2 Sterling Silver for Weddings Anniversaries Christmas Beautiful new productions, representing John Alden, ; Brandon. King Philip. Xapoleou and other new and artistic designs iu sots and combinations, in elegant mahogany and oak chests and handsome cases: also an unusually large and attractive showing of individual pieces, daintily boxed. Suitable for Gifts for All Occasions Dinner Sets Lemon Dishes Tea Sets Sandwich Dishes Coffee Sets Salts and Peppers Sugar and Cream Sets Berry Dishes Chocolate Sets Fruit Bowls Sandwich Sets Bread Plates Ramakin Sets Cheese Dishes Almond Sets Cake Dishes Individual Butter Sets Vegetable Dishes Carving Sets Napkin Rings Bou Bon Sets Mustard Jars Sp;oas Salt and Pepper Castors Knives and Forks Sugar Tongs Almond Jars Sugar Pliers Drinking Cups Tea Balls Susar Holders Tea Strainers Meat Forks Oyster Forks Olirc Spoons Nut Spoons Gravy Boats Etc., Etc. silver alwav* ma\cs an ide;>l gift, tt las ;« tendii eutal ami ai: intrinsic \ahie that is always appreciated. Tt never goes out o style and is frequently kept and handed down iu the fam ily from oue generation to auother. Wo invito you to come to this store and see these beautiful new goods. You will be delighted and it will be a pleasure for us to show them. Y ■ riend> will appreciate a Gift from Clsster's. • "Claster" on the package is the stamp of Quality. sel- . t ions made now will be held until called for. H. C. CLASTER Gems—Jewels—Silverware 302 Market Street * jf WOMEN CAUSE HU.H PRICES Ignorance Increases the Cost of laving. Say Investigators Now York. Nov. 13. —Ignorance on the part of housewives is responsible in large measure for the high cost of living, in the opinion of Mayor Mitch ei's Food Sur.ipiv committee, of whi/.i George W, Perk ns is chairman. Work ing girls and those reared a the homes , 'tf* ~jy well-to-do are equally at fav.it, according to the report. Young women employed in ofti.es. stores and factories before their mar riage have little or no practk-al train-1 iag in the art of housekeeping, the com mittee hnds. The same is true, it is held, of the daughters of prosperous families, where the mistaken notion prevails that it i« not necessary for t'hem to learn housekeeping. The committee contends that extrava gance and waste in households, headed by women not trained for home-making, leads to 'arge and unnecessary drains upon rhe-ity's food supply. Thieves Rob Telephone Booth Marietta. Nov. IS.—Thieves foned i>'< entrance We Inasday night into the Keinhold station along the Columbia and Reading railway. and carried off a bi.x whi.-ii contained a iirtle money for Bell televuone service. Entrance was effected by prying open a window. At the home- of H. Joseph Keith, a short distance away, they stoic canned fruit, vegetables, three b:gs of wine and veg etables. ' | Clergyman Sells a Farm Marietta, Nov. 13. —Ttie Rev. Sam-, uel F. .-Hiiup has soid his farm of: eighty-seven acres in East Cocalk'O township :V 16.200 to Alrin Ixkodis. of near Red Run. The farm is a very i desirable one. >i.as K. Bard sold for! Adaai Meet ley h.s property in the low er end o: the < o inly for $1,200 to Bar ton W. Me.-k.ey. Be! Sure You Get Duffrs Pure Malt Whiskey J %MMi When You Call for It Every good thiug for wnieh there i- a demand i« counterfeited. and substitutes are simply "tricks of the trade wherein the dealer "tries to put something over on you. " regardless of your health, for the sake of greater profit. When you "Get Duffy's and Keep Well" you're sure voa are taking the same good Medicine for All .Mankind that "has been used with good by thousands for more than half a century. Always demand Duffy's and insist on getting Duffv's only. Every genuine bottle of Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey has'our "Annual" wrapped around it. and on the bottle itself the Company name is blown in. the "Old Chemist" trade-mark appears on the label, and there's a seal over the cork which should be unbroken until you, yourself open Duffy's for better health. 'NOTE et Duffy's from" , # grocer or dealer. By Pennsylvania trade. Full Quarta flJio per bottle; Commercial fft A \& quartt St.OO per bottle. If he cannot supply f> gj you. wTite na. we will tell you where to get it. I*\ Medical booklet free. The Duffy Malt Wiriekey Co.. Rorhester. \. Y BOY FINDS HOME BROKEN UP Father Electrocuted for Murder and Mother 111 in Hospital Jersey City. Nov. 13.—Joseph Mel : laJio. 12 years old, was discharged from the reformatory at Jamesburg and prempth came here, wearing a suit of lothes given to him by the officials. When he got to 252 Wayne street, this I city, where his parents lived when he i was committed to the institution for be-. ! ing incorrigible, he learned for the first time that they had moved awav. and no one knew anything about their where-1 abouts. Footsore and hungry, the boy went 1 to the < ity Hall police station, where he told his story. For the first time he wa- informed that his father had been electrocuted in the Trenton State Prison for mur lei a short time after the boy was sent to the reformatory, but the facts were concealed from him. His mother is now dangerously ill in Bellevue Hospital, New } ork City. The Societv for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children has: taken charge of the boy. Hotel Proprietor Dies in Hospital Marietta. Nov. 13.—Ernest G. Mau dek, so years old. died at the Loncas-' ter General hospital from a compliea- j tion of diseases. He was proprietor of the Riverside hotel, was a retired_brew er ami the first man to erect a cottage on the \ork county shore along the Susquehanna river. He was affiliated with a number of secret organizations. | Woman Gives Money to Charity Marietta. Nov. 13.—1n the will 0 f the late Priscilia Stoner. admitted to • i riibcte. there is a bequest of 1100 to the Meunonite i hurrh at Lsndis Vallev and SSO to the Lutheran church at Neffsville. There -,s also a number of amounts willed for enaritabie purposes. HAKRISBURG STAK-IXDEPEXDKXT, FRIDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 13. 1914. WELFARE OF ALL TO BE THE IB Second Annual Welfare and Efficiency Con ference Will Be Held Here Next Week DISTINGUISHED MEN TO BE HERE Will Discuss Matters Relating to the General Benefit of Human Kind— Au Exhibit of Safety Appliances Will Be Made An outline of the plan and so ope of the se.'oiul auuual welfare ami efficiency cout'ereuce to be held in Harrit'oitrg on November 1". 18, 19. has been pre pared by .lohn Price Jackson. Commis sioner of l-iabor and Industry, which "ill give an intelligent idea of the matters to bo brought before that meeting. viovernor Tener will give an address of welcome on Tuesday morning. No vember 17, at 10 o'clock, and it is :I< HVI tiiat Governor-elct Brumbaugh will also speak upon thar occasion, i William B. Wilson, National Secretary o l ' l.H<>or, anrt> the Safety Section. Hygiene Sec tion. Welfare Section anil Fire Session. Those taking par; in these sectional Meetings will be, among others, Carl Hansen, chief engineer of the Work men's Compensation Bureau, of New York city: Dr. Thomas Darlington, a famous expert from the American Iron an.l Steel institute, New York City; W. T. Doyle, m»-,-hnuical engineer of the New York State Department of Uibor: . O. Smith, president of the Pittsburgh Emery Wheel Company: Lucien W. Chancy, a famous statistician, connected with the Bureau of l*ab,>r Statistics, Washington, I>. C.: Dr. .1. M. Wain wvighT. chief surgeon of the Delaware, and Western railway, Sc a. ton. Pa.: J. U. rughaii. professor of mechanical engineering. I'uiversity of Nevada; C. K. Dooley .head of the educational activities of the Westing- Electric Manufacturing Company, l'itt?"burgh. Pa.: 11. W. Forster, a well known safety and fire expert, of the Iv. Upenden e In-' e-tion Bureau, Phila delphia. Pa.: R. W. Campbell, president nf the National Safety Council; Dr. C. M. Pr e. famous tor his writings on la por problems, and director cf the joint board of Sanitary control, Ne»- York ' ity: James lord. President cf the Min ing Department of the American Feder ation of l.abor, an.l Frank Duffy, a member of the Indiana Coir.mission on Industrial E Incation. also secretary of the I'nited Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners. There will also be other Neil-known labor leaders and employers who will be present and take part in this day of .-is Mission. Reports of Safety Councils In the evening of the 17th repre sentatives of -.ie Safety Councils, asso ciated with t&e Department of Labor and Industry and the National Safety Council from Ha- »bu*g, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia. Reading. York. Scranton. Lebanon and other places, will make re 1-orts. Tiiis work will be followed by some unusually attractive and valuable motion pictures, dealing with safety, health and tire -prevention. The films for these motion picture are, in a num ber of cases, new and will be shown for the ti-st time. On Wednesday, November IS. the morning will be given up to the hp tional work, as 011 the firs: day. while the afternoon will deal, in a general session, with unemployment and labor mediation. The evening will be de ployed in visiting the magnificent ex hibit in the Chestnut street ball. Those taking part on this day will include Lewis T. Bryant. Commissioner , ot Labor, Trenton, X. J., and one at' . the foremost tire experts; Charles P. . Xeill. recently Commissioner of La-'ior I for the United States government. and , now with the American Smelting and Hr Company. New York Citv: j Timothy Daley, president of the Inter national "Polishers' I'nion; John K. jO'Leary, a foundry expert and vice president of the International Mould ers' Union; Arthur McDonald, pres ident of the American Dyers' and Mer- Icerizers' Union; A. A. Myrup, treas- 1 'trer of the Bakery and Confectionery Workers' International Union: Kimer Greenwalt, United States Immigration j Commissioner and ex-president of the j Pennsylvania State Federation of I. a - bor; Mrs. Sarah A. Conboy. internation jal organizer of the United Textile , Workers' Union; Miss Frances A. Kel ler. managing director of the legisla tive committee of the North American Civic League for Immigrants, well known for her important writings on immigration; A. B. Farquhar. promi- I rient manufacturer, of York. Pa.: An i drew Furuseth. president of the Inter national Seamen's Union of America, and Frank N. Bump, member of the i Massachusetts Board of Conciliation and Mediation and also member of the Boot and Shoe Workers' Union. Compensation for Industrial Accidents Ou November 19 tie morning ses sion wiil be given up to the four sec . tionai meetings, while a general session, ! dealing with the Pennsylvania Indus . trial Board and cont(x-nsa practical laboratory to which speakers can refer in dealing with the various topics of the program, and holds very much the same relation to the confer ence as does the scientific laboratory j in a college to the class room work, i This exhibition will undoubtedly be j the best which lias been held in Har-1 ristiurg. as more time has been spent j in its selection and arrangement than , in the case of any of the previous sim- | ilar exhibitions held in this citv. Co-operative Safety Movements A committee the department was instructed to take up with the various aetive organizations of Harrisburg the matter of making the conference week also a safety revival in the city of Harrisburg. This Harrisburg co-or>eru tive work will include the making of the safety rules available free to the school children of the city through the aid of the motion picture theatre peo ple. The street railways will carry "Safety First" signs through the week. The police and firemen will wear "Safety "Firstbadges. The Board of Trade wili co-operate and attend at least one of the conference meetings, and many other activities are planned lor the week, for the purpose of get ting all Harrisburg interested in the great subject of safety, health and wel fare, particularly of the children and the employes. Why l» I.AIATIVK HHOMO qiIMVK Better Thus tbr Ordinary tlulalnef Because of Its tunic and laxative effect, LAXATIVE BROMO QI'ISINK will he found better than tlie ordinary Quinine for any purpose for which Quinine is used. Does not cause nervousness nor ringing in the head. Remember the full name and look for the signature of E. W. tiROVE on box. Price 25c. SURRENDERS AFTER » YEARS Man Indicted With Storey Co. Pro moters Gives Himself - p Philadelphia, Nov. 13.—Walter B. Riggs, of Xew Vork, who was indicted nine years ago on charges of conspiracy to defraud, in connection with the Storey Cotton Company swintile, came to this city yesterday and surrendered to Deputy Alan-foal James Kenney and Postal Inspectors Hawksworth and Brigli&m. He was held in $2,500 bail for the December term of couft. Riggs was .jointly indicted with Frank Marrin, Stanley Francis, Sophia Bwk ami other officials of the com pany. When Biggs heard of the arrest of Arthur 0. Howard, former general manager of the Storey Company, a moiMh ago, iie decided to come here and clear himself of the charge that 'has been hanging over him since the fraud was exposed. He says, and it is not disputed by the postal authorities, that he never had any connection with the Storey Company. It appears Riggs was president of t'ne General Heating and Lighting Company, of New York, and that, some of the Storey Company officials had purchased stock of tthat eowern. As the money was said to have passed through the bands of Riggs, lie was in cluded in the indictment. Kiggs now maintains that the light ing company was a legitimate enter prise and that the sale of st<*-k to the Htorey Cotton Company men was in tbe regular course <*f business and free from any suspicion of fraud. Riggs furnished bail immediately upon the amount be ing fixed. Quick, Painless Way to Remove Hairy Growths (Helps to Beauty) Here is a simple, unfailing way to rid the skin of objectionable hairs: With some powdered delatone and water make enough paste to cover tbe hairy surface, apply and in about 2 minutes rub off, wash the skin and every trace of hair has vanished. This is quite harmless, but to avoid disap pointment be sure to yet the delatone in an original package. Adv. SOCIAL AND PERSONAL fOLKMAX SHOOP WEDDING 1 Bride and Groom Will Leave as Missiou arles for Lutheran Church l»ebanon, Nov. 10.—Tho wedding ot'i the Rev. Fred Coleman, of Ldaanon.l and Miss Edith M. fShoop, of l'fiiladel-' phia, took place here yesterday at the parsonage of Salemn Lutheran church. The ceremony was [erformed by the Rev. Dr. T. E. S-hman, pastor of the church. Mrs. Charles Shoop, of Phila delphia, sister-in-law of tho 'bride, was tlie matron of honor. The Rev. H. D. Whirteker, of Derry Church, served as betft man. The couple will leave on Saturday for New York City from,where t'hey will set sail on the steamer St. Paul for Ijondon. Later they will lo cate in Rajah, province of Muudy, j where they will be engaged in mission- 1 ary work for the Lutheran Church of America. MAP OF STATE HIGHWAYS County aud Township Roads Also Shown in Large Size Diaphragm of Southeastern Pennsylvania The State Highway Department has just issued a highway map of the southeastern section of Pennsylvania on which State highways ami State-aid highways, as well as county and town- ship roads, are shown. The map is of large size, being drawn to the scale of four miles to one inch. It was prepar ed at the direction of State Highway Commissioner Bigelow and S. D. Fost er, chief engineer, by G. P. Strum, a draftsman under the direction of G. 11. Klseghans, chief draftsman of the de partment. The counties included in the map are Adams. York, l.o\. 13. —Word roai l.ed h»re yesterday announcing the death .r Baltimore of Dr. Samuel Butler Grime , a former resident here, but of late years a practicing physician of thai city. He was SI years old and death was hastened by the rceen „ death of his son. who was injured in on accident. The aged physician was a graduate of several colleges. SIMPLE WAY TO El DANDRUFF Stop Falling Hair and Itching Scalp There is one sure way that has never failed to remove dandruff at once, and that is to dissolve it, then yon destroy it entirely. To do this, .just get about, four ounces of plain, common liquid arvon from any drug store (this is all yon will need), apply it at night when retiring, use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tfys- By morning, most if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dis solve, anil entirely destroy, every single sign and trace of it, no matter bow much dandruff you may have. You will find all itching and digging of the scalp will stop instantly and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. If you value your hair, you should get rid of dandruff at once, for nothing destroys the bair so quickly. It not only starves the hair and makes it fall out, but it makes it stringy, straggly dull, dry, brittle and lifeless, aut everybody notices it. ' Adv.