\fc?o(V)en rg.lnTeße-8 THE WAY OF A WOMAN 1 Know That the Jealous Heart of a Man Demands That He Be First in the Heart of the Woman He Loves By BEATRICE FAIRFAX I It was ever the custom of a woman to hang- the picture of her dead husband on the wells of ltiein. orv and occasionally flaunt his perfections before the eyes of the man who has taken his placo. It is a way that is dis tressing. aggravating and unkind and that bears no good re sults. It Is a way, thank heaven, that few maidens know, for every sir! knows that If she wishes to keep her lover she must make no moans for the lover she has lost. The wife, se cure in legal posses sion. 1s not so wise. "J am a young man of twenty-two," writes Dick, "and am keeping com pany with a young lady of twenty. J love her dearly, but every time I meet her sho takes delight in talking about a young man to whom she was once ensraged. Is it wise for me to make love to her when she is always FRUIT IMIVE FOR SICK CHILD GIVE "CALIFORNIA SYRUP OF FIGS" Cleanses tender little stom ach, liver, bowels with out injury Every mother realizes that this is • e children's ideal laxative and physic, because they love its pleasant taste and it never fails to effect a thorough "inside cleansing" without griping. When your child is cross, irritable, feverish, or breath is bad, stomach sour, look at the tongue, mother! If • •oated, give a teaspoonful of "Cali fornia Syrup of Figs," and in a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, Hour bile and undigested food passes Let me send you FREE PERFUME Write today for * testing bottle of PINAUD'S LILAC ' U The world's most famous perfume, everv drop as sweet Su \ KPf as the living blossom, for handkerchief, atomizer and bath jSfwHSSsnl \ y AmTI Fine after shaving. All the value is in the perfume- you don't W L\\ p pay extra for a fancy bottle. The quality is wonderful The y-.P^ilA) price only 75c. (6 oz ) Send4c. for the little bottle-enough w handkerchiefs. Write today. \ w W PARFUMERIE ED. PINAUD, Department M. ED. PINAUD BUILDING NEW YORK AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS GLARK "J? IGMAN !Greased Pole Trained Nurses SURPRIS / NOVELTIES NUFF SED-GET SEATS NOW Feature Movies MAJESTIC THEATER vnM "*- '' TO-NIQHT ! "o-morrow Evening, April 16th I The New Drama With Music U L I H { M AMBITION YIDDISH COM 11} Ashley Miller Presenting "ONK YEAR AFTER M Alt If 1 AGE." I'll ICES -5c to *1.50 PHICES _ 35c, 50c, Tsc and ift.oo __ Sent* Now on Stile SATURDAY, APRIL 18 CHARLES DILLINGHAM l'reseuts Montgomery and Stone AND THISIR ORIGINAL COMPANY IN THE MUSICAL. FANTASY iv THHEE ACTS ■ 1 i The Lady of the Slipper Book by Aune Caldtvell and Laurence McCarlliv. Lvrlcs liv in..... OUea. Staged by H. H. Burnslde. Music by Victor Herbert See Montgomery and Stone in the old-fashioned Song and' Dance (bur. lesqulng the first N(in K and dunce ever done bv Montuomerv and T The Six Little White PoHm and The Wonderful Coach; The Classic llallet "Sweel Sixteen"; The Palace of Maximiliani Tlie Baron's Cat- People; The lluruum and Bailey of Mualcal Shows/ Hnndred One Year at the Globe Theater, New York PRlCES—Evening, Lower Floor, *2.00 and $1.50; balcony. HI 50 *1 no and 76c | gallery, 50 cents. Matinee, lower floor, $2.00, SI 50 and *lmi, i!«t cony, <1.50. >I.OO and Tsc, gallery 50c Seats Tbur!!,"a/ nn.rnlnK. WHO WAS RIGHT? READ THE ANSWER Mrs. Levi Smith Was Told That Taking Medicine in Her Present Condition Would Be Dangerous, Yet She Took Quaker Extract and Her Life Was Saved The Address of This Party is Union Deposit, Dauphin County, Pa., and the Truth of This Cure May Be Investigated in Any Manner Which Might Suggest Itself. Mrs. Levi Smith lives in Union De posit, Dauphin county. Pa., a little village about 13 miles east of Harris burg. She is the mother of an infant still nursing and it was owing to these circumstances that medicine was re fused her, as It had been said that it would be harmful to mother and child. The advice was sincere and true, as in such a case nearly all medicines would indeed be dangerous. But Quaker Extract is a purely vegetable product, containing no poisons, and can therefore bo safely t;tki<n by young iunl old under all of life's conditions WEDNESDAY EVENING talking about this man she used to love, and whom she still seems to love?' It would not mean peace of mind for a man to marry any girl whose heart is in keeping of another man. and who makes thnt possession the subject of her thoughts and conversa tion. There are "dead men's shoes" that may bo worn comfortably —so comfortably that one in time forgets they were made for another's feet, but they pinch and squeeze and rub and hind, making callous spots and tender places, if there stands a woman with out-pointed finger crying out with a loud voice the greater perfections and fewer faults of the man for whose feet they were fashioned. I know that the jealous heart of every man demands that lie be first in the heart of the woman he loves, and I also know that the wise maiden makes a man believe he Is first, though to find the first boy she loved she would have to go back to her primer days at school, and she has Changed the film every year since. I know tnat while this may be duplicity, it is a duplicity that finds ample excuse in the unreas oning jealousy of mankind, and that means greater happiness and comfort out of the bowels and you have a well, playful child again. When Its little systom is full of cold, throat sore, has stomach ache, diarrhoea, indigestion, colic—remember a good liver and bowel cleaning should always be the first treatment given. Millions of mothers keep "Califor nia Syrup of Figs" hnndy: they know a teaspoonful to-day saves a sick child to-morrow. Directions for babies, chil dren of all ages and grown-ups are plainly on each bottle. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs." He ware of counterfeits sold here. Get the genuine, made by "California Fig Syrup Company." Refuse any other fig syrup with contempt.—Advertise ment. and all circumstances. Mrs. Smith's condition was alarming. Her bowels were irregular, she complained of stomach troubles, she was exceedingly nervous nnd irritable, and how else she suffered will be cheerfully told to all who ask her. It was only last week that she called at the drug store. She explained her case, ob tained Quaker Extract and was as sured that she could take it even though her Infant was still at her breast. The day following a telephone cat! cam' to the health n-arlier to come to the drug stcr« it once. I uon and peace of mind for the man It would deceive. This girl who entertains her lover with a recital of the charms of a man who loves her no longer may be honest in her refusal to claim an empty shrine In her heart, but it is an honesty that is aggressively disagreeable, and that doesn't spell happiness for the second lover. Fight fire with fire! Go away back among your yesterdays and revive the memory of a former sweetheart, giving her all the added gloiy that absence and time allow. Speak of her with ten derness, enthusiasm and regret, and ev ery time the girl you now love drags forth the ghost of her past let yours come forth to do battle. There will be only one result; either the girl will be cured or you will have no desire to cure her. losing what long ing you may now have to supplant her former lover. They Are Fatal Either result, my dear Dick. Is bet ter than marriage to a woman who hangs the picture of a former lover on the walls that she may use it to liaunt the man who has succeeded him. Comparisons are odious when made with men and affairs of to-day. When made with men and affairs of yester day they are fatal. Landis Tool Company Will Employ Many More Hands Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., April 15. Very encouraging news comes to Waynes boro people front the Landis Tool Company, of this place. That Indus trial corporation, which has always been one of the staunchest in this place, will add the manufacture of a new machine tool to its construction of grinders and will be able to employ from 100 to 125 additional men. The new tool is the Rochester bor ing machine, which has been pur chased by the Landis Tool Company, together with the patents, drawings, patterns and special tools for the bor ing machine, the deal just having been concluded. The Rochester Boring Machine Company built 100 machines in 1912 and sold them for $225,000. The busi ness depression handicapped the com pany and the Landis Tool Company was enabled to make the purchase. The drawings and patterns will be shipped here at once and work of con structing the machines will soon begin. Woman Dislocates Collarbone While Lacing Her Corset Special to The Telegraph I Columbia, Pa., April 15. —Mrs. Ed ward Brown, who resides at 803 Lo cust street, was the victim of a pe culiar accident at her home while en gaged In dressing herself. Mrs. Brown i while arranging her corset in some manner dislocated her collarbone and it was necessary to summon a phy sician to reduce the dislocation, which was ciuite painful. MI-O-NA FOR ALL BAD STOMACHS ! Why suffer with that uncomfortable ; feeling of fulness, headache, dizziness, sour, gassy, upset stomach, or heart burn? Get relief at once—delays are | dangerous. Buy to-day from your : druggist a fifty cent box of Mi-o-na ' Tablets. | They are not a cure-till or an ex • periment, but a scientific remedy rec ommended to regulate out-of-order stomachs and end Indigestion distress. ; Their action is sure, safe and imme j diate. i There is no more effective stomach 1 remedy than Mi-o-na. Besides quickly i stopping the distress Mi-o-na soothes the irritated walls of the stomach, strengthens and builds up the diges tive organs and increases the flow of gastric juices, thus assisting nature in the prompt digestion and assimila tion of the food —your entire system is benefited—you will enjoy good health. j Do not suffer another day—get a box of Mi-o-na Tablets from H. C. ; Kennedy. Take them as directed, j You will be surprised and delighted I with the quick relief.—Advertisement. i AMUSEMENTS I : PALACE THEATRE 333 Market Street The Home of the Exclusive Unlver nal Program, i Our Program Thurhduy Philip Sntalley, Lonls Weber, Wallace Reld aud Doro-ihy Davenport In Hex !l reel drama, "The Spider and Her Web" Irene Wallace In Victor 2-reel drama, "The Power of Prayer" Augustus Carney an «| nlvermal Ike," In comedy " •UNIVERSAL IKE' HAS ONE FOOT IN THE GRAVE." Imp comedy—"FOß LIFE AND LIBERTY." Onr Program To-day Gaumont, 3-reel drama "THE THREE SHADOWS." L'nlou Feature In 3 reeIs—"MEPHISTOPHELIA." fl BIG REELS DAILY Coming Friday, lulvcrsal Special In 4 Reels "WASHINGTON \T VALLEY FORGE." arriving there Mr. Smith, the husband of Mrs. Levi Smith, introduced him self. He thereupon produced a bottle which contained a tapeworm over fifty feet long. He states, that his wife had expelled this worm an hour or two previously. Thus another life had been saved by Quaker and thereby proved that this remedy was safe to take under the circumstances mentioned Now, who was right? Quaker Herb Extract, JI.OO per bot tle, 3 for $2.00; Oil of Balm, 25 cents At all times ;it W. H. Kennedy's 30 .Soi.Hi Third street.—Advertisement HAKRJSBURU TELEGRAPH mCEOREMBira FOR CORSET COM The Daintiest Lingerie Has Rib bons and Lace in Various Combinations 8220 Corbet Cover for Misses and Small Women, 14, 16 and 18 years. TO BE MADE OP PLOUNCING OR OP MATERIAL. Pretty, dainty corset covers always an attractive but just now when thin blouse* are the rule, they are necessities. This one can be made from flouncing or from material. As a matter of course, the flouncing means less labor for it re quires only to be threaded with ribbon and finished with a ribbon belt. When material is used, tne upper and lower edges must be turned under and stitched to form casings but plain net is so pretty with ribbons run through that it is well worth the trouble. As a matter of course, embroidered flouncing can be substituted for the lace and any thin material can be used instead of the net. Crej>e de chine is much in vogue just now anc! cr6pe de chine is very pretty made in this way with shoulder straps of ribbon. For the 16 year size, the corset cover will require IV6 yds. of flouncing 10 in. wide or % yd. of material 36 or 44 in. wide, with "3 yds. of ribbon I in. wide. The pattern 8220 is cut in sizes for 14, 16 and 18 years. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Departmeni of this paper on receipt of ten cents. Bowman's sell May Mant6n Patterns. According toMme. Ise'bell The Successful Basinet* Woman Must Be Well Groomed Bat Hat No Time For Morning Prinking HOW TO SYSTEMATIZE THB TOILET. So often women write me that thaw haven't the time for facial massage, phy sical culture or the dally care necessary to keep a woman well and In the pink of perfection. I would like to tell such wo men what some of my pupils accomplish under the strain and stress of a business or professional life, of women successful In business, who keep old age at bay be cause they believe that to do ao la a dis tinct business asset. The successful business woman is apt to be early at her desk; she has no time for morning prinking. As one young wo man puts It: "I am practically dressed for the day before I go to bed at night" T® do this the evening toilet must be an elaborate one, but, If it Is systematized and everything is at hand, it need not take over an hour. This may seem con siderable to the young office girl who comes in late from a party with only a few hours" beauty sleep between her and the alarm clock's Insistent ringing, but as the years go by she will realize that the time Is well spent and regret that she did not begin sooner. An older wo man should supplement this care with a weekly visit to a good beauty parlor, one week for a shampoo and scalp raassag% facial massage and manicure the follow* tng week, and so on. Tho Night Toilot The busy woman should take her warm cleansing bath at night. Before getting Into the tub, however, she nhould let down her hair, brush It thoroughly and pin It lightly so as to escape the water. Bhe should clean her face and neck thor oughly with a good cleansing cream and then pat on a considerable amount of massage cream which she leaves on ths face during the bath. Th» soapy bath, according to my be lief, should not touch tho face; the nails of the toes and hands and knees and elbows should be well scrubbed with a flesh brush, the skin well washed and afterwards well rinsed with clean water by means of & bath spray. Sweet smell ing talcum powder Is always pleasant after a warm bath, but the skin should be well dried before the powder Is ap plied. There Is no advantage, healthful or beautifying, in staying in the hot, •oapy water and bathing and drying should not occupy more than ten rain stss. WOMAN SHOOTS ROBBER Sunbury, Pa., April 14. —When Mrs. Norman Young, of Northumberland, heard a noise in her cellar she called and asked who was there and receivea no answer. Taking a revolver, she went downstairs and into the dining room. An inside cellarway leads up to the dining room and she could clearly hear sounds of someone trying to force the door. Without an In stant's hesitation she fired through the door. The result was a yel! and a shuffling down the steps. A few minutes later she heard a noise at the outside cellar door and saw a man fleeing from the cellar and disappear In the darkness. Later she learned that a man of prominent family had applied at a doctor's office to have a wound in his shoulder dressed. Xo arrests have been made. I Dr. Pierce's Favorite | "■gs?" Prescription n> woman §(ln Tablet or Liquid Form) tygg ||)o has helped thousands of *° suffering women to SUFFER! Better Health, J2B&SS2& Greater Strength, suppose you do have amm—mm*—— headaches, back- MISS gilkey r% mnify |* A.m. m g »«■ + q aches,extreme nerv "X wrote you last September W|#ll ousness. loW-Snirits and deacr bed tho condition of msmammarmKmmamammsm . * l i my daughter at that time," _ ■ JL 0 ■ cITIQ general good- Better Looks. for-nothing>eHn g « nervous wreck. so weak she 1 at times? Your Case could scarce!.? stand alone, suf- . . , i feringfrom stomach, liver, kid- mi • I T\ • j* • 1® TlOt IlOpoi6Sß, Favorite Prescription is pre- These symptoms are .eemed that there was rothhi«r pared from the natural remedial herbs evidence that the for her but the irrava. She be- * • • .. ~ .. . . j l* i. : £ K an taking Tavorite Pr«crip- growing in our native forests —without delicate organism of U>\ n t writer uVn alcohol, without narcotics. It is a re- f ( em,nine od y each aa prescribed, and today . » , T . . has become OUt 01 u th. picture of health, sh. storative tonic. It corrects nervous nvripranH hppH, thi now weirhs 125 pounds—a ffatn • i i n ,1 f OI Uer anQ neeQS Uie of ju.t k> pound, tferrecov. irritability, exhaustion and the dis- help Nature's reme ery is a miracle to the people . •> » - , „ "~'r " a 7' c lcl l ~ wei'wL never thought of"' nsr tressing symptoms of derangement of dies can bestow. we wo."e»ert out feminine organs. 58 The Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription has been sold in liquid form for ra K over forty years. It c."ji now be had trom all dealers in medicines in either 13 ifl tablet or liquid form—or send 50 cents in one-cent stamps and obtain a trial Pfl BH box of tablets by mail. Address: DR. PIERCE, Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N.Y. Mj Bfl Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigor- I Rm ate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, H » SH tiny granules, easy to lake aa candy. JK Aged Wanderers Cared For by Columbia Police Special to The Telegraph Columbia, Pa., April 15.—Jacob and Mary Remick, aged wanderers, were picked up along the banks of the Con estoga creek, where they lived in an open liutconstructed with poles and pices of carpet for roofing. They had no other shelter and secured an exist ence by begging from farmers, whom they annoyed with their frequent isits. The couple are married, but hey evidently have had hard luck, or they are without home and have only the scantiest clothing. They were shelter by the police. BENEFITS FOR SICK FIREMEN Special to The Telegraph Columbia. Pa., April 15.—The Fire men's Relief Association of this place has adopted an amendment to 'the by-laws of the organization which'pro vides for the payment of benefits for sickness contracted in line of duty. Heretofore benefits have been paid only for accidents incurred in the service. ONI/IT ONE "BROMO QUININE" To get the genuine, call for full name, LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE. Look for signature of E. W. GROVE. Cures a Cold In One Day. 25c.—Advertise ment. ISBBif" ITCHED ID PAINED Festered and Came to Head. Could Not Rest. Used Cutlcura Soap and Ointment, Now Face is Clear. 2826 Spruce Ave., Altoona, Pa.—"My face first brcke out in little red pimples which caused such pain. They festered and tcame to a head and at times they burned and itched very much. At night they Itched and burned ao much that I could not rest. They left small white spaces which did not look very nice. "I used remedies but all failed to relieve me. One of my friends told me to try Cutlcura Soap and Ointment. I used two cakes of Cutlcura Soap and two boxes of Cutlcura Ointment and now my face is as clear as it can be. They cured me." (Signed) Miss Ethel Shellenbarger, Nov. 5, 1913. ITCHING, INFLAMED EAR j 61 Columbia St., New York, N. Y. —"I I had an itching oar and scratched It making | it sore. There was an eruption on the ear | and sometimes It was so Inflamed that I ' could hardly bear the pain. I could not Ue on that ear. It was swollen and very prom inent. The Cutlcura Soap and Ointment cured It in two weeks." (Signed) Harry Zwlckelberg, June 3, 1913. To prevent falling hair, remove crusts and scales, and allay Itching and Irritation of ths scalp. Cutlcura Soap and Cutlcura Oint ment are indispensable. Sold everywhere. Liberal sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card "Cu tlcura, Dept. T, Boston." who shave and shampoo with Cu tlcura Soap will And It best for skin and scales PIMPLY? WELL, DON TBE! People Notice It Drive Them Off With Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets A pimply face will not embarrass you much longer if you get a package of Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets. The skin 1 should begin to clear after you have i taken the tablets a few nights. Cleanse the blood, the bowels and the liver with Olive Tablets. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are the successful substitute for calomel there's never any sickness or pain after taking them. Dr Edwards Olive Tablets do that which calomel does, and Just as effec tively. but their action Is gentle and spfc Instead of severe and irritating No one who takes Olive Tablets Is ever cursed with "a dark brown taste," a bad breath, a dull, listless, "no good' (eellng, constipation, torpid liver, bad disposition or pimply face. Dr Edwards' Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil, yov will know them by thel» olive color. Dr. Edwards spent years among pa tients afflicted with liver and bowel complaints and Olive Tablets are the Immensely effective result Talce one or two nightly for a week Soe how rruch better you feel and look 10c and 25c per box. The Olive Tablet Company, Colunibuh, O At all drug gists.—Advertisement. APRIL 15,1914. Young Woman Patient at White Pine Drops Dead Special to The Telegraph Wayneßboro, Pa., April 15.—While waiting at the Mont Alto station Sat urday afternoon for a train that was SI,OOO REWARD FOR THE Discovery and Return of Russell Uh He disappeared from WllkcN-llnrre on April 4, 1014. There la punitive proof tliat his body la In the Siiaqneliannii River. Since hi* disappear ance a hody has been seen In the river on two occasions. Wire John H. * ' ■ ,-i r/j' 'yjL— THE TEMPTATION TO '■ always with you when you carry y your surplus in your pocket. Place R r ®t National Bank v "".h-, _ | '-:>x*ixy-where it will accumulate and jyfSaa i!gfif\Fll|ili where it Is always at your command ! U for permanent Investment. This bank illlltW WM 1 Is as safe as the U. S. Treasury, and I ||jm| | W '" safoßuard your savings from any COPVRIOHT-A 224 Market Street msmmwm~ GOLD OR GAT/.RRH? TRY ELY'S CREAM BALM Instantly Clears Air PIWSMP'S: Yon Breathe Freely, Nasty Discharge Stops, Head Colds and Dull Head ache Vanish. Get a bottle anyway. Just to try It—Apply a little In the and instantly your clogged nose and stop ped up air passages of the head will open; you will breathe freely; dull ness and headache disappear. By morning! the catarrh, cold-ln-head or catarrhal sor* throat will be gone. End such misery now! Get the small bottle of "Ely's Cream Balm" at any drug store. This sweet, fragrant t Always First— Always Right! i At the great society event, the "Paquin" Paris model exhibition, held recently at the Ritz-Carlton I Hotel, New York City, the one great fashion novelty shown on almost every dress and blouse was the JAPANESE COLLAR. This delightful design was first de scribed and illustrated by Pictorial Review more than a month ago. and it is again presented in a number of novel ways in the April number of Pictorial Review—now on sale. Once again, as usual. Pictorial Re view was the first American publica tion to show the latest style. Pictorial Review is always first and always right in presenting the newest and smartest styles. That fact has made Pictorial Review the Fashion Authcrity in over a million American homes. See the Easter Fashion Number before selecting your garments for Spring. PICTORIAL REVIEW F-or April la Mil, Dives, Pomeroy Stewart ♦.o carry her to her former home In York, Pa., Miss Rachel Winters, 31- year-old daughter of Mrs. Rachel Win ters, dropped dead, a victim of tuber culosis. Sh,e had been a patient at the White Pine Sanatorium at Mont Alto for some time. Her brother-in law, Elmer Stump, and a physician were with her at the time. balm dissolves by the heat of the nos trils; penetrates and heals the In flamed, swollen membrane which llnea the nose, head and throat; clears the air passages; stops nasty discharges and a feeling of cleansing, soothing relief comes immediately. Don't lay awake to-night struggling for breath, with head stuffed; nostril* closed, hawking and blowing. Catarrh or a cold, with its running nose, foul mucous dropping into the throat, and raw dryness is distressing, but truly needless. Put your faith— Just once In "Ely** Cream Balm" and your cold or ca tarrh will surely disappear Adver tisement. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers