The star-independent. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1904-1917, November 05, 1914, Page 6, Image 6

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    6
(in JS7S)
Pubiimhad b •
THC STAR PRINTING COMPANY.
/* Stsr-lnd*p«id«nt Building.
M 10-22 South Third Street. Harrltbwt Pa.
Evary Evening Except Sunday
r. MrriKs. Jo>ti L L Km.s.
President
Vn W. ffiucwu.
Vfee President * *■«■» }
Vm. K Miiim.
Seorrtarr and Treaterer Wm W Waulower
Wm 11 Wimi. V. HI'MUtL BIKviRACS. Jr ,
• Suv.net* Manager Editor.
All communications should be addressed to Star Imikprspixt,
Ru«ln»« Editorial. Job Printing or Circulation Departinaut
according to the subject matter
Entered at the Post t'&.-a in Hat-risburg as aecond clasa matter.
Benjamiu Jt Kentaor Company.
New York and t'hn-a|to KepresentatiTea
New York Offlce. Brunswick Building. *-j Fifth Avenue
Chicago Office. People's lias Building. .Michigan Avenue.
Delivered by carriers at « ccnta a week. Mailed Co subscriber:
for Three Dollars a /ear in advance
THE STAR INDEPENDENT
The paper with the larsaai Ham-. Circulation in Harrisburg ana
Marby towns.
Circulation E\am!neu b>
THE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN ADVERTISERS.
TELEPHONES BELL
Private Branch Sichanf*. No. J2BO
CUMBERLAND VALLEY
I*ri»ata Branch Eicnange. - No .245-246
- - -=l— " -
Thursday. November 5. 1014.
NOVEMBER
Sun. Moil. Tues. Wed. Thur. Fri. Sat.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30
MOONS PHASES—
Full Moon, 2nd: Last Quarter, loth
New Moou. 17th: First Quarter, 'J4th.
■>- WEATHEE FOEECASTS
. ' Harrisburg and v unity: Fair to
! c.iht and Friday, slightly colder to-
L«wJ night. Diminishing west winds
j^ijO Kastern Pennsylvania: Fair to-night
ijp . J and Friday, slightly colder to-night.
" ... i Diminishing; west winds.
VESTEEDAY S TEMPERATURE IN HARRISBURG
Highest. 74; lowest. 4o; S a. ni.. 4b: S p. m.. 60.
THE COLONEL TURNS TO SCRIPTURE
The Colonel, from his retreat in Oyster Bay.
vexed over the t'aet that the people of this country
on Tuesday last declined further to follow his
teaching, quoted Scripture to express his feelings
oneerning actions of those who failed to heed his
advice. Having read the election news in the
. morniiir papers, and being particularly vexed be-
people of his home state and most of the
«tiier states, including Pennsylvania, should fly
in the face of fate, the Colonel found language of
lti> own inadequate to express his opinion of the
returns and he availed himself of a Scriptural quo
'tatiou. Said the Colonel to a questioner:
In the Episcopal church, lessons tasen from the Bible
are appointed for every day of the year. The lesson for
November 3 includes the se ond Epistle of Paul to Tim
othy. Chapter IV. 3. 4. which reads as follows:
"For the tipe will eome when they wilt not endure sound
doctrine: but after their own lusts shall they heap to them
seizes tea'hers having itching ears: and they shall turn
away the'r ears from the truth and shall be turned unto
fables."
The Colouel said he had nothing to add to the
above, at present, which was exceedingly modest
his part. There was plenty the Colonel might
have added and he could have found something
very appropriate in the Scriptures, taken, for in
stance. in connection with his recent political tour
of Pennsylvania. There is the quotation from Job
6: 2t>, which says:
Do ye think to reprove words, seeing that the speeches
ot" one that is desperate are as wind'
And again, there is a verse in the 4th P§alru
that he might study with benefit just now It
reads:
Commune with your own heart upon your bed. and be
still?
But why pursue the subject further? The Colonel
says he may have something more to say later. Xo
doubt of it. told is the day when the Colonel fails
:o have something to say, but let it hereafter be the
Simon-pure Rooseveltian dialect.
FAKE WAR VICTIMS ABOUT
Swindlers in this country are beginning to take
advantage of the sympathy that has been aroused
here in behalf of the Belgians, and impostors posing
a* refugees from the stricken kingdom will soon be
plentiful if the fraud is not fully exposed at every
opportunity bv the press and other agencies.
Ihe greatest loss sustained so far. perhaps,
through this new skin game, is that of an unfor
tunate New York jeweler. He purchased twenty
pounds of •platinum" with a cash payment of
«0.000. from two •"refugees" who said they had
been iu the jewelry business in Belgium and had
barely escaped from that country with their lives,
which, in addition to the "platinum,"' was all they
had in the world. That is the way they told it.
Ihe tacts are that the Belgian refugees" were im
postors and that the "•platinum" wss tin.
The clever plan by which the swindlers accom
plished the sale of common tin for precious plati
num was not exactly original, yet it worked. They
got the jeweler, whom they had picked as their
victim, to their room in a hotel, and during the
bustle preliminary to bringing forth the metal,
they upset his bottle of acid with which he had
intended to make his test before purchasing. They
were very sorry about the accident, of course, but
generouily offered to let the jeweler use some
of their own acid.
The prospective buyer unsuspectingly accepted
HARRISBI RG ST AR-INDKPENDKNT. THI RSDAV EVENING, NOVEMBER 5. 1914.
the offer and ton tut that the "acid" had no effect
on the metal, apparently proving to his satisfac
tion that he was testing pure platinum. The im
postors. in their eagerness fully to convince their
customer, insisted that he take a sample of the
metal to his assayer at once, for thorough examina
tion. The sample was platinum all right, an ounce
or so of it standing test for twenty pounds of tin.
The old gold brick game worked in this twen
tieth century and in New York city; but then the
swindling sellers were "Belgian refugees." and
Americans at present feel great sympathy for Bel
gian refugees.
The jeweler, at any rate, took the ujetal anil paid
down SO,OOO on account, promising to give the
"refugees" an equal amount in tiual settlement the
following day. When they did not come for it the
jeweler's surprise quickly grew to suspicion. He
had his twenty pounds of metal actually tested, and
the result was not Pt but Sn. The impostors are
now presumably real refugees, not from Belgium
but from New York.
There may not be many more frauds on such a
large scale perpetrated by fake war victims, yet
many little impositions may be attempted. "Bel
gian refugees" may soon be begging in American
cities, or seeking to dispose of property which they
"saved" iu their "flight from the war zone."
Swindlers realize that the scheme is one worthy of
their attention.
Kind-hearted Americans are eager to help war
victims, and the sraugs of cunning impostors know
it. Kind-hearted Americans would do well, how
ever. to bear in mind that all Belgian refugees, like
all sheets of platinum, are not necessarily genuine.
In making contributions to relieve the woeful plight
of the real war sufferers, Americans'should make
certain that their gifts are being placed iu the
hand# of the authorized and accredited agents for
the collection of such funds, or of persons of whose
integrity they have absolute knowledge.
Crow shooting didn't seem to be very good in the Fay
ette district.
Haven't heard ot" Palmer and Pint-hot sending congratu
latory message? to Senator Penrose.
Governor Brumbaugh's veto axe will have to be kept
sharp if he is to succeed in carrying out his election
j pledges.
Lincoln used to call it "the Republican state of Alle- 1
ahenyand it seems to have retained the name, judging
from the election figures.
Kunkel's majority in Dauphin county came within a few
thousand of offsetting the majority against him iu Phila- ;
delphia where it was to be expected he would run behind, j
Dauphin could hardly have done more for her "favorite!
i sou."
TOLD IN LIGHTER VEIN
AT THE BAR
That lawyers toast the humorists
often, you'll agree:
• ast note how oft the phrase "to wit"
Within their brifes you see! —Judge.
FEOM THE JOURNAL OF MADAME LEANDRE
We do not mourn our lovers—but our love for them.
1? a lover lets himself lose his hold upon our imagination
I he commits the oue unpardonable sin.
The more earthly a man. the nearer the angels does he ;
! want his wife.
Marriage without love is almost as dangerous as love
1 without marriage.
Never love a man —unless you cau do without him.
I Our spirits are shy. wild things. They are not a; easily :
| mated as our bodies.
The episodes of your past, dearest, do not interest me— :
except for the qualities they called out in you. the ehar- 1
acteristics thev shaped for you.—Helen Woljeskr. in Smart
| Set.
THE BISHOP S OPINION
Of a certain bishop the following anecdote is told: While
i presiding over a conference, a speaker began a tirade
against the universities and education, expressing thank
fulness that he had never been corrupted bv contact -yith
a college. After proceeding for a few minutes the bishop
interrupted with the question:
"Do I understand that Mr. X is thankful for his
ignorance!"
"Well, yes," was the answer; "you can put it that way
j if you like."
. "Well, all I have to say," said the prelate, in sweet and
musical tones, "all I have to say is that Mr. X- has
much to be thankful for."—Exchange.
LIKE THE BRAVES
Sunday School Teacher —"Did Pharoah overcome the'
children of Israel at the Red Seat"
t Small Boy—"Xo. ma'am. It was a walk over for the
Israelites."—Exchange.
ONE ON THE NURSE
An officer of the R. A. M. C. tells this story against the
amateur nurse who is wholly inexperienced: In a hospital
at Cape Town during the South African war. the keenness
| of certain amateur members of the nursing staff tended to
aggravate, rather than alleviate, the sufferings of some
of the wounded. At last the British soldier's native wit
came to the rescue. One morning a sick soldier's bedclothes
displayed a slip of paper inscribed: •
"Too ill to be nursed to-day!"—Tit-Bits.
HIS CORRECTION
A teacher, instructing her class in the composition of {
sentences, *vrote two on the blackboard, one a misstatement
of fact, and the other wrong grammatically. The sentences i
were: "The hen has three le-gs," and "Who done it!"
"Harry," she said to one of the youngsters, "go to the i
blackboard and show where the fault lies in those two
sentences."
Harry slowly approached the board, evidently studying j
hard. Then he took the crayon and wrote:
j "The hen never done it. God done it."—Exchange.
WASN'T SURE
An Irish maid recently sought permission of her mistress :
to take an afternoon off for the purpose of consulting a
dentist. Upon her return the mistress said:
"Well, Rosalie, did you have the tooth filled 1"
"I did, mum."
"And what did the dentist fill it with—gold, or amal
gam ?"
"I don't know just what it was, mum; ,but from the way
it felt I should think it was with thunder and lightning,
I mym." —Exchange.
| Tongue-End Top ics |
The Defeat of Kelley
Ono man eliminated from public life
for u while by the election on Tues,lay
is M. Clyde Kelley. Congressman from
the Thirtieth district, a part of Alle
gheny county, who served ono ses: ion
in the House of Representatives in Har
risburg, and was noted for his wanting
to know everything that was going on,
whether it concerned his district or not.
Kelley got himself very much disliked
by those who wanted to push through
their little private bills that would not
bear much investigation, for ho was
coutinuallv asking questions that led to
Mtvbarrassment, and he was coutinuallv
spiking legislation that he thought was
no< just the proper thing. The result
was t.iat the others retaliated on him,
aud before the session closed Kelley
found himself in the position of having
introduced a whole lot of what he con
sidered beneficial legislation and hav
ing it -buried in a pk-kling vat in some
committee. He chafed a good dt\il over
this and he made rip-roaring speeches
•bout what he considered the injustice
doue .him, but the members in the House
only gave him the laugh, and Kelley
went home without much accomplished.
It made him mad clear through, and
when the Roosevelt wave made its ap
pearauee in 1912 Kelley got a good
place on the crest and announced him
selt as a candidate for Congress in the
district represented by John Dalrell,
the High Priest of Protection in Con
gress. and Kelley got the Washington
party nomination. To the wonder of the
State Kelley defeated Dalzell and put
him entirely out of the political game—
so much so that Dalzell has never been
heard of since. When there was a scram
ble for the Washington party nomina
tion for Governor last March Kelley
came forward as a candidate, but he had
no show, and he withdrew and again
became a candidate for Congress. On
Tuesday last he went down—but he
will bob up agaiu.
* * *
"Has Anybody Here Seen Kelley?"
W heu Kelley left the Pennsylvania
House the memory pf what he had
suffered in that body rankled within
him and he sat down and wrote a 'book
telling of what he called the inside
workings of the Legislature. It was a
lampoon all the way through, and as
such male interesting reading, but
Kelley made enemies by its publication.
These people remembered him, and at
the very first opportunity, when tiiev
had the power, they "pas one over on"
Kelley. After March, the Thirtieth
Congressional distri >t will he asking a
leading question, something like:
"Has anybody here seen Kelley?"
And M. Clyde wil be there to answer
in [>ersou. for the hails of Congress will
uo ionger resound with his oratory.
Rupley 's Long Speeches
They are saving that perhaps the
speeches of Congressman Arthur R.
Rupley. of Carlisle, had something to
do with his defeat for re-election as
Congressman-at-:a-ge ou the Bull Moose
ticket. Mr. Rupley is a fairly good
spee -h-maker, but he makes his speeches
too long. For instance, when the Wash
ington party State committee met here
; ast Jane Mr. Rupley attended the
meeting armed with a speech that was
spread over many pages of typewriter
paper—the big long -ages—and he was
going to fire tha* the committeemen.
Boss Biil Flitin is said to have gotteu
hold of "Art" and told him to cut
4t out. but Mr. Ruplev had already
handed copies of that «peecii to the
newspaper boys, and felt he was in duty
bound to deliver it. However, he out
it down considerably and when it got
into priut it was even shorter, due to
the work of the news editor's ruthless
blue pencil.
P£OPLE'S_COLU/HiV '
Tie Star-Independent does not
uiake itself responsible for opinions
expressed in this column.
Compares the New Fire Trucks
Editor, the iitar-lnde-pendent:
Dear Sir:—l was very much pleased
to have the privilege of looking over
our new fir e trucks, side by side, and
it can be noticed that the one made in
our city is larger than the other one
and better finished, but that is not the
part that I am most interested in. Be
ing a mechanic I got under the ma
chines and liui the small machine is
not nearly as strongly built as the large
one aud the front part has been strain
ed. The front springs are too light.
They have settled down almost two
inches. The fenders come close to the
wheel. They are very narrow a nd
short. They are 12 inches shorter and
one-half inch narrower than the springs
on the large truck and there is another
dangerous feature. The clip that hoi ts
them is only one-half inch in diameter
and they ar e three-fourth inches on the
large truck. There is nothing to pre
vent either end of the front axle from
slipping back except the friction of
these light clips and a three-eighth
incb bolt. This is very dangerous on a
truck that runs 40 miles per hour.
The large truck is made with a cap
pressed in each ply of the springs and
that receives the boss on the next ply
to it. That, with the large clip, makes
a safer arrangement. Another thing,
the little truck has only one set of
spark plugs, and the large truck has a
double set and a double ignition.
Another point: th e large truck is
equipped with two side lights that are
made for electric globes and also with
oil burners and if the battery gets low
there still are lights. There are several
other things that the little one should
have; a fender in front and a self
starter. The seat is so high that a man's
feet will hardly reach the floor and
there >s no railing around the seat to
hold on to. There are several shades of
red paint on the little machine and the
varnish is very dull but these are not
points of danger. The machine would
look much better if it had stronger
springs in front and the front raised up
about two inches. It looks like it has
been used rough.
An Engineer.
OF INTEREST
TO WOMEN
THE NEW COSSACK
_ SILHOUETTE
Trimmings of Fur and Military Braid
ing Are Used iu Profusion Upon
Winter Costumes Hussar and
Cossack Hats
New York. Nov. u.
The most popular of all trimmings
for dresses suitable for street, motoring,
or eveuing wear is fur. fur—aud again
fur. Fox. wolf, titch, mink, caracul,
chinchilla and different kinds of lambs'
wool, from the wide, fluffy kind to the
tight, curly kind, are used for different
costumes. But among the most popular
of these furs is beaver, possibly because
v oue or two of the famous Parisian
couturiers wpre usiug it when the war
broke out.
A Coat Showing the Lines of the
Cossack Silhouette
Xutria is often used in place of
beaver and so closely resembles it that
only those very familiar with furs are
able to tell them apart. This nutria is
the fur of a South American aquatic
animal resembling the otter, aud called
a covpou. The North American otter is
also being used for those who can af
ford such a luxury, a coat of otter cost
ing a small fortune. As a novelty,
African monkey fur continues to rank
first. It is a long-haired fur, and wheu
finishing the bottom of a tunic, the edge
of a hat, or bottom of the sleeves looks
like an irregular silk fringe.
The wide bands-of fur which are
use don the bottom of the full skirts,
or tunics, are a stroug reminder of the
costumes of the Russian, the Pole and
the Cossack. With this as a beginning,
the designers have harked back for in
spiration to costumes of Russians and
Tartars of the Middle Ages. Wonder
ful evening coats are made like the cos
tumes of bartering Tartar tribes. The
material is a heavy brocade, almost of
the texture of silk tapestry, while the
figures scattered across its surface are
Oriental in origin. The garment is cut
very close-fitting at the shoulders, aud
with sleeves set in, which flare at the
bottom where they are finished with a
band of fur. A wide band of fur adds
weight and richness at the bottom of
the coat, which flares out in deep godct
ripples.
Secondary only to fur comes braid
ing. The popularity for this is no doubt
due to the war abroad. For all we
may talk of the barbarity of war our
hearts go out to the soldier who is fight
ing for his country, whether he be Eng
lish, German, Russian, Austrian, or
French. There is a glamor about war
to the uninitiated which is reflected in
the trimming and cut of our clothes.
Wide braid is used on the bottoms of
skirts and tunics in place of fur. Nar
row braid binds the edges of tailored
costumes and soutache, Hercules, and
round braif's are used for braiding
dresses, belts, panels, collars and cuffs
in attractive designs. Wider braid and
cord are made into frogs and buttons
for the closing of coats and down the
fronts of dresses, giving the military
effect. Kven modified epaulets, made
from black or blue braifi, are seen oil
frocks.
beading. Many handsome frocks have
belts which are beaded in some attrac
tive design in colors rich and dark,
which adds snap and smartness to the
entire frock. One blue dress made after
the popular Moyen Age style had a belt
which widened in the front and dropped
rather low. This was entirely covered
PURE RICH BLOOD
PREVENTS DISEASE
Bad blood is responsible for more
ailments than anything else. It causes
catarrh, dyspepsia, rheumatism, weak,
tired, languid feelings and worse
troubles.
Hood's Sarsaparilla has been won
derfully successful in purifying and
enriching the blood, removing scrofula
and other humors, and building up the
whole system. Take it —give it to all
the family so as to avoid illness. Get
it to-day. Adv.
tmmmmm The Beauty
of Diamonds
never pales—its lovely radiance
| For close to a half century
r this store has gained an enviable reputation for diamond
selling. We know diamond values, aud through the facili
ties our loug experience has made we are able to give
values that cannot l>e had elsewhere.
Comparison is the best test of values.
Diamond Rings, l-64th to 3 carat, from $3 to SOOO
Diamond Cluster Rings, Diamond Earrings,
$5 to SIOOO « $6 to 9550
Diamond LaVallieres. Diamond Cuff Buttons.
$5 to S2OO $5 to SSO
Diamond Bracelets, Diamond Scarf Pins,
$8 to S2OO $3 to S2OO
Make your Christmas selection now. Pay # small
deposit and we'U hold it for you until yon want it.
Jacob Tausig's Sons
Reliable Since 1867
420 Market St.
with a beaded design in bronze beads,
with now and then a red bead which
served to accentuate the center of tHe
conventionalized flowers. Color com
binations ot' small beads may be used
most effectively to add the touch which
tells uiioti an otherwise somber dress.
Embroidery is also used to a great
extent this year. Not the tine small em
broidery, but the largo sprawly variety,
which is done in more or less coarse
silk or wool and is most effective.
In the illustration of the coat the
Cossack silhouette, which I have spoken
of in the tore part of this letter, may
be noted. The closeness of the coat at
the shoulders and the flare at the bot
tom show the latest cut for coats.
Skunk fur is used for the rolling collar,
the cuffs and the bottom of the coat.
Frogs add the military note which is so
popular on coats of many styles.
This same style may also be seen in
coats of fur and fur-cloth, while the
bands in this case are of contrasting
fur. A long-haired fur on the short,
close fur, or a fur of merely contrast
ing color, are combined into a coat of
luxurious warmth and good style.
Although the dresses with the exag
gerated waistline, or no waistline at all,
are very much the rage, it has not tuken
away from the style of the more con
servative frocks, whose waistlines re
main normal. I have chosen for one
of my illustrations a dress in style—
unexaggerated, but cut on the late lines.
The armhole is small, the shoulders
close-fitting, the tunic flares in the
latest manner, while the rather wide
belt is at the normal waistline. The
only trimming of this dress is a braided
design which is applied to the belt, the
cuffs, the collar and the bottom of the
tunic. A jaunty little hat which be
speaks comfort in all kinds of weather
is worn with the costume.
The small hat vies with the larger!
hats for the popularity of the majority i
and the honors seem to be pretty evenly
divided. The women who find comfort j
combined with jauntiness in the small 1
hat hesitate to change for the larger i
liats, but those who have made the i
change find that the larger hats are con- 1
servative enough in size not to cause i
the discomfort of those worn four or !
five years back and called the "Merry
Widow" and "Peach Basket" hats.
From such, Dame Fashiou' please de-1
liver us! 1
Simple, But Cut on the Correct lanes Is
This Dress With Trimming of Braid
In winter hats the Cossack shape, as i
well as the Hussar, are very smart. The
latter are rather high and flat on top, i
made of cloth, velvet or fur and trim- !
mcd with jaunty fancy brushes of black
or white horse-hair. An ornament is
usually placed where this ornament is
fastened, as in the real Hussar hat tho
insignia of the regiment is usually ;
placed there, as may be seen in the hat ;
worn by tho Kaiser's Death Head Hus- i
sars, which is a skull and cross-bones. \
Not cheerful, but certainly apropos to j
the results of war.
The Cossack hats worn this season
Pennsylvania Railroad's School
of Telegraphy
The IVniiMylt nnia Hallrouil rontlurtN ■
xelionl of at llrilford, l*a.,
whirr only n nominal tuition Iff I*
t-hHruril. (. milliliter* of thin xrhool arc
n**iireil rm|ilu> im-nt ultli tile I'enimyl
\ »ntn Hull mini. For Information ail-
ILRRNN ThonifiN nil ill UK t on, Maunder. l\
11. 11. School of T'rlrirrapll)-. Ili-tlfonl. I**.
are made of fur, high and rounding at
the top. In chinchilla, mink, or beaver
they are most striking.
ANCIENT FOOTWEAR
And the Old Ceremony of Baring the
Feet at Worship
The India Hindus ami Mussulmans
alike wear both sandals and shoes (slip
pers) and the latter boots also. The
sandal (the word is Persian) was ev i
dently the original covering for the
feet over all southern and eastern Asia,
while the shoe was probably intro
duced into India by the Persians, Af
ghans and Mongols, together with the
"tip tilted" (Hittite and Etruscan)
boot.
Both are usually made in India ot'
leather, but never of pigskin, and,
while the shoes are always colored red
or yellow, the boots are generally
brightly particolored, both among the
upper classes being also richly em
broidered in gold and silver and varie
gated silk thread and with bangles,
bugles and seed pearls after the manner
of the ancient Persian boots represent
ed on Greek vases.
But. of however rare and costly
elaboration, the invariable rule is to re
move them after entering a private
house just when stepping 011 to the mat
or carpet 011 which the visitor takes his
seat. They must be cast off, the right
boot or shoe first, before the worshiper
enters a temple or mosque, and it is
still regarded as an absolute profana
tion to attempt to enter either fully
shod. —Westminster Gazette.
Damp Room Test
To ascertain whether a room is damp
or not place a weighed quantity of
fresh lime in an open vessel in the
room and leave it there for twenty
four hours, carefully closing the win
dows and doors. At the end 'of the
twenty-four hours reweigh the lime, and
if the increase exceeds 1 per cent, of
the original weight it is not safe to
live in the room.
WHY HE DOES IT
Druggist H. C. Kennedy Gives Reasons
for Selling at Half Price
"It isn't often that I have faith
enough in the medicines put up by
other people to be willing to offer to
refund the money if it does not cure,"
laid Druggist 11. C. Kennedy to one of
his many customers, "but I am glad to
sell Dr. Howard's specific for tho cure
uf constipation and dyspepsia 011 that
plan.
"The Dr. Howard Co., in order to get
4 quick introductory sale, authorized me
to sell the regular flfty-eent bottlo of
their specific for half price, 2.") cents,
and although I have sold a lot of it.
md guaranteed every package, not one
lias been brought back as unsatis
fnctorv.
"I am still selliug the specific at
half price, although I cannot tell how
long I shall be able to do so. Any per
son who is subject to constipation, sick
headache, dizziness, liver trouble, indi
gestion or' a general played out condi
tion, ought to take advantage of this
opportunity. If the specific does not
•lire them, they can come right back to
mv store, and 1 will cheerfully refund
their money.' Adv.
r Do: I z-s
msfa s^2 6 ? upthe
SMOKE should go up tlie
chimney— not the heat.
The heat should circu
late through the house.
If it doesn't, then your coal
money is literally being wast
ed through the chimney
route.
Keller's favorite furnace
coal —hard stove at $6.70 —
gives more heat for the
money because it is clean and
absolutely high-grade.
H. 18. Kelley & Co.
Office, 1 N Third Street.
. Yard, 10th and State Streets