/ sos* What a Dollar • W' - ' Will Do "W* —For a Gift or Two We have a splendid variety of the modest-priced articles suitable for gifts. As a special inducement to have you become acquainted with this store and see the splendid progress we have made and our excellent assortment of other gift suggestions, we have selected the following to sell special at One Dollar, while they last: SI.OO Choice SI.OO - Cut Glass Nappies, values up to $1.50 Sterling Silver Forks, values to $1.50 Baby Spoons, values up to $1.50 Solid Gold Scarf Pius, values to $2.00 Cuff Links, gold front, values to $1..~>0 Baby Lockets and Chain, values to $1.7") Coat Chains, gold filled, values to $2.00 Ribbon Fobs, ......values tip to $2.50 Beauty Pins, solid gold, values fo $2.7") Brooch Pins, gold filled, values to $2.50 Cigar Cutters, silver,.. .values to $2.00 Powder Pencils, silver, values to $2.(10 Party Cases, values up to $2.")0 Casseroles or Bean Pots, values to $1.75 Silver Baby Cups, values up to $1.70 Armolu Gold Clocks, values up to $1.75 Jewel Cases, values up to $1.50 Bar Pins, gold filled, values up lo $1.75 Cut Glass Comports, values up to $1.75 Six Rogers Teaspoons, values to $1.75 Hat Pins. ....» values up to SB.OO Mesh Bags, values up to s:i.oo Bracelets values to $1.50 Brass Umbrella Stauds, values fo $2.50 Brass Cuspidors, values lo $1.50 Choice of any Open Evenings of these I Until at A Christmas C APLAN COMPANY I JEWELERS , . I The Morr where *tiiiiotatoes. This in | vestigation will ultimately be extend ed to other uses for potato products, such as the manufacture of starch and glucose, in order to encourage the pro duction ot potatoes as a regular part in crop rotation in sections where this could be done with benefit. Iwo new ways have also been dis covered of utilizing surplus and cull apples. One is the manufacture of ap ple sirup by clarifying and boiling down apple juice. The sirup obtained promises to be a welcome addition to our diet as well as affording a new market for the apple grower. The other method of disposing of the sur , l'' us ol f apples is the manufacture of concentrated cider. Hitherto the mar ket for cider has been limited, due to the fact that it can only be kept a short time and that its bulk makes its transportation too expensive when long ) distances are to be covered. The con centrated cider ferments very slowlv when kept at a low temperature. When' diluted with water it lias prmticallv the same flavor as the original ai.pl'e juice from which it was ma le, and' its condensed form makes it much chean er to ship. '' Considerable attention has also been - devoted to the fis'h industry which up , to the present time has been a subject of much less scientific study than meat packing. With tne growing scarmtv of meat, however, ii seems obvious that Hsh will come to play a more import ant part in the nation's fool supplv and Mich uesfions as the best means ot storage, transportation, and the pre vention of waste deserve careful in , v ': stl Kation. An instance of the value ot this work is afforded bv the Alaiue sardipe industry. As a result of «ov e mine lit investigation a marked im provement has taken place in the qua.ity of American sardines put up by establishments along tlie coa«; of that State. NEW KINO OF TAX SWKAKIM; Board Gets Letter Woman Surely Did Not Mean for Official* Hover, X. .1., De-. 18.— ThX\Iorris Count* Tax Board sat here this we_>k '< with* its usual admirable caHu and dig nity until • new business '' came up. Then Secretary Pred L>. Danlon pick ] e.l up a bunch of letters addressed to' the body, opened one envelope, cleared! I his throat an I read: "I thought I was your only girl. I Men are deceitful de\ ils and you are I 'he worst I know of. Vou caii't ks< jme any more, nor even lu >k at me, you villain. The best place for you j I is hell, with brimstone and charcoal. 1 j Shame on you, you cuss." I Pour thing, ' said one of the board, j ''But I don't know how you've got I the nerve, Fred, to stand up and I j read '' "This thing isn't for me!" siyiuted j the Secretary. "I'm just wondering j | which of you she means." The protest was unanimous. Finally j | it was deduced that somebody's sweet- i | heart had both tax worries and love troubles and had mixed her envelopes j so that the villain got a protest I against an assessment, while the Tax j Board got what the letter recommends | as the best abiding place for the; "cuss." LONG-LOST BROTHER HOME Sister Thought He Had Been Killed in j West "-!H Years Ago Collingswood, N. J., Dec. 18.—Ab sent from home and family for forty years, reported shot and killed at Black Hills, Ariz., twenty-eight years ago, and not having been a'ble to locate his people since then, William Gere sur prised his sister. Mrs. Stella Shockley, of this place, when he walked into her home. He had difficulty in making her believe that he was her long-lort brother who left home when he was 3 5 years of age, when they were living in Ivow Vork. i SUNKJCTORANGES W L Are Now on Sale by All Good Dealers lliili ing should hold a Sunkist Orange. fornia in your home on Christmas day. Sunkist Seedless Navels should be The harmful effects of overeating served at the Christmas breakfast. A other foods are minimized by eating J j big bowl of golden Sunkist should oranges. Sunkist Seedless Navels are H decorate the center of the Christmas the best now on the market. Get a ; table. ' box today. !| jr*ls Sunkist Lemons Order by Phone Order Sunkist Lemons, too, to use in cooking Your telephone is a Sunkist agency at your j Christmas dinner. Use the juice in place of vinegar finger tips. Simply call your dealer and f , | in salads or in any dish that calls for vinegar. Note the dainty flavor— say "Send Sunkist." Don't say merely ✓ California Fruit tj the delicious difference. "oranges" or "lemons"—"Sunkist" S Growers Exchange 1 Sunkist Lemons are practically seedless—.juicy, tart, full flavored. brings the best. S 139 N. Clark Street, Chicago 1 Best looking lemons to serve sliced or quartered with meats, oysters, Prepare for Christmas. Phone S ail us this cou P°? and we wi 'l , fish or tea. Insist Oil Sllllkist fora boxof Sunkist Oranges. S page redpe book, showing over 110 Get Sunkist Lemons for the f ways of using Sunkist Oranges and Sunkist Premiums Make Fine premium book, which tells you how /"»» • , f-t , Jr to trade Sunkist wrappers for beautiful tabls »«ver.j ju t send this coupon. ' — Wmam ~ ——■» i | PAIL TO FIX BLAME IN DEATH j Jury Disagree in Case of Students j Struck by Train •South Bethlehem, Pa., Dec. IS. —The! Coroner's jury, which Wednesday night investigated the death here on Novem ber 2" of John Clymer, the Lafayette College graduate, at the Brodhead ave nue grade crossing of tlhe Lehigh Valley railroa I, and the injury to Hugh Miller and Jam us McCaudJess, University of I Pennsylvania students, disagreed as to ! i the responsibility for the accident. j The persons named, and .'enrv Chid j sey, of Eastou, and Harold Kelly, of i j the University of Pennsylvania, were ! I on their way rrom here to Kastou in aii j | auto about 3.50 on Sunday morning, • j when they were struck by a backing en i I gine at the crossing, which was Uupro- ■ tected at that hour by safety gates or , flagman. The Speed Limit Motorists going through a small j town up in northern Indiana bear wit-, ness to the fact that sarcasm reaches' j a high stage of development there. Go- j i in.g into Hie town one is met by a sigu ' reading, "Speed Limit 110 Miles an j I Hour." "Mighty decent people in this; town," thinks the motorist. But be- 1 fore he has >:ione far he realizes the j sarcasm fully. The streets are so rough and the road through there to Chicago lias so many turns in it that it would be impossible to go faster than tea ' miles au hour without running into some one's trout yard.—lndianapolis j ! News. Lii ' SCENES SHOWING INCIDENTS ON 'V. ' ' I S . :• • . , . CONVEYING OF A ACEOSS THE LONO INHABITANTS OE TOMASZOV WHOSE HOOSES WERE RUINED ,Y ROLIINO PLAINS NEAR TOMASZOV. THE SHEIX FIRE OF THE COMBATANTS. • A" • ' ,• . ' ■ • i AUSTRIAN RAILWAY WAGONS CAPTURED BY THE RUSSIANS AT MfculiJiniti OF A RUSSIAN RAILROAD BATTALION AT THE CAP- * I BIELLGITZ—THE RUSSIAN FLAG FLOATS IN THE FOREGROUND. TURED GALICIAN TOWN OF RAW A-RUStfKA. •? (PAYS $15,000 FOR AUTO KILLING ! Wrenn, Former Tennis Champion, Set tles With Mrs, Loveday Newburgh, N. V., Dec. 18. —The suit j brought by Ktliel A. Loveday, of Tux edo, to compel liobert L>. Wrenn, former tennis champion, to pay $50,000 dam ages for causing the death of Herbert G. Loveday, organist of St. Mary's church, Tuxedo Park, in May, was dis , continued yesterday, when the jury was ' being drawn for the trial. Announce- I ment was made that settlement had been made by the payment of sls, i 000. Wrenn, who is president of the Uuit ied States Lawn Tennis Association, j had taken some friends to the Krie sta ] j tion at Tuxedo on the night of May o. | | Mr. Loveday, Charles W. Spreckley,! j sexton of the church; Mrs. Spreckley, Alexander Norris and others were walk ing in the highway when the automo bile in which Wrenn and the chauffeur wore returning to their home ran them down. Loveday was so badly hurt that j he died the next day. | Wrenn was held to await action oil i the Grand Jury in $5,000 bail. The ' Grand Jury did not iudict him. Spreck ! ley and his wife were seriously injured. I It is reported that they have settled ion payment of $9,000, Breaks Skull on Subway Stairs New York, Dec. IS.—Lewis Lequeer, j 62, a retired leather merchant, living with his wife in the Sevilla apartments, ; 117 West Fifty-eighth street, fell on the subway stairs at Times Square sta [ tion last night and fractured his skull. He was taken to Flower hospital by Dr. i Rovd. It was said he most likelv would | die. JUDGMENT FOR ARCHBALD j Government Must Pay His Expenses | Up to Time of Impeachment Scran ton, Pa., Dec. 18.—Judge C. B. j 'Witmer, in tlie United States District ! Court yesterday, gave former Commerce | Court Judge K. W. Archbald, of this | > city, judgment against the United States government for $583.45 and the | cost of collection. The complainant was appointed a I Commerce Court Judge by President; j Taft in 1910. Along with the salary.! [he was lo !.'• allowed sl, •>IMI a year for' j expenses, In was impeached January j ' II!. 1913, hut his expenses were paid I j only to August 24, 1912. He insisted upon being paid to the j [date of his impeachment, but it was] ! said that Congress failed to appropri- i | ate any money for liis expenses after (August 24. Judge Witmer decided that, he is entitled to his expenses up! ! to the date of his removal. INDIANAPOLIS AIDS POOR Organized Effort to Relieve Distress Is Under Way Indianapolis, Dec. IS.—Work of re lieving the distressed condition of the j thousands of Indianapolis people said | to be destitute because of unemploy ment began yesterday. Committees to take charge of the various branches ■ of the work were named yesterday, when prominent citizens met witlh j Joseph T. Bell. An old hospital building will ] equipped w+tli rots ami thrown open to I those without shelter. i.i'beral dona ' tions of food aml money have been j made. PRISONERS ARE LASHED j Four, Convicted of Larceny, Are Whipped at Wilmington Wilmington, Del., Dec. l IX.—Pour ! prisoners in the State court who plead- J od guilty to larceny yesterday received sentences of lashes. Charles Lynch, charged with stealing a stove, received 10 lashes and a year |>n prison. Klwood Massev, colored, | charged with stealing automobile ac cessories, IMIS given 10 lashes and nine months. Harry Spencer, who had just | been released from the workhouse on a | similar charge when rearrested, was i given lo lashes and one year. John Collins, colored, got 10 lashes and one year for entering a man's house and : stealing lead pipe. Postoffice Is Robbed A 1 toon a, Pa., Dec. 18. —Burglars i broke into the Kast Altoona postoflice j Wednesday night and stole SSOO in I cash. The safe was unlocked. The | nionef stolen was money order receipts, I always heavy at this time of the year. Breaks Leg in Bed Altoona, Pa., Dec. IS. — Mrs. Verna I Rhodes, aged 42. of Juniata Gap, broke , her left log while asleep in bed Wed- I nesdav night. It is supposed that in an attempt to turn s>ne twisted the leg, and snapped the bono above the knee. Wedded Fifty Years *Mauch Chunk, Pa., Dec. 18.—Solo mon Johnson, of Alauch Chunk, a prom inent Civil war veteran, and his wife, Wednesday celebrated their golden wed ding at their home. Air. Johnson is 7 4 years old and his wife is two years younger. 7