wofflen rSiDTeRe-8 F.I I.A WHRF.I F.R wTrnF ~ -ON- Reincarnation. The Sayings of Christ Are Filled With It; the Teach ing Was Lost Only For a Time, but Poets and Philosophers Have Never Forgotten It (Copyright, 1913, by Star Company. I Our philosophy, our science, our religion have only ■worth as they make us more useful members of the Brotherhood of Man.—Anna Besant. The sayings of Christ were replete with references to Incarnation. In John and Mat thew and Mark such references may bo found lelative to John the Baptist, and there are many more. The doctrine was for certain reasons put aside in the sixth " ' 1 century. But it was preserved by many Chris tian sects. Speaking: of this, an earnest student of Theosophy says: "In tlio eighteenth century there is a regular outburst of this doctrine; and, strangely enough, two years ago I cajne across a rare and little known book, printed in 1766, written by the Re\: Capel Borrows, rector of Rossingham, Nottinghamshire. It is called 'A I.«upse of Human Souls in a State of Pre-Exist ence: The Only Original Sin," and the author gives all the arguments for re incarnation, with which some of you may be familiar from the mouths of Theosophists to-day, all along the line of Christian belief. Proved the Doctrine Wu Once an In tegral Part of Christianity. "He declares that Mr. Brocklesby, 'a man of most prodigious learning," had published a book in 1706, proving this doctrino to be an integral part of Chris tianity, and he quotes a number of great names of his own time, all of whom be lieved tj>is doctrine to be part of Chris tianity. r>r. Butler, the Bishop of Dur ham—so that we even have a Bishop on our side in dealing with the orthodoxy of this in the Christian Church, and no I Their Married Life j I By MABEL HERBERT URNER "Can't se« the number on these doors," grumbled Warren, as he scan ned the houses on both sides of the quiet, dimly-lit Bronx street. "Must be In that row on the next block." "Will we go In?" asked Helen eag erly, for "looking over a mortage" was for her a new and Interesting experi ence. "If it looks like a good loan. Can't tell much from the outside. Here we are," pausing before a small three- Btory house. There was a light in an upper win dow, and a faint hall light shone through the diamond-paned glass around the old-fashioned door. "Why It's frame," exclaimed Helen. "All these old houses along here are frame. But It's a good deep lot — 120 feet. House seems well kept up too. I should say that's good for a three thousand loan. Let's have a look inside." As Warren went up the steps and rang the bell, Helen tried to picture the person who she thought might open the door. Since Warren was making this loan for a client through a mortgage company they knew noth ing of the owner except that the name was Tollman. Yet Helen felt a profound pity for any one who was so unfortunate as to have to mortgage their home. To her this seemed the last resort of some hopeless indebtedness. She had visions of the door being opened by a 6ad-faeed woman, probably a widow with a couple of children clinging to her skirt. There was a sound of steps inside and the door opened. It was a wo man, but not sad-faced and there were no children. Instead she was a stout wholesome and very prosperous look ing German woman. Warren stated briefly that he wanted to look over the house, in view of taking the mortgage. A Surprise "Certainly, sir. Come right in. Just wait a moment," as they entered the hall, "and I'll light the gas in the par lor." To Helen's surprise there was no evidence of poverty or destitution. The "parlor" was furnished with very highly polished. Imitation mahogany t furniture, heavily upholstered in rose damask. There was an upright piano, a num ber of pictures in heavy gilt frames, and a bright flowered Smyrna rug. The ceilings had been newly done over and the walls were papered in a large flowered and gilt design. "Everything looks well kept up," commented Warren, with a quick ap praising glance about. "May I see the back outlook? The diagram show ed this to bp a good, deep lot.'* "Oh, yes sir," leading them through the back parlor and drawing aside the BtifT lace curtain from the window, "thin is a 120-foot lot." "Yes, that's a good back yard," peering out into the darkness. "I be lieve you have twelve rooms here?" "Yes, sir; it's three stories and basement." "Modern plumbing?" "Yes, sir. I had all new plumbing put in two years ago. Would you like to go upstairs?" "I'll just take a look at the bath room." Helen, feeling that for her to go would seem an unneceesay Intrusion, ■waited in the back parlor while War ren and Mrs. Tollman went up. Instead of being distressed at this Inspection of her home by strangers, Mrs. Tollman seemd to take it quite as a matter of course. "What taxes do you pay here?" asked Warren at they came down stairs. "I'll Just get my tax receipts, sir," and she ran back up the steps. "Did things look as clean upstairs?" whispered Helen. "Yes; it's an old house, but well kept up. The plumbing"s all new— porcelain tub, good sited bathroom. If« rood for three thousand." Mrs. Tollman came down now and gar® Warren a blue tax receipt. "Forty-five," he mused glancing over It "This is for half a year?" CASTOR IA For Infants and Children >.n Use For Over 30 Years tsz&mzz FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 6, 1914. f I one, I think, will challenge the ortho '! doxy of Dr. Butler—Dr. Henry Moore, 11 Dr. Cheyne and the Chevalier Ramsay. !; So that the teaching only disappeared " for a time in the flood of ignorance that ■ j swept over Europe after the decay of : the Roman Empire. , Nor has the teaching faded out of the minds of philopsophers and poets. Need I remind you of those well-known ' words of Wordsworth: "Our birth is but a »leep and a forget ting, The soul that rises with us, our life's 1 star, • Hath elsewhere had its setting And cometh from afar. Not in entire forgetfulness, And not in utter nakedness, But trailing clouds of glory do we come I From God, who is our home." All the teachings of philosophy are I for the good of the human race. They are the moral uplift of society. 1 One who understands the very rudi-1 • ments of reincarnation and Karma must know that every thought of his mind is I i helping to shape his destiny here on earth, in the realms beyond and on the earth when he returns. And he must learn that everything he sees which seems like Injustice in the differences between the situations of people, at birth, has a law of Justice back of it. There was a little pain-racked crip ple woman, with a lovely face, who. by some inexplicable power, drew the great people of earth to her side. Ska Had Been a Queen lu One of Her Past Incarnation*. Sha possessed a peculiar ability to make friends and be on terms of equal ity with the world's renowned beii;gs. She was confined to an invalid's chair, and never walked, and was deprived of every privilege for which her heart oraved—deprived of marriage and ma ternity. Before she died One Who Knew told her of her past incarnations; where in two separate periods she had been "Yes, sir; |9O a year. It's assessed for five thousand." "Now, I suppose you've had this title examined?" "Well, no, 6ir, I haven't, but I'll have it done. I know it's all right, for my husband bought this house in 1864." "In 1864!" repeated Warren In as tonishment. "Yes, sir. You see, I was Mr. Toll man's second wife he was almost twice my age when I married him. That's his picture," nodding proudly toward a crayon portrait of a portly old man with side whiskers. "Isn't that a uniform?" asked Helen." A Sea Captain "Yes, ma'am; he was a sea captain. He ran for twenty years between here and the West Indies. Ho was well off, but, of course, his first wife's children came in for their share.. This house and the house In Cypress street that I rent was willed to me and my boy." "Oh, then your son has an interest in this?" observed Warren. "No, sir; not a penny. Every brick and every board in this and the Cy press street house is MINE!" with un expected vehemence. "His father's will was that when my boy was twenty one I should divide half and half. And I've done it! A year ago this February I gave him $7,000 In cash," her lips trembled, "and now he hasn't got a cent!" "You don't mean he spent it all in that time?" murmured Helen, sympa thetically, for Mrs. Tollman had un consciously turned to her. "Yes ma'am —it's all gone. He's a good boy, but he got in the clutches of a bad woman—and she got every cent of his money." "That's hard," admitted Warren. "Pity you gave it to him in cash." "That's the way he wanted it, and I wanted to keep the house. I had three appraisers go over every inch of this and the Cypress street house. They appraised it all at fourteen thou sand, and Albert got his seven thou sand In cash. I kept roomers eigh teen years, ever since his father died, to save this money—now it's all gone. | That woman got every cent of it! And she's forty old enough to be his mother!" "Is she an actress?" asked Helen Impulsively. "No, ma'am, she's no actress. She's the wife of a dentist here. And now that she's spent all my son's money she's through with him. At least, I 've got that to be thankful for." "Hope you're not mortgaging this to give him more" advised Warren. "No. indeed, sir," decidedly. "He's had his share. I'll give him a home —but no more money. Tie's book keeping now in a furniture factorv getting only fifteen a week. No, I'm taking this mortgage to build some bungalows on a couple of lots T bought three years ago at Roekaway. The lots ain't bringing in anything, and if I put up a couple of cottages I can rent them for J3OO a season. Warren Interested Warren, who was always Interested in real estate, began talking to her about Roekaway lots, but Helen kept pondering over tho boy and the wo man of forty who had gotten his seven thousand dollars. Bhe looked at his mother, whole some and hardworking, and thought of all she must have suffered as she saw her boy's fortune slip away from him. She was not a woman to give up easily, for Helen read both strength and character In her firm mouth and chin. But evidently she had been helpless to contend with the fascination that held her son. Then Helen tried to picture this other woman, this woman of forty. What had been her power? What did she looks like? How had she held this boy of twenty-one? "Well, Mrs. Tollman," as Warren now rose, "you have the title looked up, and you can call this closed. You understand about the terms—sH per cent for three years." "Yes, sir, I'll have Mr. Claflin, my lawyer, attend to all that." "Then he can send. the papers around to my office. You've got an attractive little home here, Mrs. Toll man. Some of these old frame houses are better built than the flimsy brick ones they're putting up now." "Yes, sir, this is a well-built house, and we've tried to keep it up," proud ly, as slie followed them to the door. "I hope you'll lie successful with your bungalows," murmured Helen, i "Thank you very kindly, inu'ain; I i hope so." opening the door for them.' Jk» they came down the steps Helen • j gifted with beauty and brain and power , and position; she had once been a . Queen, and misused all her blessings [ ; and cared only for conquest and per sonal aggrandizement. She had broken ' j hearts and ruined lives, and so she had J made for herself this life of pain and |' loneliness. But so sweet and patient i and kind and brave was she that her I lesson seemed wholly learned, and when i she comes again she will know and j appreciate love and home and friend ship, And she will use beauty and power wisely and altruistically. Every thought is a little chisel work- away on our future bodies and I homes. The poor working girl, who wonders why she is deprived of fine apparel and j pleasures and travel, yet gives her learnings with loving generosity to her I parents and her younger brothers and 'sisters, and who turns a deaf ear to the | voice of temptation, and cheerfully and j lovingly pursues her tasks, is, ail un ; I consciously to herself, building beauty and opulence and leight for herself in i worlds and times to come, and all that her heart has longed for here and now ■ shall be given with interest a hundred fold. She Will Carry All Her Fonilest Long ing* to Fruition. Not only shall the spirit realms ; through which she passes be as lovely as imagination dreams, but she sha'll come back to earth after the right pe • riod of time, and carry to fruition all her fondest longings. Every earnest endeavor made for i self-development, every good aspiration, every effort to benefit one's own char acter or the lives of others, however they seem to miscarry, are seeds sowed which must and WILL grow into a har vest later. , So keep on with the endeavor dearest to your heart. Every step you take is toward your goal. Every thought or act is helping you toward realization. It is the LAW. turned to look back. The little frame house had an added Interest, now that she knew Its history. She could see Mrs. Tollman's stout form outlined on tho shade as she reached up to turn oft tho parlor gus. "This whole row's pretty well kept up," mused Warren, who was survey ing the surrounding houses, intent only on the real estate point of vietv. "Probably all around here own their homes. That loan's all right." "Oh, don't you like her?" for Helen saw only the human side. "Couldn't you see that she was really a very fine "woman?" "Pretty good business woman, too! She'll do well with those Roekaway lots." "But think of her working all those years to save that money, and then to have that boy throw It away!" Warren shrugged his shoulders. "Well, she's sensible enough to take it philosophically. The boy's had his share, and he's spent it." "Did you notice the way she said 'Every brick and every board in this house Is MINE?' I can imagine how she felt. Dear, if she shouldn't be able to pay the interest you'd make it easy for her. wouldn't you? Oh, I'd love to help a wjpman like that." "Huh, there's no sentiment about mortgages. You pay or you're fore closed. But she'll keep up her pay ments all right. Those thrifty Ger mans made mighty good business wo men. I'm like some more loans as good. She'll not get behind. Now, don't you begin to worry about HER." ANOTHER VARIATION OF PEG TOP SIT The Smartest Frocks Are Follow ing This Style For Late Winter 8033 Onc-Piece Peg Top Skirt, 22 to 32 waist. WITH HIGH OR NATURAL WAIST LINO. What is known as the peg top skirt, or the one that shows drapery over the hips, is a pronounced favorite and 6eems likely to extend its favor for a lon£ time to come. Here is one made all in one piece. The front edges are slightly curved and overlapped and buttons can be used as illustrated or for the entire length. Such a skirt is desirable both for street and indoor wear and equally ap propriate for the coat suit and for the gown. As a matter of course when narrow material is used, selvage edges must be joined to obtain the needed width, but the pattern of the 6kirt is all in one piece. _ The finish can be made at either the raised waist line or afthe natural one. For the medium size, the skirt will require 4% yds. of material 27 or 36, 2 yds. 44 in. wide. The width at the lower edge 13 1 yd. and 7 in. The pattern of the skirt 8133 is cut in sizes from 22 to 32 inches waist measure. It will be mailed to any address by the ! Fashion Department of this paper, oa i receipt of ten cenu. Bowinau a sell .May 2J- .tluji Patterns. imwm ■SJOCS FROM TAE PLAY CT GEORGE tt-CCtflAfl /■ f ED\vS\^mR3HALL IJ mWITH PHOTOGRAPHS TOIOTID IN THE PIAY mrm/crtr, /Hf.er cw.PHLinomncow+rjY _ [Continued.] "Great?" saiu juoKaon. "It was | wonderful! I never knew It was In me." Ho was completely satisfied with Broadway Jones. He whirled ! again on Pembroke. "Go on, say some- ■ thing else." But Pembroke kept a stony silence. "Tell you what I'll do," cried Broad way, "I'll talk you for a thousand dol lars a side." Pembroke wcorned this proposition. Plainly he was not a sport. "Then I am to understand the price Is—" "The salesman will state the price. I'm the owner." "I don't consider any commercial trade-mark worth a million and a half of dollars," Pembroke said with em phasis. "Neither do I," said Wallace cheer fully. "Still," said Pembroke slowly and coldly, "even In business we some times desire to satisfy our pride. It has always been the ambition of our company to control this output. For ten years we have tried to absorb it Into the Consolidated without success. I have communicated with my people In Ohio, and, while we feel and know the price to be highly exorbitant, we have decided to take It over. I am | prepared to buy." "Well, we are not prepared to sell," : ■aid Wallace slowly and emphatically. "What! I've agreed to your owa terms!" "I heard everything you said." "I don't quite gather your meaning." "No; and you're not going to gather our chewing-gum either. We're not going to sell. We're going to. flght. You haven't a tottering old man to deal with now, but a young man—full of fire and fight, of energy and ambi tion! Look!" Bob himself knew this to have been a fine flight. He pointed with a ges ture full of drama at Broad-way, who did the best he could to meet the situ ation with an attitude which might have broken Pembroke's gravity had he been less absorbed and incensed. "We have an article which, on Its, own merits, has stood up under almost impossible competition," Wallace con tinued in a tone of triumph. "W« J have the goods to deliver, and we're j going to fight and beat you at your j own game. We're going to make you | take your own medicine, Mr. Pembroke. I We're going to make you compete with us. We're going to advertise as no ar ticle was ever advertised before. We're going to post and plaster from one end of the country to the other. We're going to snow you under, that's | what we're going to do, and we're in a 1 position to do it." I Broadway was r.s proud of Wallace as he had been of himself. "What do you think of that?" he asked the startled Pembroke. Pembroke smiled. He had a well trained face. He also was an egotist, both for himself and for his company. "We spend a million dollars annually in advertising, Mr. Wilson." "No you don't," said Wallace promptly. "I know what you spend better than you do yourself. And my name is not 'Mr, Wilson,' and I'm not Mr. Jones' secretary." He pulled a | card out of his pocket. "Here's my j name and here s my business." Pembroke took the card, looked at It, and was really affected. As far as he was capable of showing real uneasi- i ness he showed it then. "You mean the Empire Advertising fcompany is behind this business?" The Empire Advertising company, it must be remembered, was the largest In the world. Wallace had not thought of that He had not meant to say the Empire was actually behind Jones' Pepsin gum. But now that Pembroke had suggested it, it seemed to him to be a good idea, and, without taking into consideration the important fact that his father, not himself, was president of the Empire Advertising company, he took the plunge. "That's just what I mean, and we're going to do five times aa much adver j tisipg as you ever did, and at one- the cost" W "Then my people do uo more busi ' ness with the Empire." "All right," Wallace positively sneered, "then let's see how much out door advertising you get this aide of : the Rocky mountains." Pembroke rose. He was not happy,' but he did his level best to hide his worry. "Very well, I'll take the 11:40 back to New York. Come, John." He turned, then, to Broadway, and spoke omin ously. "You mark my word, Mr. Jones, you'll be glad to do business with us before another year has passed." "All right," Broadway answered, "come around and see me in about twelve months. I may want to buy your company." "Come, John," said Pembroke with out answering. "Say, John, take down that last one i I said," Broadway called after him. "I thought it was a corker." The Judge rose from the chair in which he had been sitting in a sort of i Joyous trance. "I'd give ten years of my life rather than have missed that." Josle, who, as spellbound, had been watching from the side, sighed hap pily "It was ail wonderful!" Wallace smiled at her "Have the! stenographer make carbon copies of I an that Pembroke . entire con versation. We may need them." "Incriminating, nearly every word of it," lae Judge agreed. "Didn't I tell you I'd scare the life out of him?" Wallace asked in boast ful tones. "Did you?" said Broadway. '1 wasn't so bad myself, was I?" The Judge grinned at him in com mendation. Then: "I'll tell Higgins that Pembroke has gone about his business. Perhaps they'll raise anoth er cheer. It will make them all feel Just a little better—if they could feel any better. He'll spread the news in a Jiffy." "Well, what did you think of it?" Wallace asked of Jackson. "How about It, now that it's all over?" Broadway was a little dubious. "It's a good plot, but how are we going to play It?" he inquired, reverting to the atrical slang of that street he had loved and lost so much on. "Why, it's the biggest cinch in the world," said Wallace. "If this plant showed the profit they say it did, last year, I'll bet you that—" He was interrupted by the ringing .of the telephone. "I'll answer it," said he. "You want to do everything, don't you?" said Broadway peevishly. It was the long-distance call for which Wallace had some time before left or ders. He gave a hurried, warning glance at all of them as soon as he [had heard the voice which came to him along the wj*e. "Hello, guv'nor," he replied. "Ilello! 'Hello! . . Yes; I called you up. I'm up here ia ConecUcut . . . Oh, no, strictly business. Say, guv-nor, I can get a big contract from the Jones' Pepsin people. They're going in heavy, I hear. I can close this deal right away. What do you think T . . . New owner takes possession today. They must be all right. I looked them up. . . . Well, will you let me use my own judgment about that? 1 think I'll make a splen did deal. . . . Say, guv-nor, will you send me a wire authorizing me to sign this contract? . . . Thanks. ... I won't be back until tomor row. . . . Good contract? . . . Thanks. . . . No; I won't be back until tomorrow. Good-by." [To Be Continued.] j| c M,adame, Is el elks +Beauty Lessor. LESSON X—PART IV. BREATHING: ITS RELATION TO HEALTH AND BEAUTY. Use of Massage Cream. All breathing exercises will have an excellent effect on the development of the throat, if the shoulders are held well back and the chin up. Most lines In the neck come from either wearing high, stiff collars or an Improper habit of holding the head, or both. A stiff, high collar by weakening the muscles is responsible for a double chin, and by pushing up the fleeh will often make a little area of wrinkled flesh back of the ears. The breathing ex ercises given in this lesson will help this trouble and the effect will be more rapid If, while the pupil is doing them, the throat, the skin behind the ears, and any hollows in the neck are covered with a good massage cream. The exercises by increasing the circu lation and making the skin pores more active, put the skin in a condition to quickly absorb the nutrition in the massage cream. When the exercises are finished wipe oft any surplus cream with a soft cloth and follow by bathing the skin with very cold water. Short Breathing. A woman is often mortified by dis covering that she cannot make a short spurt, like running for a train, with out getting out of breath. This condi tion will always result from incom plete breathing, that is, the habit of only partly filling the lungs. When In creased exercise calls for more work from the lungs they are not able to respond without discomfort. Another cause of short breathing is the ac cumulation of too much fat around the diaphragm. The breathing exer cises will help both of these condi tions, and, later on, I shall give some exercises for waist reducing. However, I wish my pupils to "get the habit" of correct breathing before they com mence physical culture. Deep breath ing every morning will soon so ao custom the lungs to complete lnhala tlon of air that they will be satisfied with nothing else, and deep breathing will become a habit. (Lesson X to be continued.) Try Telegraph Want Ads. jjSSBk.. our Treat |P% AII Week! at Special Prices, at Your Dealer's! The best part of breakfast is a j u icy, thin-skinned, seedless "Sunkist" orange. "Sunkist" oranges are the finest, juiciest, most delicious oranges v grown in the world. Buy them by the box or half-box —they are most economical and keep for weeks. Carefully picked and packed by gloved hands. The cleanest of fruits. Tree-ripened. Use "Sunkist" lemons on meats, fish, poultry and salads. Thin-skinned. The juiciest, finest lemons erown. Rogers Silverware Premiums for "Sunkist" Trademarks Cut the trademarks from "Sunkist" orange TW» and lemon wrappers, and send them to us. elegant We offer 27 different silverware premiums Rogers Orangs -all Rogers A-l guaranteed Stand- .. SP9°° .?»■'«° y°"for ard silver plate. Exclusive ami 6 two-cent stamps. "Red " Sunkist " Bair'oraniro and lemon wrappers design count same as 'Sunkist" B"y "Sunkist'' Oranges and Lemons (X yZT' ■% Jr at Your Dealer'* Actual jKr f S "/r' ' ' Cn< * OUr name aD 111 111 I mill nil i 11111 ijn ii nliHli ii I" SSP' California Fruit Growers Exchange Fiytftf?SrV 139 N. Clark Street (158) Chicago, 111. PARE'S DIAPEPSiN DIGESTS FOOD WHEN STOMACH CAHTHTS GREAT Stops Indigestion, Sourness, Gas and Dyspepsia in Five Minutes If you feel bloated after eating, and you believe it is the food which fills you; if what little you eat lies llko a lump of lead on your stomach; if there Is difficulty in breathing after eating, eructations of sour, undigested food and acid, heartburn, brash or a belching of gas, you need Pape's Dia pepsln to stop food fermentation and Indigestion. It neutralizes excessive acid, stom ach poison; absorbs that misery-mak ing gas and stops fermentation which sours your entire meal and causes Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Biliousness, Constipation. Griping, etc. Your real Old "Whitehall" to Be Temperance House Without a bar and fitted out in a modern style that will appeal to re spectable traveling men and transients, the old Essex, or "Whitehall" Hotel, which the Court closed, will be opened, it is said, as a dry hotel by J. W. Roden liaver. It is said the lease prohibits the sale of liquor. The plans call for a store room on the first floor, with a hotel office and entrance with rooms on the other floors, probably forty in number. GOODYEAR TO BE POSTMASTER Special to The Telegraph Carlisle, Pa., Feb. 6.—lt was said hero to-day that Fiske Goodyear, a member of the firm of Goodyear Brothers, will be the next postmaster of Carlisle. His nomination, it was said to-day, has been sent to the Sen ate for confirmation. WOMAN FAKE COLLECTOR A woman, who Is said to have collect ed contributions from Green street residents for the American Rescue Workers, ie declared to be a faker by Howard B. Clark, adjutant of the Res cue Workers. He has employed no wo men to collect from house to house. Gold Dust does what you can't do for dishes. It digs into the corners and M 'GOLD DUST cleans everything. Never be without it. §j !||K ITWE W.K. FAIRBANKcowpanyI " Lm * ,ho aoL ° ° uBT tw,ms d ° ><""■ ««»*" Shalll D ° ? [ |^with my money to keep it safe? is ■ V-fl a c l uest ' on w *tli people who keep If h MSrT their money at home, and as a temp tation to tliieves or burglars. Why vswfl 4 ill' ® not deposit it in a good safe bank m where it will be invested at threo S i $ P er cent - interest and safe at the jLlj : sanie time. You can do this now first National Bank —224 STREET 17 and only trouble is that which you eat does not digest, but quickly fer ments anil sours, producing almost any unhealthy condition. A case of Pape's Diapepsln will cost fifty cenls at any pharmacy here, and will convince any stomach sufferer in five minutes that Fermentation and Sour Stomach is causing the misery of Indigestion. No matter If you call your troubl« Catarrh of the Stomach, Nervousness or Gastritis, or by any other name always remember that relief Is wait ing at any drug store the moment you decide to begin its use. Pape's Diapepsln will regulate any out-of-order Stomach within five min utes, and digest promptly, without any fuss or discomfort, all of any kind of food you eat. —Advertisement. I Not an Application For License in Mifflin County Sptcial to The Telegraph Lewistown, Pa., Feb. 6.—A peculiar state of affairs In Mifflin county—not one application for liquor" license has been made this year. This Is the first time in the history of the county that no applications have been filed. Tha time for filing has expired. Mifflin county has been under no-licensa rul« for four years past. SUSPECTS HELD FOB TRIAIi Special to The Telegraph Lewistown, Pa., Feb. 6.—Two mefl have been arrested suspected of en* terlng the Bohrman home near Mlf* filntown, on Thursday morning and after ransacking the plac« and find ing nothing, forced the woman to sign a check for SIOO. The men ar< rested are Michael Dolan, of Plttßton, and William Harris, of Shenandoah, They have been held for trial. Mrs. Bohrman was at the hearing and up* on the strength of her evidence tha men were held.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers