118 Number of persons referred to positions 97 Number of positions filled .... 77 Pittsburgh— Number of persons asked for by employers 1,028 j Number of applications for S positions 604 Number of persons referred to r positions 513 Number of positions filled .... 482 Altoona— Number of persons asked for _ by employers 153 Number of applications for _ positions • 145 Number of persons referred to positions 75 Number of positions filled .!!! 63 'Look Both Ways' Warning Given by Traction Company | Lemoyne, Pa., Sept. 14.—ConfL j dential safety first talks being placed in the West Shore cars of the Valley j Railways Company are attracting j considerable attention. I ~t T wo s ' Bns refid as follows: | "Look both ways before you cross a i street and keep on looking while you are crossing." "Teach your chil dren safety first—your instruction may be (he means of preventing dis aster in your own family.'' NKW LIGHTS IX CARS Lemoyne, Pa.. Sept. 14. — There will be no more poorly-lighted curs operated on the West Shore. In a short time the installation of hinh candlepower lights in all cars will be completed. The new system of lighting is being favorably com mended by all passengers. ' H ■ l I All Advertise „ Cut Prices I I — = 321 MARKET STREET CeS I I Standard Medicines Saturda y Sale of s *¥S£t 3 to2^s° f Satu rday Sale of Rubber Goods I 50c sloo Hood's Sarsaparilla 57C Mar y Garden Face Powder 730 Mary Garden Greaseless Cream 750 ment on the second floor. In charge of lady attendants. c . . 4 Dier Kiss Face Powder 40* Pond s \ anishing Cream, jar, ' 160 ■ f r a ■ a ■ . _ _ 50c Pinex 390 Azurea Face Powder 890 Pond's Vanishing Cream, tubes, ... 100 Sale of Fountain Syringes I Saturday Sale of Bulb 1 fij SI.OO Pinkham's Veg. Compound ..68< Horayme Face Powder StiUmMS Cream $ 1. 2 5 Fountain Syringe 83* SyrillgeS aild AtOUliZerS jl .'sc Bromo Seltzer . lTf Face Powder 4.? Satm, Skin Cold Cream IT * Founttin Syri „ K e #1.35 50c Atomizer 9 SI.OO Sargol ~!>* Ri Pod "* £" ,th °. tre " m 98c Fountain Syringe ><■ 6Sc A |™ " ''"' *** 9 35c Limestone Phosphate ... . .... . . .19$ Carmen Fa Powder 290 Pompeian Massage Cream '>Bo $1 50 Fountain Syringe "..[.51.18 75c Atomizer WWW.' 7.7.7.7W. 580 |* 35c Fletcher's Castoria 230 Laßlache l ace Powder 320 Hhid's'cold sl/00 Listerine 640 -' ava R,cc Pov J' d J r ': "' p * * Hipd's Honey and Almond Cream" ! 340 S UB Fountain Syringe 980 Atomizer 980 $3.75 Ilorlick's Malted Milk $2.75 Kogers ® (jallett * ice 1 ow(lcr Daggett and Ramsdell Cold Cream .. 140 $2.00 Fountain Syringe $1.35 ~~ ■ 75c Mellin's Food 530 Ko S ers & Gallett I<ace Powder 490 Colgate's Cold Cream 250 $1.75 Madewell Fountain Syringe ' Bulb SvrillgeS 75c Jad's Kidney Salts ...; 410 Jess Face Powder ..... ..240 Creme DeMeridor 150 ' $1.23 50c Bulb Svrinee 18* I 25c Red Cross Kidney Plasters 150 Woodbury s lace Powder I<o v^ I 'Weed Cream Ht s2 " s ° Fountain s y rin £e $1.63 6 5 c B ulb Syringe . WW. 480 I 50c Sal-Hepatica ..." 360 Tetlow's Swandown Face Powder .. 110 geam 290 $1 . 50 Combination Fountain Syringe 75c Bulb Syringe . 580 25c Listerine 170 San,tol Facc Powder 17 * Palmolive Cream ./ 330 r i• ♦ • Jit f ™ Pu , b S ynnge 78 * M $1.25 Scott's Emulsion 890 Cha,les Face Powder 29<t Knowlton's Massage Cream .190 f 2 OO Combination $1 48 fm i A" * • 9 fJ 25c At wood's Bitters 14* Colgate's Charms Face Powder ... 250 Aubrey Sisters' Cold Cream 210 Puritan CnmhinVtinn" * ftiAK s3 °° Lad,CS Rotar y-spray $„.48 SI.OO Danderine 570 La Baronesse Powdcr 190 , 25c Vick's Vap-O-Rub 170 Lad >' Face Powder ? 5 * Viola Cream ?. .V.".: $L5 ° Challenge Fountain Syringe Saturday Sale I 25c Hill's Cascara Quinine 160 '-kaya I<ace Powder J9O Lady Betty Cream <t? ;n r- i- u! T?llVlflPT* WAPPQCIt IPC 1 SI.OO Oil of Korein Cansnles Manilla Poudre de Ria 38* Lady Wary Cream 45* #I.OB JtUDDer JNeCCSSItieS 25c lllaud's Iron Pills, 100 14* 4711 Ma rquese Powder 3* Ideal Cucumber Cream —— Rubber Rain Coats $10.48 25c James' Headache Powders 13* Sweet Orchid Powder TP* ' 1 '? Sale Of Hot Watef BottlCS Sponge Bags".'.'.'.'.'.'." 21J Koc Sloan's Liniment 290 " _ " $1.25 Hub Hot Water Bottle.. .670 Rubber Sheeting, single 1 coated, I SI.OO Nuxated Iron Tablets ....570 S/l "ffl fn S\ "V S/lIP Of Saturday Sale 01 $1.25 Grpde A Hot Water Bottle the yd ..650 50c Glover's Mange Remedy 290 U J 650 Hard Rubber Pile Pipes SIOO Milk's Emulsion H7* Tni A DeiltalLreamS fj-fS Hot Water Bottle 730 Rubber Bath Tub Mats $1.78 ■ Milk s limulsion 670 1 OllCt XirXICICS $1.50 Hot Water Bottle 980 Rubber Complexion Brushes ■ -^ c Fly s Cream Balm 290 Kolynos Dental Cream 1<)0 $1.75 Reliable Hot Water Rubber Bath SprSys iH 25c Musterole 190 Mercohzed Wax 530 Colgate's Dental Cream 230 Bottle $1.23 Rubber Crutch Tips, the pair ' 10tf 25c Gingerole i?9 c Canthrox 2.J0 Pebeco Dental Cream 351.50 Red Hot Water Bottle ... 980 Rubber Garters 23* $2.00 Eckman's Alterative ' $1 26 7? a • or . A" lit Kal P heno Dental Cream 160 $1.75 Hot Water Bottle $1.19 Corrugated Rubber Mats ...'.".WW" 380 ■ 15c \lnine Tea fj C°°oa 400 Lyon's Dental Cream 160 SI.OO White Hot Water Bottle, 580 Atomizers 780 35c Drake s Cmiin RemoHv lJ !mn 6 w 7 C Crea m <>>o Sanitol Dental Cream 160 $2.00 Hospital Special $1.48 Rubber Plant Sprinklers 78? 50c J vsol 1 y t I mrS °"r "ii'r Vit Pond ' s Exra Paste Rheuma (for Rheumatism 1 aH • ! i£o£ 6 Cr ° a,n Sozodont Paste 170 $1.75 Madewell Water Bottle, $1.19 Rubber Bath Shoes 980 S r 4 i i'i* 50c Dorin s 1249 Rouge 390 Mennen's Paste 170 $2.00 Wearever Water Bottle, $1.35 Rubber Toys *>3s. I 2-c Ja} Lxpectorant 150 50c El Rado Depilatory 340 Arnica Tooth Soap 170 $2.50 Standard Water Bottle . $1.98 Large Rubber Toys ... 480 I KENNEDY'S. 321 Market Street I SWEDES SENT SPY REPORTS FROM MEXICO Stockholiu Got Tip When Pershing's Transports Left For France Washington, Sept. 14. Swedish- German duplicity, which has threat ened to embroil Argentina and Ger many, was exposed by the State De partment to-day as working its in imical hand in Mexico. The Swedish charge d'affaires in Mexico City gave to the German min ister there information from the allied countries. He transmitted messages for the German minister through the Swedish foreign office to Berlin. So extensive and so valuable were his services up to March, 1916, that Herr von Eckhardt, the German min ister, recommended that the kaiser bestow upon Hprr Folke Cronholm, the Swedish charge, an imperial Ger man decoration, its award to be kept secret until after the war. Asked for Rcwur<l A copy of the letter recounting these services and making this rec ommendation from Von Eckhardt to the German chancellor was made public, by Secretary of State Lansing to-day. The letter was dated March 8, 1916. At the same time this announce ment was made the Secretary of State gave out a report from Ira Nelson Morris, American minister at Stockholm. Mr. Morris declares that while the Swedish foreign office was transmitting German messages in German code for the German diplo mats. it was requiring Mr. Morris to file his messages to Constantinople via the Swedish foreign office in French. The relation in the Mexico City letter of this further proof of Swed ish pro-Germanism can be met, ac cording to opinion here, only by the dismissal from Swedish service of the guilty parties, a break in rela tions between Sweden and Germany and a profound apology to the United States and the other allies. United States Sufferer The United States was sinned against in the Mexican transaction in much the same way as was Great Britain in Argentina. The German messages were trans mitted over the cable and telegraph lines of Europe under the guarantee of the Swedish diplomats, just as were the Luxburg dispatches sent over the British cables. Neither Von Eckhardt nor Cron holm are now in Mexico, but the possibility that through them leaked the news of the sailing of Pershing's transports and other military news has shocked the government and the allied diplomatic corps. MORE SCHOOL ROOM NEEDED West Fairview, Pa., Sept. 14. T.ooal public schools are crowded to llieir capacity. v Sessions of the fourth and fifth grades are held to gether, as well as the seventh and eighth. The school board will ask permission of the taxpayers at the fall election to increase the indebt edness. The money will be used :n building two additional rooms to the present building. HARRIBBURG CgSfPR? TELEGRAPH j HAVEYOUIMAGINATION? By Beatrice Fairfax Does your imagination bring you joy or pain? You are free to in \ ent for yourselves ogres and goblins —or good fairies. Which do you choose to summon? None of the things we dread is? as bad as our prefervid Imaginations make them. None of our pet horrors ever torture us as we thought they would. We use ourselves up and wear ourselves out. fearing some situation which lurks behind the black curtain of the future. Then we go draw the curtain, and behold! there is light on the other side and our terror is a beneficent and kindly ghost. Have you dreaded losing your job? Well, you lost it and walked the streets disconsolately looking for work for several weeks. At the end of tht time you got a far better po sition than the one you had so feared losing. }f you have gone through the ex perience of learning to ride, you know that if you were at first afraid ot your mount the horse seemed al most psychologically aware of it and was the barder to handle. With courage, it was fairly easy to keep your seat. The instructor told you that you were getting "a good wrist" and a splendid "knee grip." But you knew that it was more than that —you had mastered your mount, and he knew it and acknowledged it by responding to your will. Your own fears are exactly like that. Dkirectly you cease dreading them, they take orders from you! When terror is permitted to mas ter you it rides you mercilessly. But directly you conquer it, the demand becomes yours. Approach your fear, look at it from all sides, force yourself to ex amine it calmly—it isn't real, is it? What you have been afraid of js nothing actual, nothing tangible, but just a figment of your own imagina tion. And shall this conquer you? But why bother with it at all? Why not invent for yourself radiant and happy imaginings? You can, you know. "As a man thlnketh in his heart, so is he." Never was anything more deeply beautiful and true than those lines. We come in the end to be a little like our dreams. Beautiful aspirations and equisite hopes leave their mark on every one just as ugly ones do. Why should anyone Invent terror and horror for himself when he is perfectly free to invent beautiful things? Not very many of us could think of the exquisite fancies which Barrie makes real for us in his marvelous fairy-tale plays. But all of us are perfectly capable of making a start in the direction of thinking beauti ful thoughts. We have a way of training our selves via suspicion and gossip and ugly innuendo to imagine evil of our neighbors if they make the tiniest move in the direction whioli is not absolutely conventional and not easily explicable. Fear, scandal, scorn and hate are all poisonous emotions which react on the indi vidual who sets them free. L.ong ago I heard a story of a gentle old lady who spoke kindly of every one. One of her friends said to her, "My dear, I believe you would think of something good to say of Satan him self." Half deprecatlnjfly and far too quickly to be the result of a desire to be clever or to pose, the old lady replied: "well, he's really awfully energetic, you know," An attitude like that is not a gift of the fairies or some magic result of good fortune; It comes from keeping your attitude toward things clean and sweet and wholesome. It is due to training your heart in kindness and to using' your imagi nation to cultivate and house pleasant thoughts. It is perfectly possible to make up a dream world for yourself in which everything shall be pleasant and Joyous. Vision is the quality which makes men achieve great things. Without vision America would never have been discovered. The telegraph and the telephone and the steam engine are all dreams come true. If you have not the magnificent gift of imagination which will fire you to invent a cotton gin or spur you to travel in search of the mouth of an Amazon River, at least you have imagination enough to look out at the black clouds of a storm tossed day and to feel back of them the blue of a kindly sky and the golden sunlight. You know that the tiniest bud holds the possibility of an apple blossom and that apple blossoms promise luscious fruit. It is easy enough to imagine what you have seen. The trick lies in imagining the unknown. And whether you imagine it grim and dour and threatening or beautiful and gentle and kind, is for you yourself to de cide. , Your imagination lies absolutely under your control unless you wil fully choose to let it run away with you. Even when you are dreaming that you need force and action to make them come true. \ Dorit wisfi ior a good complexion- Resinol will give it to you If your skin is not fresh, smooth and plowing, or has suffered from an unwise use of cosmetics, here is an easy, inex pensive way to clear it: Spread on a little Resinol Ointment, letting it remain for ten minutes. Then wash off with Resinol Soap and hot water. Finish with a dash of clear. c °ld water to close the pores. Do this regularly, i OT1 ? e a ant * * ee ** ** d° ea not quickly soothe and cleanse the pores, MNoi"yH lessen the tendency to pimples, and ■ leave the complexion clear, fresh ami ve ' vety * Resinol Ointmentand Rts inol Soap are sold by all druggists. Woman Too Persistent So He Kicks Her From Second Floor of House Robert Joppy,, colored, was held under S3OO for his appearance In court to answer the charge of kick ing and otherwise abusing Hattie Dcveron, also colored, by Alderman lißndis in police court yesterday afternoon. The woman limped badly, and could stand on her feet only with difficulty. She told a tale of how she had lived "off and on" with her colored friend, but finally decided to leave hiin. He dragged her to his FALL OPENING WONDER CLOTHES tThe Newest Apppoved Styles Are Here For Fall and Winter Wear ' Come in and sec the new and classy garments that represent the last word in Style and Workmanship. Made np of the latest weaves, in all the popuar fabrics. WONDER CLOTHES for Fall and Winter to suit the conservative dressers as well as snappy patterns and make-ups for ultra young men, including a full line of "stouts" up to size 50. Style—Service—Quality Suits and Overcoats Direct From Factory to Wearer $12.50 itp" Remember we save you the middleman's OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 8 O'CLOCK OPEN SATURDAYS UNTIL 10 P. M. THE WONDER STORE 211 MARKET STREET SEPTEMBER 14, 1917. home at 328 Suyford street, accord ing to the woman's story, and to escape him she jumped from a sec ond story window. Joppy aslced permission to testify in his own behalf. He was placed on oath, and told a different story. He claimed that Hattie had run after him until she was a regular nuisance about the house, and he was com pelled to remove her from the prem ises at the time mentioned in her testimony beccuse she was drinking heavily and was using language that he just naturally couldn't endure. The judge decided to have the matter straightened out in court. Several hours after he was locked up. the woman and another negro from Kingston, Jamaica, wero ar rested upon a disorderly practice charge, and lodged in jail. Washington Heights Is in Favor of Annexal Washington Pa., Sept. liJ —Washington Heights people heard! with surprise to-day the report thsitj they do not want to go into Camiq Hill. Precisely the opposite is truej At present they pay road taxes an<j| have the worst streets of any 10-* cality about Harrisburg. They haval no fire protection, no street regula-<J tions and no community govetnmentj They went in large numbers to CarJ lisle last spring to urge annexation* and say they will go again if nec-* essary. It was through the of a committee of Washington; Heights citizens that Camp H'lh council took up the annexation plan* 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers