HOUSEHOLD TALKS Henrietta D. Grauel How Lye Should be Used Frequently one hoars of serious burns caused by lye or potash, then one feels as if this dangerous sub stance should not be sold indiscrim inately. But rightly handled lye is a good friend aud there are thousands of households where it has been used for generations without accident. It should, however, never be used in its raw natural form. Holes should be cut in the top of the can and the con tents poured into several gallons of water. This solution should be kept in jugs and ttsed sparingly. It is :» wonderful disinfectant. A little poured into sinks, drains and greasy pipes will sweeten and clear them almost at once. Very bad drains should l>e filled with the so lution at night and flushed in the morning. Every housekeeper has had experi ences in cleaning when only lye could be relied upon to remove the dirt and its whitening powers deserve praise in deed but it should not be used regularly for scrubbing for in time it takes the life front any wood and softens the fibres. The best way to use lye is to make it into soap ami this is good season for this duty for the necessary fat to put with it can be secured easily now. The proportions for hard soap, for general cleaning purposes, is five gal lons of water, five pounds of fat and one can of lve. Boil together ii a great kittle until the mass is like milk. Theu add salt until the soap separates from the water. Boil fifteen minutes longer and cool. Skim off the soap and 1 WHAT ARE YOU f | SEEKING? ! | 1 "\\ hether it s a room, house, apartment, office, |3 store, studio, garage, lot or farm, you will find it §i IS by placing a want ad in the classified columns of $ 1 the I | STAR-INDEPENDENT 1 i«fc TT . , , _ -IS Harrisburg s Great Home Newspaper % Call Bell phone 3280; Independent phone 245 Si I or 246. I ASK FOR ADVERTISING I ); Satisfactory=-Refreshing== Healthful i DOEHNE BEER ! ;> Its delicious snappy flavor commends it to lovers > of good beer. < 3; Brewery thoroughly equipped. J> ;I Unexcelled for Purity and Excellence. < I DOEHNE < J Bell BU6 L ORDER IT Independent 318 < !; § j" STARJNDEPENDENT. } j II >J LIBRARV IS IBMPLCFE UI I «» F"] WITHOUT TWO CERTAIN BOOKS*—THE BIBLE AND J"\ 2 !! KD .-??£* E FT?F,^ E I» L X= A QUOTATION USETF-M LITERATURE §*! ♦ , 7 T FROM ONE OF THESg | ] I i The above Certificate J ;; Entitles bearer to this $5.00 Illustrated Bible I H '1 offke ®tvocJ£? , ? p * p pr® r - '•••*«• with tho stated .mount tb«t • I » coran the aocemrr EXPENSE i!e.»e of thi« greet .fcetribotion -including ♦ . . dark hira, cort of packing, chocking, expreM from factory, etc., etc W !! z j | MAGNIFICENT ("«C illustration in announcements from day to day) is* 011 l IICTDATCn H .l n ll " A fx 'Me limp leather, with overlapping covers 5 , , iLLUoIKAItU and title stamped in sold, with numerous full-page plates 2 <! <*s Editu* i» color from the world famous Tissot collection, together ♦ ( ,VO *i the with six hundred superb pictures graphically illustrating f BI BL E , p' am the ve «e in the light of modern Biblical ft ; j J- .* no *'' ea SC a "d research. The text conforms to the ♦ )( authorized edition, is self-prcnouncing, with copious ■ ■ * marginal references, maos and hebs: printed on thin L. z • bible paper, flat opening at all pa<;«; beautiful, 15 1.12 cxSSi.r ♦ ~ readable type. Oce Free Certificate and Ut« * h««T f Alto an Edition for Catholics 1 t I ILLIiaiMTED ;he style of binding. Through ar exclusive arrangesneat we 2 1 ; [ BIBLE which is in siik cloth; have been most fortunate in securing theft contams all of the illus- Catholic Bible, Douay Version, endorsed 2 ! 'rations and * tv Cardinal Gibbons and Archbishop ft maps. On, fr„ I 01. pvopSsp (now Cardinal) Farley, as well as by the ♦ : eertlflcete nnd Oil. "".not various Archbishops of the country. Theft J ; illustrations consists of the full-page en- ♦ Z » u T J ..... gratings approved by the Church, with- ft £2 .'iJ'J* 0 a 5 pictures. Jt will be distributed in the same bind.ngs as the Pro- ♦ ' J tesUnt books and at tne same Amount Expense Items, with the necessary Free Certificate, ft « > M * IL OKDEBS—Any b.jok by parrel post, include EXTRA 7 cents within 1 ! { ( 1(1 rail**; 10 cents 150 to JOO mllee; for greater distances aelc your puetmaster X ' J , amount to include for J pounds * * ♦♦ft»e»»W»ft»<H9«ft«»f*a*a*tttt«|>nit t ttmf ■? * 1 1 DEATH AFTE3 AUTO'S BLOW Woman Struck as She Alights From Car and Hurled Into Curb '"Vraiiion, ''a.. \o\. 2.— r While alight I inj; I'rom a strec; <•»:• in Xort'.i S ran ton yesterday iii'torncoD, Miss -Sue Mar ion. of Wili'v Bii;re. was struck bv an | un i so badly injured thai put into molds. This will improve with age. To make soft soap take one quart of i the hard soap, before it cools, and add lit to four gallons of water. Boil this until reduced one-half and cool in i crocks or jars. Tl;e hard soap is excellent for scrub bing purposes when mops are used and the older it is the better it cleans. The soft soap is to be used for laundry 'purposes and for washing greasy cook ery pans. M ashing fluid is also made from lye, it is too strong for the average family unless the clothes are very coarse and exceedingly dirty. The Javelle water is much preferred. Here is the recipe for making the !ve fluid but it is published with the reservations noted. Cse a large stone jar and label it "washing fluid. LYE." In this put two gallons of cold water, one tablespoou of carbonate of ammonia and one . tablespoon of -alts of tartar. When these lime dissolved add one ten-cent can of lye. cork and lot stand several days, t'se a half a pint of this to a tub of water when washing clothes. To i bleach put two tablespoonfuls into a washboiler of water. For scrubbing use one tablespoonful to a bucket of water. Beside removing odors, freshening sinks and drains a little of the solu tion used in washing shelves will pre . vent mice entering cupboards. It should I never be sprinkled around in its crys tal form for it is capable of doing un told harm to individuals and of ruining any surface it touches. she died before she could be moved to a hospital. The young woman had just alighted, j when the automobile whizzed from be ; hind the ear on which she had been rid iug. She was thrown to one side of the I road, her head strikiug against the i curb, which fractured her skull. HARRISBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT, MONDAY EVENING, NOV KM BKR 2, 1914. \THE AFTER HOUSE KStory of love. Mystery and a Private Yacht By MARY ROBERTS RINEHART j Ctpyrifkt, 1913, ky tkt McClurr Pvbhcntttns, Imt, Cff igki, 1914, b Mary Hjktru Rjmakmt. Continued ! | "You sec. ,i was mailed downtowu lau- this afternoon I lie j bote! «ot It at T ■•Viuek Marshall! wanted lt> get h detective. lull I 1 ; thought of veil I Knew - you knew the' ; boat, and then-yon Had said' - • Anything in all tne world that I ean do to help you 1 will do." I said, look ing at her» And Ibe thing that 1 could not keep out of my eyes made her drop bers. "Sweet little document!" said Me. Whlrtei. looking over my shoulder. "Seut by some one witlj a nice dlsposi ; tion. What do the crosses mark?" "The location of the bodies when ; found." I explained —"these ttree. This I looks like the place where Buqus lay . unconscious. That one uear the rail I ! don't know about, nor this by tliu j tuuiumast." "We thought they uilgtit mark ! places, clews, perhaps, that I-id been overlooked. The whole-tbe whole document is a taunt, isn't it? The scaffold and the a* and 'not vet: a ! piece of bravado!" j "Right you are." said McWhirter ad j mirinsly. "A little escape of glee froiu somebody who's laughing too soon One-thirty—it will soon be the proper j hour for something to happen on the Ella, won't it? If that was sent by 1 some member of the crew-and it looks j like it: they are loose today-the quick er we follow it up the better if there's ■ anything to follow." "We thought if yon would go early j in the morning before any of theui I make au excuse to go back on board" - | "We will go right way: but. please— i don't build too much on this. It's a i sood possibility, that's all. Will the watchman let us on board?" "We thought of that. Here is a noto' |to him froui Marshall, and —will you do us one more kindness?" "I will." "lhen— If vou shou d dud anything; bring it to us: t<» the police later, if you must, but to us first She held out net band first to Me- ( Wbirter. then to nie i uept it a little} longer than I should huv>>. perhaps and she did n >t ;ai{(> ii away "It Is such a comfort." she said, "to! nave you with n* at ui not against us ; lor Marshall liirtm do it, Leslie t uteau— it is hard i..r ine to think or von : as Dr. Leslie He didn't do It. At first, we thought lie might have, ami he was delirious and could not reassuiv us. He swears Ue did not I think Just at first, lie was afraid lim had It. but tie did not. I believe that anil you uiust." I believed her—l believed anything! she said. I think that if she had chosen to say that I tiad wielded tin murderer's ax on the Ella l shoiiiu have gone to the gallows rather man gainsay her From that niirtit. I was the devil's advocate, if you like I was determined to save Marshall Turner I stood lu the street, bareheaded, watching her tax ion i> as it rallied down tiie street. McWhirter touched me on the arm. "Wake up!' he said. "We have work to do, mv friend." We went upstairs together, cautions ly. not to rouse the bouse. At tile top Mac tinned arid patted itie on the elbow, my shoulder beiug a foot or so above him "Good boy!" he said "And if that •hirt front and ti* didn't knock into eternal oblivion the deck washing uu the Ella. I'll eat them.'" CHAPTER XVII. The Thing, m DESERVE no credit for the solution of the Ella s mystery. I have a certain quality <»} force, perhaps, and I am n't lacking in physical courage: hut I iihvo no finesse of intellect. McWhirter. a foot shorter than I, round of face, jo rial and stocky, has as much subtlety In his little finger as I have in ray six feet and a fractiou or body All the way to the river, therefore, be was poring over the drawing He named the paper at once "Ought to know It." he said In reply to my surprise. "Sold enough paper at tbe drug store to qualify as a sta tionery engineer." He writhed as was bis habit over his jokes and then fell to work at the drawing again. "A book." he said, "and an ax. and a gibbet or gallows. B-a-g-t&iu makes 'bag.' Doesn't go far, does It? Mil- j morons duck, tsn't he? Any one wtio ran write 'ha! ha!' under a gallows feat real bnmor. <J-a-b, b-a-sr!" The Ella still lay In the Delaware. ; half a mile or so from her original moorings. She carried the usual riding lights—a white one In the bow, an other at the stern, and the two ver tical red lights which showed her not . under command. In reply to repealed signals, wc were unable to rouse the watchman. 1 had brought an electric ; flash with me. and by its aid we found a rope ladder over the side, with a ; small boat at its foot. Although the boat Indicated the pres- . ence of the watchman on board, we i made our way to tbe deck without 1 challenge. Here McWhirter suggested that the situation might be disagree- j able were the man to awaken and get ! at us with a gun. We stood by tbe top of the ladder. | therefore, and made another effort to : rouse him. "Hey. watchman!" I call- ' ed. And McWhirter. in a deep bass, ! sang lustily, "Watchman, what of tbe j night?" Neither of us made any per- j ceptible impression on tbe silence and ! gloom of the Ella. McWhirter grew less gay. The de- i serted decks of the ship, her tragic bis- i tory. ber Isolation, tbe darkness, . which my small flash seemed only to ! intensify, ail bad their effect on him. ' "It's tot my goat," he admitted. "It smebs lil.e :i tomb." "Don't be au ass." "Turn the light over tbe side and see if we fastened that boat. We dou't want to lie left here Indettuitely." "That's folly. Mac." I said, but I obeyed him. "The watchman's boat Is there, so we"— But he caught me suddenly by the arm aud shook ree. "My God!" he said. "What is that over there?" It was a moment before my eyes aft er the flashlight could discern any thing in the darkness. Mac was point ing forward. When 1 could see Mac was ready to laugh at himself. "This tomb has sure got my goat, he said sheepiAily. "I thought I saw something dt;»k around tbe corner of that building, but 1 think it was a ray from a searchlight on one of those boats." "The watchman, probably." 1 said quietly. But my heart beat a little faster. "The watchman takiug a look at us and gone for his gun." 1 thought rapidly. If Mac bad seen anything. 1 did not believe it was-the watchman. But there should be a watchman on board—in the forward house, probably. I gave Mac my re volver and put. the light in my pocket. I might want both hands that night. I saw better without the flash, and. It Wa* Covered With Dirk Brown' Stains. guideil partly by the bow light, partly by my knowledge of the yacht, 1 led the way across ibe deck. The forward house was closed aud locked, aud uo knocking produced any indication of life. The alter we found noi only locked, but barred across with strips of wood nailed into place. The forecastle was likewise closed. It was a dead ship. No tiguie reappearing to alarm him, Mac took tue droving out of his pocket and focused the flashlight on It. "This i cross by the mainmast." he said—"that wou'.d be where?" "Hight behind you. there.'' He walked to tilt; mast, and examined carefully around its base. There was nothing there, and even now I do not know to what that cross alluded, un less poor Schwartz! "Then this other one—forward, you call it. don't you? Suppose we locate that.'" All expectation of the watchman having now died, we went forward ou the port side to the approximate loca tion of the cross. This beiug in the neighborhood where Mac bad thought he saw something move, we approach ed with extreme caution. But nothing more ominous was discovered than the port lifeboat, nothing more ghostly heard than the occasional creak with which it rocked in its davits. The lifeboat seemed to be indicated by tbe cross. It swung almost shoul der high on MeWhlrter. We looked under and around it. with a growing feeling that we had misread the sig nificance of the crosses, or that the Fillister record extended to a time be fore the "she devil" of the Turner line was dressed in white and turned into a lady. I was feeling underneath the boat, with a sense of absurdity that Me- Whlrter put Into words. "I oul.v hope." he said, "that the watchman does not wake up now and see us. He'd be justified In filling us with lead or put ting us in atraltjackets." But 1 had discovered something. "Mac." I said, "some one has been at this boat within the last few minutes.'' "Why 7" "Take your revolver and watch the deck. "One of the tarecas"— "What's that?" "One of the water barrels has been upset, nnd the plug is out. It is leak ing Into the boat. It Is leaking fast, and there's only a gallon or so in the bottom. Give me the light." The contents of the boat revealed the truth of what 1 had said. The boat wag in confusion. Its cover had been thrown back, and tins of biscuit, bail ers. boatliooks and extra rowlocks were jumbled together in confusion. The barecas lay on itM side, antl its plug Iwd been either knocked or drawn ouc. MeWhlrter was for turning t« In spect the boat, but I ordered him stern ly to watch the deck. He was lncilued to laugh at my caution, which, he claimed, was a quality In me he had not suspected. He lounged against the roil neur me and iu spite of his chaff kept a keen enough lookout. The barecas of water were lashed amidships. In the bow and ateru were ! small air tight compartments, and in j the stem was also a small locker from j which the biscuit tins had been taken. ! I was about to abandon my search | when 1 sow something gleaming In the ; locker aud reached in aud drew It out. It appeared to be au ordinary white abeet. but its presence there was curi ous. 1 turned the light on. It was covered with dark brown stains. Even now the memory of that sheet I turns me 111. I shook it out. and Mac jat my exclamation came to me. It ! was not a sheet, at all—that is, not a 1 whoie one. It was a circular piece of i white cloth, on whi -h In black were | curious marks, a six pointed star pre dominating. There were o(hers-a crescent, a crude attempt to draw what might be either a dog or a lamb and a cross. From edge to edge It ; was s men red with blood. Of what followed just after both ' McWhirter and 1 are vague. There seemed to be simultaneously a yeli of ! fury from the riggiug overhead and the crash of a falling body on the deck near its. Then we were closing with a kicking, biting, screaming thing that bore me to the ground, extinguishing I the little electric flash, and that, rising suddenly from under me. had Mc- Whirter in the air and almost over board before I caught him. So dazed i were we by the onslaught that the thing—whatever it was—could have es caped and left us none the wiser. But. although it eluded us lu the darkness, it did not leave. It was there, whim pering to itself, searching for sonie | thing-the sheet. As I steadied Mac it passed me. I caught at !t. Immedi ately the straggle began all over again. But this time we had tbe advantage i and kept it. After a battle that seem ed to last all night, and that was ac tually fought all over that part of the deck, we held the creature subdued, and Mac, getting a hand free, struck a ; match. It was Charlie Jones.- That, after all, is the story. Jones was a madman, a homicidal maniac of the worst type. Always a mad man, the homicidal element of his dis ease was recurrent and of a curious nature. He thought himself a priest of heaven, appointed to make ghastly sacrifices at certain signals from on high. The signals 1 am not sure of; he turned taciturn after bis capture and would not talk. 1 am inclined to think that a shooting star, perhaps in a particular quarter of the heavens, was his signal. This is distinctly pos sible and is made probable by the stars which he had painted with tar on his sacrificial robe. The story of the early moruing of : Aug. 12 will never be fully known: but much ot it. in view of our knowi ; edge, we were able to reconstruct. Thus—Jones ate his supper that night, a mild and well disposed individual. : During the afternoon before he had j read prayers for the soul of Schwartz, in whose departure he may or may not | have had a part-I am inclined to , think not. Jones construing his misslou j as being one to remove the wicked and the oppressor, aud Schwartz hardly i coming under either classification. He was at the wheel from midnight | until 4 In the morning on the night jof the murders. At certain hours we i believe that he went forward tn the | forecastle head and performed, clad in his priestly robe, such devotions as his disordered mind dictated. It Is my idea that he looked, al these times, for a heavenly signal, either a meteor or some strange appearance of ihe heav- I ens. It was known that he was a j poor sleeper and spent much time at ; night wandering around. On the night of the crimes it Is prob nble that lip performed his devotions early, and thou got the signal. This is evidenced by Singleton's finding the ax against the captain's door 1 ♦fore midnight. He had evident : y been dis turbed. We believe that he intended to kill the captain and Mr. Turner, but made a mistake in the rooms. He clearly intended to Uiil the Danish girl. Several passages in his Bii.le. marked with a red cross, showed his inflamed hatred of loose women, and be be lieved Karen Hansen to be of that type. To Be Continued. Carvers' Tonic Tablets For nerves, weakness and nervous prostration, SO cents at druggists. Adr. QUAEBiIL ENDS IN TRAGEDY Native Russian Stabbed by Austrians in Altercation Over Waj: Norristown, Pa., Nov. 2.—Walde slaw Chiastv was stabbed to death in front of his home in Swedesburg at midnight. Joseph Koehamar an-.l Joseph Mazur are in jail charged with beinw the murderers. It is said the men quarreled over the war, the prisoners being Austrians and the dead man was a Kussian. Chiastv was stabbed eight times, and was cnr ried into the house by neighbors, who were summoned by his grandfather. The Bridgeport police caught one man in bed at his boarding house. The other was found beneath a porch. Revivalists at Mahanoy City Mahanoy City, Pa., Nov. 2.—The Munhall and Lowe evangelistic party, of Philadelphia, opened a religious cam paign here 'yesterday. A tabernacle seating several thousand has been erect ed. It was comfortably filled at the opening services. The Protestant churches are behind the campaign. Cuts Throat for Imaginary Sins Hazleton, iPa., Nov. 2.—Worrying because of imaginary sinfulness, al though s woman of exemplary char acter, Mrs. John Angove, aged 57, of Hazleton, arose from bed. cut her turoat with a penknife and lies a.t the Btaite hospital, between life and death. Reading City Solicitor Resigns Reading, Pa., Nov. 2.—City Solicitor H. P. Koiser announced yesterday that ho had tendered his reoignation, to take effect November 14. The position pavs $3,000. POISON VICTIM WAITS END Ex-Army Officer Bids Qood-Bye to Griof- Stricken Wife and Is Pre pared for Inevitable Philadelphia, Nov. 1!. — Knowing that death is only a'iiout forby-eig'ht hours distant, Adolph Langhorst. a former of ticer in the United States army and a victim of poison tablets, who is in the "Medfcoo-Ohiruroical hospital, yesterday resigned himself to his fate and c'heer fullybade gowd-'bye to his wife, who sat at his bedside throughout the day. has been a patient in the hospital for several days, 'but it was not until Saturday t'hat his identity was re vealed. \\ hen admitted to the institu tion he declared his name was Magrane. This he did. he explained, because Tie wished to avoid notoriety. Laugh or st, reiterated the statement he made Saturday when he declared that ho had taken the poison tablets it' mistake for peppermint lo; enges. He said that lie did not discover the error until he began suffering pains in the abdomen. He then went to the hos pital. The dying man spoke cheerfully to his wife, nurses and physicians until aibout noon yesterday when swollen ulcers in his throat silenced his vodce. Ho tiien wrote short note* to his wife and in these told her he is prepared to d'ie ami in calmly awaiting the end. During the afternoon he was visited 'by •C. Stuart Patterson, Jr., his attorney and former comrade in fue army. The two men fought in the Spanish Ameri can war and were members of I'iie Sixth United States Coast Artillery, was advanced to the rank of second lieutenant, but left t'lie army two years ago. Physicians at the hospital declared yesterday that Langhorst probably will die Wednesday. Everytihimg known to medical science, they declare, lias been employed to save the life of the pa tient, but he is gradually growing weaker and is now beyond all aid. Mrs. Langhorot returae«l to her home last night in accordance with the wisti of her husband. She will return when his deat'h is announ-e.l and claim tlie body. ORDERS SCHOOL HEAD TO JAIL | Judge Gives Superintendent Ten Days ; and SSOO Fins for Contempt j Cleveland, Nov. 2. —Common Pleas Judge N'eff has sentencet super:iuten-: dent J. M. H. Frederick, of the Cleve land public schools, to serve 10 days: in jail and pay a fine of si>oo for con-j tempt of court. Superintendent Fred erick was found guilty of violating the | court's order which restrained school officials from refusing to reappoint } teachers because of their activities in! the teachers' union. Attorneys for Superintendent Freder- 1 ick announced that an appeal would be made to the higher court at once. Thi action will work a stay of execution of the sentence. Superintendent Frederick was found guilty Monday last, but the court gave him until Saturday to rein state the teachers "and lighten his of fense. '' TWO KILLED BY EXPLOSION Father and Daughter Fatally Injured at Duke Centre Kane. Pa.. .Nov. 2. — In a gas explo sion Saturday night at Duka Outre, W. M. George and his daughter, Alma George, were fatally burned. The explosion occurred ft the George home and is thought to have been caused by a leak in the gas connection. The force of the explosion was so givat that Mr. George an i his daughter were blown through a window into th yard, a distance of 20 feet. When neighbor*' came to their assistance their clothing was a mass of flames. They were taken to a hospital, where the daughter died at midnight and the father one hou.'j later. The George home and the ad joining residence, owned bv S. M. Sal j livan, were burned. I CAR KILLS COURT CLERK Steps to Track as Halloween Party Waits for Special Pittsburgh, Nov. 2. —Robert P. Moore, chief clerk of the Allegheny county Common Pleas Court, died in the Homeopathic Hospital yesterday | morning from injuries received when struck by a street car at Brooksi le, a ! suburb. Moore, with a party of other county | officials, hail been attending a Hal loween celebration near by. All were wailing for a special car to take then back to this city, when Moore stepped to the track. No one had noticed a ! swiftly-moving regular car approach j ing. It struck Moore. The injured man was placed, aboard the car and hurried to the h.spiial, where it was found his skuil, right leg and au arm had been fractured. DEATH SLEEP IN BARN Man Whose Bodjf Was Found Sup posed to Have Caused Fire Woodb.ourne, Pa., Nov. 2. —After the barn or Zephaniab Por.'e had been' burned at 7 o'clock last evening, the charred boilv of Hugh Ocstello was found in the ruins. Uoßtoi o had loafing in the baru ; all day, not feeling well, it is said. It is believed that he smoked an.l went to sleep, thus setting the structure' alire. It was not known, however, that j he had perished in the flames until' they had been subdued by the I*.iig heme firemen, called when smoke is-i suing from the barn directed attention i to the blaze. Loss, SII,OOP. Dying of Stab Wound in Lung Lebanon, Pa., Nov. 2.—William Ma lone, of Philadelphia, is in a critical condition at the Good Samaritan bos pi Lai, suffering from stab wounds, one of which pierced the lung. Malone claims he was attacked durCng a quarrel ■bv a foreigner—now under arrest—j armed with a stiletto, at Myerstawn | Saturday night. Malone is' 35 years I old and" is employed as a farm hand, j He is not expoeted to recover. Cumberland Valley Railroad In Effect May 24, 1914. TnUaa L«r» Harrlabnr* — For Winchester and Martinsburg, at , 6.03, *7.50 a. m.. *3.40 p. m. For Hageratown. Cliambersburg and Intermediate stations, at *5.03, «7.00, : •11.hS a. m., *3.40, 5.32. •7.40, U.Qu ; p. m. Additional trains (or Carlisle and Mechatik-aburg at 9.48 a. m„ 2.18, 3.27. i b.3l>, 9.30 n. m. For Dlllsburg at 6.03, *T.BO and *11.53 | a. m.. 2.18. '3.40, 6.32. G.SO p. m. •Dally All other trains dally except Sunday. J H. TONGE. H A. KIDDIE, aP. A. SupW I FOOT STRAIN little Talks on Health and Hygiene by Samuel G. Dixon, M. D.. LL. D., Commissioner of Health V Rod yard Kujilinj; mnkesone of his characters in a military tal-o say "A soldier is no better than his t'oPt." The man or woman whose occupation or duties require them to stand or walk for h greater portion of the day come to a certain extent in the saanu rate ■gory —t'liev are no better than their feet. 'i'his is not alone due to their la k of mobility, but to the over present strain on the nervous system when the feet are partially incapacitated. Any one who lias suffered from tlie break ing down of the arches of the feet can appreciate 'how extremely painful this is and how serious a handicap. Cases of this sort are of an extreme character. What people do not appreciate is that- worn down heels which throw the weight of the body to one sido or other of the foot may cuuse a continuous strain w'hen walking or stamliug. Manv people who are particularly careful in the care of their hands pay less at tention to their other extremities. Our modern shoemakers are turning out. better shoes than have ever 'been made in the history of the world. Thev are less clumsy and more serviceable. Unfortunately, however, the dictates of fashion have led women and men to wear footgear which distorts the natural slhape of the foot. | The Roman sandal which permitted the toes to assume their natural po sition and allowed each one of the five jto bear ils ortion of the weight and give spring to Uhe step was obviously | more sensible than tilie French heeled pump. The latter throws the weight of the body 011 the ball of t'he foot and > his causes a strain to keep the body balanced. Phis may be an unconscious action, but it is nevertheless extremely tiresome. It is possible owing to the craftsmanship of present dav shoemak ers for both men and women to secure neat, trim-looking footgear u-hic'h is sensible in shape. To 'be comfortalbly shod is no small factor in the preparation for one's dailv work and will prove a material aid in increasing individual efficiency. Ends Life With Hogs' Acid Reading. Pa., Nov. 2. —Peter Still I formerly of Scranton, for 10 years a trusty in the State Asylum for Chronic insane at Wernersville, committed sui j cide yesterday by drinking a bottle ot I carbolic acid, which he found in the I hog pen, where it had been used foi | treatment of hog cholera. IF VISITING NEW YOKK CITY you desire to locate t* VERT CENTRE nec rnlail shops and most arce«»!bT« to depot* *'<vimvjlp picra, jm» wIM be pleased at rhe HOTEL Aibemarle-Hoffman sth AT,, Brc?dway, 24th St. OVERLOOKING MADISON 8Q PARK. ; 1 | A tivu million <lol!nr Ptample of nio<i«rb I •■rehiieciural pTfe ilon; n. oo«mrw*l« tico. 1,000 guests. A Good Room, $1.. ! 50 Per Day. I With Bath, $2 to $5. I Famous Piccadilly Ken tan rant. •! nv. Booklet and Ouide on Itequest. j £ D.WIFJ, P HITCHr,v jr I r [ j ■K > H m i S When tn Philadelphia Stop at the j| j NEW HOTEL WALTON 1 Bread and Locust Streets B g Reopened after the expenditure |( H Of an enormous snm In remodel g * IPi THE CENTCR Of EVERHIIING | jg Near all Stores, Thestres and 9 K Points of Interest. P E»ery Modern Convenience jjj j| 600 Elegantly Furnlnhed Koto-, European I'Un W Rooms. Without bstb |1 So en P ■ Rooms, with bath S2 np W g Hot and rold running p water In all rooms H I WALTON HOTEL CO. 1 B Lonli Lutes. President-Manager. ■ 6sowenp»je!iir"i®rir 'firoiim I®' 3 BUSINESS COLLEGE*. /' \ IUBU,. aUb-UUiifcS 1 Jk'JM Market Street Fall xonu beptou:bei first I DAY AND NIUHT I - ' r~ ' Day and Night Sessions Positions for Ali Graduate! Euroll Next Mo::d.iy SCHOOL of COMMERCE 15 8. Market Sq., Pa. !.■ - W
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers