What a Woman Deserves By Beatrice Fairfax. ■ During: their court ship a inan treats hta sweetheart as if she wore a child, whose ignorance of respon sibility is what at- . tracts him. After marriage, he de - mands that she bo a woman crown, with shoulders broad! enough to bear a j woman's burden, and , a n understanding that that is her por tion. He never learns that much which goes wrong is due to his insane beginning. A limn who signs himself "Perplexed" writes: "After having been in business for some tlifie, I have •ouimenced to keep com pany with a young woman Ave years my junior, antl have developed a great affection for her which I have reason to think is returned. "But now I And that my business Is not progressing fast enough; at least, not as expected, and I do not know just when I will be In position to think ser iously of marriage. "Now, what 1 wish to know Is, would it be proper for me to explain my po sition to my friend, whose sterling qualities would quickly gain her other admirers, or shall I say nothing? I love her dearly." Say nothing? Certainly, if you class her among the simple anil feeble- A NURSE TAKES DOCTOR'S ADViOE And is Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound. Euphemia, Ohio.—"Because of total i ignorance of, how to care for myself I When verging into womanhood, and from i taking cold when going to school, I suf fered from a displacement, and each month I had severe pains and nausea which always meant a lay-off from work for two to four days from the time I was 16 years old. "I went to Kansas to live with my sis ter and while there a doctor told me of the Pinkham remedies but I did not use them then as my faith in patent medi cines was limited. After my sister died ' I came home to Ohio to live and that j has been my homo for the last 18 years. "The Change of Life came when I was 47 years old and about this time I saw my physical condition plainly described in one of your advertisements. Then I ' began using Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg- j etable Compound and I cannot tell you or any one the relief it gave me in tho 1 first three months. It put me right ' where I need not. lay off every month ' and during the last 13 years I have not ; Said out two dollars to adoctor.and have j een blest with excellent health fora wo- I woman of my age and I can thank Lydia E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound for it "Since the Change of Life is over I j have been a maternity nurse and being | wholly self-supporting I cannot over I estimate the value oi good health. I have now earned a comfortable little home just by sewing and nursing. I j have recommended the Com; ound to many with good results, as it is excel- | lent to take before and after child birth."—Miss EVELYN ADEUA STEW- ; ART, Euphemia, Ohio. If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Piukbnm Medicine Co. (confl- j dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by n woman and held in strict couhdcnce. Kelley's Coal Is j Cheap 2st Now Every ton of Kelley's Lykens Valley, Wilkes-Barre and mixed; Broken, Egg, Stove and Nut is— 50c a Ton Cheaper Coal price dropped April 1 to (encourage the early filling of coal bins for next Winter. If you burn 10, 12 or 15 tons a Winter, it will mean a saving of J $5.00, $6.00 or $7.50 if you buy j it in April. Worth saving, isn't it? E M.KELLEY CO. 1 N. Third St 10th and State Street*. Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Kffect November 30. 1913 TRAINS leave Harrisburg— For Winchester and Martinsburir m 8:03, »7:52 a. m.. *3:40 p m. * For HaKerstown. Chambersburir, Car lisle, Mechanicsburg and intermediate citations at 5:03, •7:58, *11:53 a m •S:4O, 5.32, *7:40, *11:15 p m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanicsburg at 9:48 a. m 2:18. 327 6:80. 9:30 a. m. For Dillsburgr at 6:03, *7:52 and •11:53 a. m„ 2:18. *8:40, 5:82 and 6 3u p. m •Dally. All other trains dally except Sunday. H. A. RIDDLE, J. if TONOB. Q. P a. Bupt EDUCATION PREPARE FOR OFFICEWORK DAY AND NIGHT SESSIONS Enroll Next MOIU'BT SCHOOL OF COMMERCE 16 S. MARKET SQ., HARRISBURQ, Harrisburg Business College Day and Night. Business. Shorthand and Civil Service. In dividual Instruction. 28th year. 329 Market St Harrisburg, Pa. DNDKHTAKBH9 RUDOLPH K. SPICER Funeral Director and Embalmer •13 Walnut to. Bell Phone Try Telegraph Want Ads.- TUESDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH APRIL 14,1914.' I minded! Btop payinsr her any attention without the explanation due her in you 'think Kho -is still a child, but if you have the sense of a grown man and re- | alize that she has the brain and sympa thies of a woman and is neither ft baby I nor a doll, go to her a'nd tell her the , truth and the whole truth, beginning ' with the statement that you love her. That statement will always result in a woman taking a chair, eager to hoar the rest. . 1 There can be but one result: An ap -1 peal to a woman's understanding al : ways tflves her a hotter undemanding. "You have a brain in your head and will understand what I am trying to tell you" is what makes intelligent thinking women of your girls. "You are Just a nice, pretty child, and I don't want your foolish little head bothered with business." is what makes young girls develop into the smirking flpureheads of society who are only saved by their social position from being classed as Idiots. They were once the fashion in femi ninity. There was a time when the ideal woman was as incapable of think ing as Is the miniature sugar bride on top a wedding cake, but the day is past and gene, and the man of to-day who treats a woman as if she were still of that period belongs away back there with the yesterdays. Don't be of that number, Mr. Per- Flexed. Give your sweetheart credit or liaving a brain, and talk to her of your hopes and your prospects as if she were an Intelligent being. Her sym pathy will help you over the rough places. Her faith In you will give you the courage to make to-day develop into a brighter to-morrow. And, best of all, Love will have had Its way. Madame Ise'bell Say* "Keep Your Eyet Open mnd Your Face Uplifted If You With to Look Yoa.ig" J ' fofraai HABITS—Part IV. i The first lines that appear on the fore* [ head are apt to be those that are the ; direct result of the habit of frowning. No amount of massage will permanently re i move these unless this habit ie corrected, i An unllned brow with well trained, well marked eye-brows is a distinct charm on ! any face, young or old, and the pity is that so few yeung faces even possess It. As a woman grows older the whole face i begins to droop and this is noticeable i about the eyes even before It appears on 1 the lower part of the face. To illustrate the difference this makes in the face place the two forefingers against the hair line | back of the temples and lift them, lifting i the skin of the face at the same time, i What Is the result? In the case of most j women past thirty-five the face looks years younger. Do this night and morn ing after the face has been well cleaned j and annointed with massage cream, and, | while holding the skin up, wink the eyes ! half a dozen times. Thin will leave an uplifted expression to the face. Hold thl» as much as possible during the day. Keep the Eyes Open. I-earn also to keep the eyes well opes If you wish to preserve a young expres* eion. As years go on the eyes are apt t« appear smaller, to droop at the corner* and to slak back into the head. ThU drooping effect can bo largely corrected by training the muscles not to droop. Stand before a mirror and without touch ing the hand 3 to the face, let the muscles ! relax; new Mft them. De you not see the difference? Now, using plenty of massage cream with the sides of the two forefin gers massage the skin gently from the cor ; ners of the eyes up to the temples. To I keep at bay tho withered look that the i eyelids sometimes assume keep them well J lubricated at night with massage cream. Be careful never to press on the eyeballs while treating the eyelids to cream. It U very easy to harm them. To be continued. UPEmUOUS HAIR SKiLiEO WITHOUT ELECTRICITY BY A SPECIALIST "I have the greatest trouble with correspondents who insist on usinlr common, worthless depilatories or want the torturing barbarous electrical needle applied for killing their supe?- fluous hair, says Mine. Chamlnade In Milady s Boudoir. More mental and physical suffering is caused by abominable methods than you can lm ugine I have carefully Investigated and tried a new and simple mfthod that never fails to remove all signs of hair completely and painlessly and without Injury to the skin or complex large number of cases it has destroyed all trace of hair so that It has never returned, in fact I must caution my readers that It must not be applied to hair that they do not wish totally destroyed. It Is called Mrs. Osgood's Wonder," being named for a well known woman who arranged for it to be put on the roar- Sti t ?i r 14 ad Bucc eeded In entirely eradicating all trace of her own very distressing growth of hair on chin lip ?iYL/ r . ms ; w, ? loh everything else had failed to touch. Mrs. Osgood's Wonder is quite Inex pensive; you can obtain it from Ken nedy s Medicino Store, or any up-to date druggist or department store, on rr e - K .V ftrantee your money hack, if £ sk , for 11 b y name, "Mrs. Osgood s Wonder": a signed guaranty merit" every package.—Adverilse- Invaluable as a Douche The Kills Leaves Odor. No Odor. irim, ru Po4 "°- >T » ' COATS—Values to $8.50. t: & *°° d aßßortment of BtyleS ' v ' *- Women's Kavser I WOMEN>S NEW SPR,Ne CORSETS "EvZST * New Spring Shapes. Embroidery trimmed, 29c 37 r [ Quit* with four hose supporters, all sizes; £Q • One table of Women's Lace O#C i. J nmn k/jllirs J / SI.OO value. Wednesday for OI7C Neckwear, Manufacturers' All Pure Silk Double Ileel t*L —' /V/ 1 ™ sample line. Value to SI.OO. and toe. In all the newest mmmS Wednesday for 2»c each. Spring shades. Choice for 37c. This is the first time that the Kayser concern has Women's Brassieres Women's Blouses ... made a union garment with a French band top to sell cn~ tr.i,,. per cent SIOO water bonds from which only one years' interest coupons had been clipped were presented to City Treas urer O. M. Copelln for payment. The interest on each which 'stopped ten years ago, amounted to $174, or $348 for the p. >•. The securities were two of three outstanding bonds issued forty years ago in part payment for printing and J advertising in connection with the! construction of the city reservoir in Reservoir Park. They are signed by J. D. Boas, mayor, Grafton Fox, city treasurer and L. R. Metzger, Har risburg's first city controller. Tho Commonwealth Trust Company unearthed the bonds in settling up an estate. J f 1 Miss Fairfax Answers Queries THAT DEPENDS DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I have been keeping company with a young man (two years my senior) for one year, and as a rule we are very hoppy when together; but every time he meets a certain person in my family whom he dislikes, he io very cool with me. When I speak to him about thiß lie answers that he always has the same good feeling toward me. X. IF the person he dislikes is very near to you, and one he would often meet after your marriage, I hope you will not marry the man. His intolerance now will become active dislike then, and he will make you very unhappy. TIME WII.L SHOW YOU DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I was graduated from public school at sixteen, and since then have under taken many kinds of work, but seem to fail in everything I do. At oresent I am eighteen and unem ployed. I am at times almost frantic with the thought of not accomplishing the purpose of my being on earth. Is there not some way or place where ane can find out what he is best fitted for? HOPEFUL. THE said to one in similar doubt, "What hast thou in the house?" meaning what is the talent lying near est at hand. Tour purpose «f being on earth cAn not be explained by worry and doubt: keep on working, find the work near est at hand suitable till you find bet ter. and don't grow discouraged. One at eighteen should not know the mean ing of the word. ARM BADLY FRACTURED Special to Tht Ttltgrapk Lewlstown, Pa., April 14. John Hook, of Blacklog, has been admitted to the Lewistown Hospital with a broken arm. The youth, who is em ployed at a sawmill a few milnH from this place, was firing the holier in readiness for the day's work, when he • tripped and fell into a deep pit. Prices ; FOR SALE BY DIVES, FOMEROY & STEWART 5