12 AT THE REQUEST #of Many Who Could not Conveniently Join Our CHRISTMAS JL SAVINGS CLUB Last Week, We Have Extended the Time for Joining Until Saturday, January 10th. Join Any Day This Week. Tell Your Friends *l^ to Join Before it is Too Late. *** The Sure Way to Have Money for a Merry Christmas and a Full Stocking •*—VI v vj^Sfk UNION TRUST COMPANY OF PENNSYLVANIA UNION TRUST BUILDING """" 1 1 ■ —— — j IN WOMANS REALM §G| Daysey May me and Her Folks PASSING THK RECEIPT DATSET • MAYMB APPbETON makes a rake called Golden <'ake, which calls for twelve eggs. She makes It once a week, no matter what the price of eggs. and | has Iwcoint such an adept that her f friends pay her the compliment of asking for the receipt. "It really cost us only five eggs." j she wrote to a friend making the re quest, "for we deny father his egg for breakfast, which means seven toward the cake. Self-denial, as I tell him. Is good for everyone, and specially good for the men. Xo. he doesn't eat ajiy of the cake. "Beat the eggs separately—and 11 have the cutest little es:g heater. II got It on sale, and mentioning sales reminds me that 1 got three new dresses last week. I didn't need them, hut they were very cheap, and it is every girl's duty to buy when things ire cheap, a duty she owes to her dear father, who toils so hard for the money she spends. "When the whites are stiff—and this Is such hard work I let mother do it She likes the knowledge that she is helping 1 me in my cake baking, and I is my duty to give her all the ' THE PIED PIPER By EI, LA WHEELER WILCOX There is a legend of a. "Piper Pied," Who charmed the rats with music of his reed. Shrilling: his way down to the river side He led them to their death. The Town in Greed Withheld the promised price; the Piper then Walked, blithely playing, past the homes of men. The listening- children followed on his trail And none came back. So ends the olden tale. Still lives the Piper: piping thro' the land. He calls the children as he called of yore. The greedy world, indifferent. s«es the band Follow htm blindly, to return no more. Shrilling his tune, as blithely as of gld. I lard by the homes of men. unchecked and bold He pipes his music while the children dance And disappear. His name is IGNORANCE g|) SAMPLE FREE Try it for nasal and dry catarrh, sneezing, cold in tlie head, hay {ever or any complication resulting from chronic catarrh. Keeps the breathing passages open, thus giving sound, restful sleep and nntnormg. Soothes and heals the inflamed membranes. Fine for nose bieed. Get Kondon's, the original and genuine Catarrh al Jelly, at druggists or direct, in sanitary tubes. 25c or SCc. Sample free. Write Kondon Mlg. Co.. Minneapolis, Minn. KUUCATIO.XAL, WINTER TERM " BUG INS MONDAY, JAN. 5 Day and Night Sessions SCHOOL OF COMMERCE 15 S. Market Square, Harrisburg, Pa. HARRIS BL HO BISINESS CULLEOI fall Term, Taeada/, Sept x. luia. DAY AND NIUHT Individual Instruction. Civil Servlo*. 11th Tear. S3II Market St_ Hutiabara ■»*. J. B. UAH.V'BH. Hrlaeiaai. , MEAT CAUSE OF KIDNEY TROUBLE Take Salts to flush Kidneys if Back hurts or Bladder bothers If you must have your meat every | day, eat It but flush your kidneys with salts occasionally, ssuys a noted au thority who tells us that meat forms uric acid, which almost paralyzes the kidneys in their efforts to expel It from , the blood. Thay become sluggish and 1 weaken, then you suffer with a dull 1 misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue la coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids, ♦.O cleanse the kidneys and flush oft the body's urinous waste, get four ounces of Jad Salts from any phar macy here; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfaat for a few days, and your kidneys will then act flne. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and ■ttmnlate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so It no longer irritates, thus ending bladder wealraees. , Jad Baits is Inexpensive: cannot in jure, and makes a delightful effer &SMt Uthla-water drink, —Adv. MONDAY EVENING, ' pleasure I tan. Hnve the oven very | hot, not too hot, of course, but Just hot i enough. Mother watches the oven. She doesn't mind the heat at all. ' "Flour. of course—and if you could j see the darling little sifter I have you would make cake every day. 1 always sift the (lour myself, having read once of a girl who answered the door bell ( with flour on her nose, and the mil lionaire who stood there married ht?tl next day, knowing she could cook. 1 ! forget where they went on her wed-, ding trip, but he .itist settled thousands and thousands of dollars on her. and hugged her with his strong arms, and kissed her with his firm though gome- 1 what stern mouth, and looked at her with the fondest eyes. 1 forget the name of the book, but I will trv to remember, and tell you. "With much love, "DAYSEY MAYME." Then Daysey Maynie sealed and di rected the letter, and. having once passed through the Indian reservation, on a train, devoted the rest of the day to writing a paper for her literar* club on "The Indian: His Past. Pres ent and Future, and What the Ked Man Stands for as a Factor in Civ ilization." CHILKN'S CLOTHK UG LOOSELY I 8097 Child's Long Waisted Petticoat} 2 to 6 years. There is no petticoat better »nap*»r| to 1 ®e little child's needs than this one. The j ikirt is straight and gathered and the body portion fits smoothly so that any frock ran be adjusted over the petticoat. Flouncing makes pretty skirts and. of -oursc, simplifies the labor of making but, for every day hard usage, plain ma terial will be found more durable. It caa be finished with a plain hem or with hcm-stitcbing or the edges can be scal loped to be pretty and dainty. Many mothers think hand work the only appro priate finish for the little children and tba scallops are not difficult. For the 4 year size, the petticoat will require % yd. of material 36 in. wide for the body portion with ifi yds.*of flouncing to in. wide, yds. of narrow ruffling; or i*A yds. of plain material 36 to make as (hovin in tne back view. The pattern of the petticoat 8097 iscut in sizes for children of 2, 4 and 6 years. It will be mailed to any addreas by tha Fashion Department of this' paper. Qfl receipt of tea cents. l 1 HARRJSBURG TELEGRAPH LBRQ\DW j m,k >\r. s MB FROM T/YE PLAY CF ; BBH GEORGEM.COMJS Jg jg EDWARDmRSHALL I& MWRRN PHOTOGRAPHS FROA OTID M W PLAY 1 i merely wishiu nave a little talk with you—er—Mr. Jones." said he. "You know your balance is—er—run ning rather low." "Is what?" said Broadway, in amaze ment. "Is running rather low." "You don't mean "You've drawn rather heavily against it." "But it was strong enough to stand * terrible strain." "Not quite strong enough to stand without a protest the strain to which you have subjected it. Mr. Jones. It's not exhausted, but it's—" "Getting tired?" Broadway himseli ■upplied the words. "About that. You have not been having it written up. you know; ] thought perhaps you didn't realize the figures. I've had them all made out for you." Broadway took one swift look ai them, then sank back in his chair and took a longer look at them. "Well, I'll be !" he ventured. "I was afraid you'd feel that way. I only thought you ought to have a hint of just how things are running Young men lose track of things some times. I've known it to occur before." Jackson scarcely saw Broadway when he went out of the gray build ing, and it was the first time he had ever trodden Broadway without see ing and admiring it. "Hello, Broadway!" cried a merry ▼oice from just beyond the curb. It was a blonde voice, and issued from a natty little motor car with a sedan chair top. Broadway had bought that motor car and given it to the blonde voice. "Let me put you down some where?" "I'm not feeling very fit. You might take me to the morgue." "Jump in; we'll make it the Knick erbocker." But the Knickerbocker had no charms for Broadway at that mo ment. He made his stay as brief as possible in the bright restaurant. "Dollie, darling," he said gloomily, "I don't need a restaurant, today; I need a hospital. How would you like me, Dollie, honestly, if I was broke?" "You? Broke?" She laughed. "No; seriously. How would you like me?" "It's nonsense; but you know what Shanley does to broken dishes." '"The ash can. Eh?" "It wouldn't be, for you, of course; but—what's the use of being Mr Grump? Brace up? Come on up to Churchill's and we'll drinkv-drink it outy-out." But Broadway would have none of such a plan as that. He went to his apartment, and, rummaging in every drawer and pocket, collected every bill which he could find. There were a hundred of them, ranging in all sorts of figures and for all sorts ol articles, from diamonds to gasoline, from charity to faro. The arrival ol the sympathetic Rankin, who believed this master had a headache, with a note from Mrs. Gerard, interrupted the bookkeeping which, for the first time in his life, Broadway had begun. It had not been encouragiug, as far a? he had gone. He read the note and found it to be an invitation. Deciding to accept it, he decided, also, that it must be the last one of the sort he must accept It had become intensely plain to him that now had come the time when he must cease his gaieties and find more money. He was a gloomy figure at the feast that night, and his gloom grew with every aged smile which Mrs. Gerard ! na ßt in his direction. It was plair enough to him, to everyone, that this exceedingly rich lady, of uncertain age regarded him with very friendly eves 1 She even sometimes called him "Jack son." After the dinner he took Robert Wallace downtown with him in hif | sixty horsepower touring car. "Mrs. Gerard," he ventured, "seems i a well-preserved old—er—l mean that 1 she seems well preserved." "Well canned, you mean," said Wal j lace. "But too much chemical preserv ative in females is as dangerous as | it is in food. How - did we happen to' go there tonight? You roped me into; that. Broadway. You didn't tell me where you meant to take me. You merely said we'd go to dinner with some friends of yours." "Well, she's a friend of mine." Broadway defended rather hotly. An idea, so terrible that it was fascinat ing, had occurred to him. "She might have gone to school with your grandmother. It makes me sick to see her ogle you. I think she wants to marry you." Broadway burst into a laugh which he was well aware was quite too loud, too cackly and too hollow; he fearet. acutely that his friend would recognize its falseness. "To marry me! Ho, ho!" Instantly his manner changed. "But I don't like the way you speak about her, Bob. Remember—we have Just enjpyed her hospitality!" "Enjoyed it! Speak for yourself, old man! If I had known where you were going, do you suppose I would have gone with you? I can meet grand mother's schoolmates at the Old La dies' home. I don't have to go to din ner with them." "Now, Bob!" Wallace burst into a laugh. "I be lieve it is pure charity," he guessed "You are trying to make others happy You smile on her as you would throw a dollar into a Salvation Army cash pot around Christmas time." "Bob, I'm thinking about getting married." His friend sat straight and looked at him in dumb amazement for a second. "Married? And is grandma in 6ome ■way related to the bride who may be?" "Bob. I need —" He stopped. Almost he had told his friend he needed money; but he had not the courage. To confess poverty on Broadway is Like confessing mur der in a church. "Need what?" "A rest. I'm going to—er—take some sort of a vacation. Don't know w hat. Maybe back to the old home, Anyway, you won't see me around for quite a little while." "Never mind, old chap! I'll tell them all that you huve had to go away on business. Go somewhere and get straightened out. You need It. There's something wrong with you, or you would never have gone to that dinner where that ancient mariness could ogle you the way she did. "Well, you won't see me for a week or two." "Drop me a line if you want any thing." Jackson Jones went away early on the following morning. As Ignorant of business and of business methods as a baby, yet he tried to scheme some way by means of which he might re coup his staggering finances. Wild Ideas, all unpractical, whirled through his brain. He must have money, that was cer tain. He had not the least idea of Just how he had accomplished it, but he had spent his patrimony— spent It all and more than all of it If he had paid up the debts he owed—which all the world seemed glad to have him owe—that was the hard part of it; everyone seemed anxious to have him go in debt to them-—he would have far less than nothing left. For days he stewed above his fig ures in a room of which he kept close guard upon the key. He told Rankin, who was curious, that he planned to write & book. "Indeed, sir? Fiction, sir?" "Fiction? Gad, no! Fact." "A book of travel, sir? I've traveled quite a bit. Perhaps—" "No. Or yes. Of travel up and down Broadway." "Splendid, sir, if I may be excused for taking such a liberty. I'm sure no gentleman in all New York is more familiar with the BiJbject, sir. I shall be glad to read it. sir. I'm sure it will be quite a revelation!" "Rankin," said Broadway earnestly, "if I wrote what I really know about Broadway it would be a revelation." He grew very serious, for him. "It would put some men on pedestals, and they would not be those who now stand highest. It would put some men behind the bars, and among them are some men who now are free to come and go. with welcomes when they come and invitations when they leave, , In every place where people gather in this town." He burst into a sudden laugh. "Great : stuff, eh, Rankin? When you say 'Broadway' you stir me up. I love it, I hate it; it always fascinates me. 1 There's no street like it in the world." "If your book is like that, sir. It will be a big success." commented | Rankin, spellbound. It's going to be t a fine book, Mr. Jones." • "It won't interest Broadway. There's only one kind of book that Broadway cares about," "And what is that, sir?." "Check books, Rankin. Now I'm go ing into—into—" He did not. know Just, what to call the room which he kept locked. "Your study, sir?" "Thanks, Rankin. Yes; I'm going to my study. Don't let me be disturbed." "I'll not, sir." When he left that "study" he avoid ed Rankin. His fingers were ink stained from calculations, his hair was quite disheveled, his eyes were wide and rolling. He could see no hope ahead. [To He Continued.] r ———-—~ PEOPLE Of All Ages I ' Come to Pr. Phllllpe for flrat-daaa dental work, because my reputation fcaa pot mo in the front rank. My aaarr yeara' •*- perlence has enabled ma to adopt the moat thorough and palnlesa methoda of performing dental operations. Daj by day my practice baa increased nnder the direct aupertiaion of myaelf. UNTIL I bad to employ three graduate aaalatanta who are of auperlor ability. It will pay you to bare na do your work. Don't worry about paymenta, ar rangements can be made to anlt ? petlenta. i Plates. $5 and up. Crown and Bridge Work, $3 |4, $3. Filling* In silver alloy, enamel. foe na. Gold, SI.OO up. ■••t Work, Be»t lUtorUL Lowest Trio—. Written ra»r»nt« with ■; work. j DR. PHILLIPS 320 Market Street < Offlca Hoar■: Daily, t.M A. K. te • r. BuadAfM. 10 1. 4. 0. V. TELEPHONE MIT LADY ATTENDANT I *?• J* I?* 1 ,nd thoroughly • equipped ofß<* In cltj. i „ OEBKAN BPOXXK. * Brush 081cm—EMdlnc «nd PWl»dnl»hU. ■ • UNDERTAKERS HARRY M. HOFFMANN (Sfcreeaaor to .1. J. Ogplabrl UNDERTAKER ' 310 NORTH SECOND STREET Try Telegraph Want Ads. Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect November 30, 1913 TRAINS leave Harrlaburg— For Winchester and Martlnaburc at 6:03, *7:62 a. m.. *3:40 p. m. * 1 For Haaeratown, Charnbereburg car llale, Mecnanlcßburg and Intermediate stations at 6:03, *7:62, *11:53 a. m •3:40, 6:32, *7:40. *11:16 p. m. ' Additional trains for Carlisle and Met-hanicsburß at 9:4* a. in., 2:18. S'27 5:30, 9:30 a. m. For DlUaburg at 6:03, *7:62 and •11:53 a. m. 2:18, *3:40, 6:32 and <:3O p. m. •Dai'.y. AH other trains dally ezceot Sunday. H. A. RIDDLE. J. U. TONOE, O. P. A. fiupt , 1 JANUARY 5, 1914. 1 r " Try Just One Pictorial Review Pattern! We recommend to all women who are not yet using Pictorial Review Patterns try one—Just one. No other patterns fit as well, hare that French chic or are so simple to use. Krery Pictorial Review Pattern will siitp you from one-half to one yard material uu each dress ou account of the patented Cutting and Construction Uuldo. Patterns of these styles 15 cents for each number. JANUARY PATTERNS and Magazines Now on Sale. | Dives, Pomeroy (H Stewart fCrcmc "1 j J.SIMON _ JSimonJ PARIS | \ The only preparation which removes absolutely s j Chapping, Roughness and Redness, ) ) and protects the hands and face against the winter winds. < ) Powder I Maurtoe LEVY, sole U. S., Agent. < 1 3liuUl>l O Soap | 15-17, Woet 38th S\ NEW-YORK ( - - - ■ ;; This New Illustrated Book for Every Reader j p99 | =] (jf HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH |j jj 11 pri AS EXPLAINED B£LOW • 1= \ j ; C=J See the Great Canal in Picture and Prose f?3 ;; i; iMIEJEISJEIiiIJEMJESIHa ii ;; Read How You May Have It Almost Free ' > ' Cat out the above eonpoa, and preseat It at this office with th. 1 I expense amooat herela aet oppoalte the style aeleeted (which «Uen 1 1 I 1 t m i 2? th ® ™'° l paekla*. expreaa from the factory, cheek., ;££ mpknsb »•—> « ; I PANAMA Thta bea "t' f ul *>'* volume U written by Willis J.! ' ' * bbot . a writer of International renown, and la! 1 1 the acknowledged standard reference work of the I I ! ! f ANAI *T* at Canal Zon#> Jt '■ a ■»!•"«« large book of 1 1 almost 600 pages. 9x12 lnchea In size; printed l 1 In Pictnre and from new type, large and clear, on special paner-' ' | ; Prose bound in tropical red vellum cloth; title stamped! I 1 Illustrated * ol A« th ,„ co,or panel; containa moral 1 1 Edition than 600 magnificent illustrations, including beau-' I I tiful pages reproduced from water color studies" 1 • in colorings that far surpass any work of a si ml- I— lar character. Call and see this b'eautlful book I MPE '"> « I | that would sell for $4 under usual conditions, but I Amammtmt 1 1 1 which is presented to our readers for ONB of tha Af aa 1 1 1 above Certificates, and wI*UU ; Sent by Mail, Postage Paid, for 91.40 1 CertMort®, ! Closing Out Our 1914 Line of Calendars at Bargain Prices ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED MYERS MANUFACTURING CO. Third mnd Cumberla Above Miller's Shoe Store. Try Telegraph Want Ads