Q & EASY WEEKLY TERMS J** A 1 Ooinrt ! I Wait ! □□ T □□ □□ A BUY YOUR FALL AND WIN- A ter clothing on our easy payment % plan and get a full season's wear out $ A of the garments. All of the new A Y styles for men and women are ready, 7 y and our low prices are always marked V in plain figures. ft JL For Men—Those nobby Tartan plaids |Q> Y and other up-to-date weaves in fall and JL JL winter suits Balmacaans in a big j' Y variety of styles The smartest JL JL shapes in men's soft and stiff hats. y s□□ □ § • For Women- Tailored suits in all of the A i fashionable models Separate Coats in the new semi-fitted styles. ... A Basque Dresses in both silk and wool fabrics Trimmed Millinery in tha A new velvet shapes. □□ □ 0 Terms To Suit The Pay-Days A flj No Charge For Alterations £ Every Garment Guaranteed |fl| jy| Start Your Account Now tTO | i Br iJx I J ASKIN & MARINE « a CO. —— } 36 N. Second Street CORNER OF WALNUT Q A 0 WILLIAM HOFFMAN, Manager V LEPROSY REMEDY FOUND Favorable Results Obtained in Philip pines by Treatment Washington, Oct. 16.—Treatment of leprosy in the Philippines b_v the hy podermic use of a chaulmoogra oil mix ture has shown favorable results, ac cording to a report made public yes terday by the public health service. The report, which was by T>r. Victor G. Heiser, director of health for the Philippine Islands, giveg the following net results of experiments made in 12 cases of leprosy at San Lazaro hospi tal, Manila: apparent cures. 11.11 per cent.; apparent clinical recoveries, 4 4.4 4; showing marked improvement, 33.33; showing only slight evidence of improvement, 11.11. FOR SOUR STOMAGH j OAS OR INDIGESTION' Use Mi-o-na and Got Immediate and Effective Relief When you have heartburn, pains in the stomach and taste undigested food, it's a sure sign your last meal is not digesting, but fermenting, causing pois onous gases, sourness and acin stom a.-h. Prompt and lasting relief for any stomach distress is a simple inexpen sive matter if you will only try the harmless Mi-o-na prescription easily obtained from H. C. Kennedy or any druggist. Mi-o-na is especially prepared to : neutralize excess acid and stop fermen tation which surely sours your food, causing sick headache, dyspepsia, bil iousness and bad dreams. Mi-o-ua not only corrects sour, acid, and gassy stomach, but improves the entire digestive system, go that the blood, cenes, muscles and skin all re ceive increased nourishment causing clear complexion, brigut eyes and that delightful sensation of "feeling fit." Get some Mi-o-na tablets to-day—if i they do not banish every sign of indi gestion they will not cost you a penny. \ Adv. j APPLES FOR THE PRESIDENT Yakima Valley to Send Six Boxes of ••Delicious" to Mr. Wilson North Vakima, Wash., O.'t, 16. Six boxes of Yakima Delicious apples will be furnished by the Commercial I'lub, of this city, for presentation lo President Woodrow Wilson and mem berg of his Cabinet in special Washing ton-made boxes on National Apple Day, October 20. They will be forwarded to Seattle for shipment from there by parcel post. TO BAR GREEK LETTER GIRLS College Women Issue Ultimatum to High School Students New York, Oct. 16.—Every Ameri can high school girl who belongs to a Greek letter sorority and does not re sign before November 15 will be barred from joining such sororities when she enters college, under a resolution adopt ed here vesterdav by the thirteenth congress of the National Pan-Hellenic, representing 70,000 college sororitv women. Outrages Shock Vatican Rome. Oct. 16. —The Vatican an thorities have expressed surprise au 1 regret at the bomb outrages perpetrated on St. Patrick's Cathedral and the rec tory of St. Alphonaus' church, New York. Pope Benedict has asked Cardi nal Pietro. the new papal secretarv of state, to keep him advised as to the de velopments in the case. Engine Boiler's Rise and Fall York, Oct. 16.—A locomotive boiler undergoing repairs in the Hanover round house of the Western Maryland railroad blew up yesterday; crashed up through the roof, then down again, without injuring anybody. Snake's Bite Kills a Bull York, Oct. 16.—Probably the first Instance on record of an animal suffer ing death from a copperhead's bite in this county, is that of a bull on the farm of John F. Gilbert, iu the Lower End. RARRTSRVRft STAR-INDEPENDENT, FRFDAT EVENING, OCTOBER 16. 1914. The Daily Fashion Hint. | f — - * ~— >T' ' J JJjjM Tht? elegauce of litis season's mate rials gives to evening nit inde scribable elegance. This model is nf tfoi<] colored panne velvet with corsage and tunic of poid lace and net. The, tunic is bordered with white f«>x. TKAIMNd 01 TKACHKHS Conference of Specialists Called to Meet at Richmond Washington, 1). C., f special ists in charge of departments 111 State universities, normal schools and other institutions tor the training of teach ers for vocational schools, an.l j»resi• dents or directors of sucli institutions, to be held in connection with the 1914 annual convention of the National So cietv for the Promotion of Industrial Education, Richmond, Ya. The conference will lie hold, by in vitation, in the rooms of the Richmond Business Men's Club, fri ay evening, December 11. The conference will be I'receded by an informal dinner at ti p. m., tickets for which will lie sl. Application for copies of the program of the conference and cards of admis sion should be addressed, before De cember 1, to W. T. Bawden, United States Bureau of Education, Washing ton, I>. ('., who is in charge of the ar rangements. THIRD CROP OF RASPBERRIES Marietta Citizen Gathers Pint of Lus cious Fruit From Garden Marietta, Oct. 16. .Icim Ruther ford, residing on a farm m\i town, took from his garden a beet that weighed nearly sixteen pounds and had thirteen protuberances. It was twenty live inches in circumference and fifteen inches long. • Benton Hip le took a pint of rasp berries from his garden yesterday, it he •in# t'he fhird time this season the plants bore. Tomatoes .a any quantity are being taken d:..!v from gardens iu this section, whi h is unusual. WILL DEDICATE CATHEDRAL Service Next Sunday at *2,(Mo.iKH) St. Louis Structure St. Louis, Oct. It!. -Archbishop lohn .r. GlenuOn Sunday morning will dei.ver the sermon at the dedication of flic new St. Louis C athedral, which w;»s built at a cost of more than 000,000. He will conduct the services with the assistance of the clergy of the Cathe dral, visiting priests and students of Kenriek Seminary. Baxn Burning After Threat Lancaster, Oct. 16.—t larence Wad deli, a farm hand, has been arrested for barn burning near "here. He had a dispute with a neighbor, threatened to "get even" and a few nights later the barn of his neighbor, John Coch ran, was destroyed. Aged Grantville Citizen Dies Ijobauotr, Pa., Oct. 16.—IPerc.ival Ohumac.ht, a well-known resident ot Grantville, Dauphin county, died ves terday, aged SI years. For the past si\ months he suffered with an ailment of his leg and falling eyesight. Ho lost his evesigtht entirely prior to h:.> death. He was a life-long resident of t'he Grantville region and fifteen years ago he retired from active farming. Delicate Girls and W omen are too often y dosed with drugs fS when their blood is really starved. They need that blooa - strength which comes from medicinal nourishment No drugs can make blood. SCOTT'S EMULSION is a highly concentrated blood-food and every drop yields ret urns in strengthening both body and brain. fa. If yon are frail, languid, Jr& delicate or nervous, take Scott't Emulsion after meals II \il for one month. No AlcohoL LATIN AMERICAN COUNTRIES j Dr. Clayton Urges Special Study of \ s wed as other re cent events, have served to call the at tention of the people of the I'nited States to the recent rapid growth and development of" the hatin-American re publics. "These countries comprise an area three times as great as the United States. They are rich in minerals, for ests, water power, and a wide range of Agricultural products. They have 70,- 000.000 of people, with governments modeled after our own. Their foreign commerce amounts to more than $3,- 000,000,000 mutually and is rapidly increasing. "The third American city in popu a tion is in I.atiu America. Another Uat in American city has 1,000,000 inhabi tants. Three others have approximate Iv 500,000 each, au.i tive others have each 200,000 or more. Some of these cities rank among the most beautiful and attractive in the world. "These countries are making rapid progress in elementary and secondary education and in industrial education. Several of their universities enroll from one to 2,000 students each. The his tory of their countries is interesting, anil they possess a rich and varied lit erature. "A further reason for teaching Span ish in out- schools more than we do is that it is the language of one-tenth of all the people claiming protection tin der the American Hag, as well as of one of the culture nations of Kurope." PENNSYLVANIA HAS SAND This State Rankr First in Value, If Not in Quantity Washington, I), i.. Oct. 16.—The production of sand and gravel in Penn sylvania in lyi3 was tons, valued at $3,381,692, against 6,509,- 333 tons, valued at ?3,371,513, in 1912, according to the I'nited States (ieological Survey. Building sand is ♦lie most important product of this character in the State, but of greater relative importance is ! glass and, iu the production ot which | Pennsylvania ranks tirst among the ! States. In the value of the sand pro duced, although not in the quantity. Pennsylvania ranks lirst. the precedence in value being due to the high value of the glass sand i-umpared to other kinds. Good Spirits j can only be enjoyed by those whose | digestive orgar.s work naturally and j regularly. The best corrective and j preventive yet discovered for irregu lar or faulty action of stomach, liveror bowels, is known the world over to be BEECHAM'S FILLS Sold everywhere. In boxes, 10c., 25c. ACCUSED OF MANSLAUGHTER Fight Ends in Death of Man Kun Over by Van Philadelphia. Oct. 16.—Oscar lirant, 26 years old, a 'helper on a storage van at Chester, was brought here ves- I terdav by defectives to answer Jhe charge of manslaughter in having i caused the death of Frank "J.> years old, a!s.i a resident of Chester. Sparks died last Tues.lav night, at tiie Chester hoM'i'tal, from in juries snf fered on Septe-.nber 24, when he was :'ju over oy a (storage van during a : h 'ght on Cray's ferry bridge, in t'his 1 city. The police say tiiiat Sparks was knocked down by (Iran;, and that t;ie horses attached to the wagon, in which the men had been riding, became fright - ! ened and rati over I s arks. Eentists Select Lebanon for 1015 Meet I ebanon, Oct. 16.—With the closing 1 of the 1914 convention o'f tfar I Lebanon \ alley Dental Association in Pot'tsvi He. j yesterday. Lebanon was selr'te I as the I la e for t'ae next annual convention in 1915. Dr. K. S. Filbert, of Pottsville, was ele.'ted president of the association ! and Dt. IHarry Zimmerman, of Ann \ ville. was re-elected tlie treasurer for ' another year. 'Dr. Edward P. Kremer, j of this city, gave a demonstration ttuft | was interesting and instructive. Elected Scoutmaster at Marietta I Marietta. Oct. 16.—lo'hn K. Miller j was last nig'ht elected scoutmaster of I the troop of Boy Scouts, organized here. ! succeeding Oeorge H. Pinkerton, who i resigned. Benton ft. Hippie, dr., will :be the assistant. A council of the j scouts with prominent men and women i of the convmtnuitv interested, has also I been formed. Expert Clgarmaker Dies at Maytown Marietta. Oct. 16. Harrison Huls- I inger, 50 years old, died from a com plication of diseases after a nhort ill ness at IMlaytovvn. iHe was an exipert • igar manufacturer and affiliated with the ('igarmakers' Union. He is survived bv a sister, 'Mrs. .lohn Mathias, of Phil adelphia. The Trained Voice lawyers, clergymen and doctors all fail to secure the influence with the people whom they come in contact be cause of inabilitv to express their thoughts in nn impressive way. Had ! the voice been trained the same as the eye and the intellect, had the exterior (jualities been trained to express like the voice the best and the clearest facts, they would all have been suc . i esses. The melodious voice of Henry Clay iflways charmed his audience ev erywhere. Wherever he went people (locked to hear him, while the heavy bass tones of Daniel Webster failed to i attract and actually drove people away. They preferred to read what he had to ; say, buj wanted personally to hear j Clay's ' pleasing voice.—Medical Rev- I ord. COf Ladies' Suits, Coats, jflK esses and Hats SATURDAY I ) Ladies' Fall Suits $f Many Shades of Serges, Poplin 111 lis. Choice at .1 HE,} ) Ladies' Fall Coats. S4J ■! j \W and Many Styles to Select Lft \m ) Ladies' Fall Dresses $K lISP? In Messaline Silks and All Wool Serges. Choice at W ? C A S~H J5 CREDIT IF YOU HAVE IT. Id IF YOU WANT IT. Men's Balmacaan 250 Men's Suits Top Coats s*l A M JH&M ForSatnrdaySalelji A Very Stylish Models I I I P IBBMBIS in Mixtures and Fancy I $ i : OUR PRICE, ONLY JL Choice at.. JL T IVINGSTON'C .FREE LJ NO. 9 MA P I —— WMW—WHHBHTOHjjagi an. HMW. i. w I FRl'lT SHIP RAMMED IN FOti ! Vessol Sinks in Shoal Water After Col lision in New York Harbor New York Opt. 16.—The steamship Metapan, coming I'lom Colon, foundered in the lowej harbor late yesterday I after a collision with the freighter; lowan, leaving port for San Francisco. All of her 77 passengers and her crew were rescued. The iowan, less sen-! ouslv damaged, stood by and her boats | took aboard two of the Metapan's pas sengers. The remainder were trans- j ferred to rescuing craft and landed in i New York last night. The crash occurred in a (tense fog. The freighter \va» first seen when she was only a short, distance away. 1n I nil effort to avoid the cnsli tli,? lowan is said to have let go her anchor, but j the headway was greater than she could overcome. She hit the Metapan aboutj :'»0 feet from the bow of the ship on the port quarter, plowing through the steel and iron and inflicting a wound [ that caused the Metapan to lill quickly* I The wireless operator on the Meta-1 pan immediately s«jit "S. O. S." calls tor assistance, which were answered , quickly bv six or eight vessels. As soon as it was seen that the ship 1 was sinking he was headed toward shoal water. The boats were ordered out, and all hands were taken off with- j out panic or confusion. RESERVE BANKS SOON OPEN Call for Installment of Subscriptions Issued by Federal Board Washington, 1). C., Oct. IB.—The! federal reserve board took decisive action last night to hasten the opening of the twelve federal reserve hanks by j announcing a determination to call the tirst installment of subscriptions to the J capital of these banks. A call for 1 peri cent, of combined capital and surplus j will be issued at once and payments. are due November 2. The board decided also that all twelve banks shall be opened, simul-j taneonslv. No date has been set for the opening, but this probably will be tie-, termined after the conference with rep j resentatives of the banks to be held i here early next week. In view of yesterday'B action it was believed that the banks will he in operation by November 15. COUPLE RELEASED ON BAIL Innes and His Wife Are Indicted for Murder and Conspiracy Han Antonio, Texas, Oct. 16. — Victor, E. Innes and his wife, of Eugene, Ore., j indicted for murder and conspiracv to I murder in connection with the disap-1 pearance of Mrs. Eloise Nelms Dennis and her sister. Miss Beatrie Nelms, of! Atlanta, Ga., last June, were granted J bail at a habeas corpus hearing yester day. Irnes' bail was fixed at $4,000 and his wife's at $2,000. NOVEL MASSAGE CREAM Perfect Skin Pood That Removes' Wrinkles and Clears Complexion The most delicate skin will quickly j respond to the soothing and tonic ef-1 fects of Hokara and when this pure: skin cream is used, pimples are soon a i thing of the past. As a massage cream or after sha\it)g' it is unequaled, removing all irritu- i tions, and making the skin soft and | velvety. Apply a little to the hands or face ! after washing and surprise yourself I, with the dead pkin that comes off. j Hokara is nie only antiseptic mas sage cream, and pimples, eczema and [ all skin blemishes soon disappear when | it is used. Although far superior to the ordi- i narv massage creams and sold on a guarantee of "best you ever used or money back," yet the price is a trifle, only 25c for a liberal jar; larger size 50c. Sold on a guarantee by W. H. Ken nedy. Adv. BANK FAILURE DEATH TO SIX I i Seventh Depositor in Mandel Chain Sleeps in Park With Baby New York, Oct. 16.—Since the col-j lapse of the chain of private banks eon-1 ducted by Adolf Mandel, six of the do-1 positors have committed suicide, and a seventh, a woman with a baby, lias I slept for the past six nights in the citv parks. Mayor Mitchel was told yes-1 terday by the spokesman of men, worn- j en and children depositors, who swept i down upon the City Hall, demanding that the Mayor listen to their story. The Mayor heard the disturbance j they made outside his office and scut, word for them to send in one of their number. They chose Louis H. Schuttzer j who t old of the poverty of,, many of. those whose savings were tied up in the! banks. GIVES UNIVERSITIES $850,000 Harvard and Johns Hopkins Condi tional Legatees Under Will Salem, Mass., Oct. 1 ti.—'Public insti tutions, including Harvard and Johns' Hopkins Universities and the Boston I Museum of Fine Arts, are conditional, residuary legatees to the extent of hun- j dreds of thousands of dollars under the will of the lute Gardiner M. Lane, of Boston and Brookline, filed for probate j here yesterday. The value of the estate was not stated, lite residuary bequests are| $250,000 to Harvard to establish a; fund to be known as the George Mar- j tin Lane fund anil SIOO,OOO to Johns | Hopkins University to establish a Basil Gildersleeve fund. END HOUSE SALARY DOCKING ! Action Permits Restless Ones to Go Home to Political Fences Washington, Oct. 16. —Members of i the House chafing to get into their ■ home districts for campaign work, i virtually were given temporary leaves! of absence yesterday, when Majority header Underwood announced that there was no reason why those mem bers who could return next week in j time to vote on the war revenue bill | after it hail passed the Senate should j stay in Washington now. At Underwood's suggestion the House promptly repealed the recently I enacted resolution directing the ser-; geant-at-arms to enforce the old law authorizing docking of salaries of mem bers absent without leave. Representative Underwood said Con- i gress probably would adjourn about the 'end of next week. TAFT PRAISES PRESIDENT "Has Taken Exact Stand in War,"j Former Executive Declares Providence, R. 1., Oct. 16.—Praise, for President Wilson for his neutral at-: titude in the present war was bestowed yesterday by ex-President Taft and An j drew Carnegie at a luncheon of the Chamber of Cbmmerce. "President Wilson has taken the ex-1 act stand," Mr. Taft said, "and has 1 expressed it with admirable accuracy.'' RUMANIAN KING BURIED Funeral Ceremonies at Bucharest Marked by Simplicity Bucharest, Rumania, Oct. 16.—With! impressive ceremonies King Charles, of ! Rumania, was buried yesterday. The formal funeral exercises, which j were exceedingly simple, were, held at j 9 o'clock yesterday morning. The en-! tire city is in mourning. TO SUE RELATIVES OF INSANE j New Jersey County Has Claims Against UN) That Total SIO,(MM) Trenton, Oct. 16.—Because of con ; stant ignoring of claims against, them! more than 100 residents of Mercer I county, who have relatives in the New Jersey Hospital for tne Insane here, will be sued by the county, which has claims against such persons amounting to more than SIO,OOO. About $35,000 per year is spent by the county for the maintenance of in digent patients at this institution. 7 CLERK IIKM) FOR Rl(i THEFT Position at Baldwin Works Aftordod Chance to "Doctor" Books Philadelphia, Oct. 16.—James ft. O'Drain, I!> 10 Master street, a clerk in the accounting department of the Baldwin Locomotive Works, yesterday was held under SIO,OOO bail for a fur ther hearing to day, charged with em bezzling $13,000 from his employers during the past three years. O'Drain was arrested last night by Constable j Waller Hauf, of Magistrate William .1\ Tracy's office, while he was coming; i from the Baldwin works, Broad and 1 Spring Garden streets. The charges were preferred by Wil liam DeKratTt, secretary and treasurer lof the Baldwin Locomotive Works. 11 I appears that O'Drain at various t.im«» i during the yoar- 1912-13-14 took the i $13,000. 'i'hc books had been altered ! and false entries had been made, it is 1 alleged. Money was collected on writ ! ten orders issued in his own name from | various banks, it is charged. According to Magistrate Tracy. | O'Drain had been serving on a jury HI i common pleas court during the past week. The loss was discovered by Mr. j DeKrall't several days ago, when the j annual auditing of the books was in ' progress. When confronted with thfe j charges yesterday, O'Drain confessed. ' A warrant was immediately sworn out i for his arrest. • According to Constable Hauf, ti»p 1 prisoner said as he was taken to tine . Fifteenth and Vine streets statioft I " Well, I got the money. I guess T ' might as wel take my medicine pleas j iiiitly.'' U. S. TRADE SEEKERS GO SOUTH 1 Information to Further Foreign Busi ness Will Be Obtained Washington. Oct. 16. —Three of the 1 newly-appointed commercial attaches of ' the United State-. Albert Hale, C. W. A. Veditz and Krwin W. Thompson, will leave at once for the South to con fer with manufacturers and merchants. They are to be connected with the ; American legations at Buenos Ayres, : Paris and Berlin, and now particularly seek intimate information about south ern interests in trade and possibilities of trade with Argentina and western K u rope. ' Wilson Endorses Glynn for Re-election Washington, Oct. 16. Governor I Glynn, of New York, was endowed for i re-election yesterday by President Wil i soil, who sent him a letter expressing j the hope that the voters of New York would return him to office, "with au ( emphatic majority.'' PLUMP FOLKS I AND THIN POLKS i Samose Will Make People Fat—"Money Back If It Fails" Says H. C. Kennedy The line of beauty is a curve. Women ! may be thin and graceful, but not thin and beautiful. There is a vast number | of pale, thin, scrawny people who are ! all brains and nerves, but without the : strength and health that accompanied ! the standard weight. Good flesh and j perfect health go together. A true flesh | forming food like Samose is absolutely necessary to many people, j This remarkable discovery comes in ! tablet form and when taken after meals J mingles with the food and helps it to I assimilate so that it makes rich blood j and pleasing plumpness. H. ('. Kennedy has so much conti jdence in this remarkable flesh forming food and health restorer that he is will ing and glad to allow any customer to deposit 50c with him and take homo a box of Samose with the understanding that if it does not give a marked in crease in good firm flesh the money will be .returned without any questions. Adv.