8 \X2bfflen T«lnreß^s Men and Women Love By Instinct By Dorothy Dix. A correspondent asks those ques tions: ••Why should a man or a woman go over all the reasons why , he or she should not love soino one, and eJI tho equally forc ible reasons why [ some other one who would be best and wisest for him or her to marry, while he or she knows . that he or she loves and wants the unde sirable party? In short, why should men and women In love he like one who Ilips u rotn to decide a question, and I when it comes down heads abides by the lail decision any how? Is this subtle thing wo call intuition, or the sixth i< nse. a better guide In love than our roarsc und by uo means Infallible, rea son?" \ general blanket reply to these ii'teries is that men and women love by instinct, and not by rule. There Is a mysterious attraction of the in dividual. just as there Is an attraction between tho ses.es, that nobody can ex plain. The wisest and most learned scien tists cannot tell us why a man picks home one particular woman out of all Ilia <ether women to be his mate, nor why a woman gets up and follows some nne man to the ends of the world. Nov do the man and woman know. Ihemselveß. The wife and husband a mar and woman have chosen may be Inferior In every way to hundreds of I'ther men and women with whom I hey were associated daily. The world may wonder at their selection, but to the man and the woman there was pnly one other man and woman In the World. The Tragedy of J.ove It is part of the tragedy of love D^es y° ur bab y ■■ $ as much HPwvlh os Ae should? IgVT, »«■ JH AKE his little legs and arms as plump as they should be? Is his little body rovmd A and chubby? Are his cheeks (&ZT S J rosy and his eyes sparkling HA ffV I— Whin your baby la six montha old ha ahould weigh twice as roach as be did when born. At the and of his first year he should weigh three times his weight at birth. If your baby doea not weigh as ranch m he shonld, there is probably something wrong with his food. A baby that is getting proper nourishment, the right amount of sleep, exercise and fresh air, will be ruddy with health. The beet food for baby is mother's milk. But if you can't nurse your baby, use the one safe substitute and watch your baby grow strong. Nestles Food is the nea rest thing there is to mother's tall he should bo, what chest, arm milk. The basis of NestliS's is pure and leg measurements he should cow's milk from sanitary dairies. The have, how large his head should be, indigestible curd meant for the etc. Measure your baby by this chart calfs four stomachs —is made soft and see how he compares with the and fleecy as in mother's milk, and modern standards of baby health, the special baby needs, not in cow's Send the coupon today, milk, are added. To prepare, just ——7———^— add cold water and boil one minute. NESTUE'S FOOD COMPANY, Send the coupon for a free box of WooJwortb Bids.. New York Nestl^'s—enough for twelve feedings Pleaaeeend m«. PRES. your boo* and —and our book on the Care of Babies trial package., —both free. The "Better Babies" Namt Chitt will also be sent you. It tells AMreu what your baby should weigh, hrrw •J ufr 1 I Esaii m' ■, ~.iaC DO YOUR OWN SHOPPING~| "Onyx" Clf Hosiery I Gives the BLST VALUE for Your Money | Every Kind from Cotton to Silk, For Men, Women sad Children j. Any Color and Style From 25c to $5.00 per pair y Look for the Trade Mark! Sold by All Good Dialera. i jjl Wholesale Lord & Taylor NEW YORK S jL M . J Now Is the Time to Clean With the Spring time conies cleaning time for your draperies, curtains, chair covers, etc. You know they are hard for you to clean. Save your- a lot of work and worry by sending them to us. We call for and deliver promptly. Both phones. EGGERT, 1245 Market Street Cleaning and Dyeing Cea! Is Cheapest and Best Now To buy coal now is to buy it at the cheapest price for which it can 1 " obtained during th*- year. And then you gain In quality, too for the coal sent from the mliirs at this time of the year may he thorouehlv screened befor- delivery. a difficult matter in cold weather when (Yost will cause the dirt to rlinp to the coal. So to buv Montgomery coal now is to buy the best quality of the best coal at the lowest nn.-e, I'lace your order. ywwea. J. B. MONTGOMERY Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets SI,OOO REWARD FOR THE Discovery and Russell Uh llr illaappcurad from Wllkm-Hfi rv „• \ itrll 4, l»l 1 Thero i. lirouf that hi. body I. Id «be - J,aVw" ita£ hto dl.«peir! "nee a Ixwly hn* been con In tli<- r.irr 1,11 < n „ orcealoaa »V| " ' u I 1.1, mikwllnrrr, ~r phono HS2 \\, HarrUburK. V * THURSDAY EVENING, I that the head and the heart do not always approve of the same person, and that the one who fires our fancy seldom comes up to our Ideal. Thus a man. liefore he Is hard hit by Cupid's dart, will toll you that the woman lie marries must be Intelligent, Industrious. thrifty, domestic. not (riven to fashion or folly, and he will hold ui) his hands In hftrror over the very Idea of a man choosing for a life s mate a giddy little thing who is as pretty and as useless as a painted butterfly. Nevertheless, here comes along tho little butterfly and tho next thing we know the sensible man Is breaking his neck chasing after her. Or it may be u woman who is poor, ana who hates poverty with all the ferocious bitterness that a pretty woman fools. All her life the girl has loathed her squalid surroundings and the sordid makeshifts that she has had to contrive. All her life she has longed for luxurious surroundings, for pretty clothes and Jewels and all that would make a proper frame for her beauty. The sight of her narents' struggle and her little sisters' and brothers' necessities has wrung her heart, and she has grown up with tho fixed resolve to marry money if tho opportunity over comes her way. Finally It does. A rich man, who is good and kind and generous and not only to plve her all that she wants but to be a model husband besides, asks her to marry him. She should by all the laws of reason bless all of her gods for her luck and fall upon his neck with devotion: but. alas! her errant heart has gone Its own way and bestowed itself upon some youth 'with out a penny to bless himself with, and who Is wild and wayward and nothing that lier sober judgment com mends. To marry him will nlunge her deeper Into the slough of poverty than ever, and vet he is the one that her very soul cries out for. \ M yatery Nobody ran explain these things and nobody can suggest a remedy, for when the head and the heart espouse dif ferent sides in matrimony there Is hap piness in following tho lead of neither. The marriage of reason where a man marries a woman because she Is suit ; able, or a woman marries a man be- I cause lie can give her a fine establish ment. is n cold-blooded affair that has I no more thrills In it than a Jelly-fish, i and that palls 011 one's appetite like a dinner of health foods. A women may i have all the virtues under the sun, but unless there Is something In her that quickens a man's blood and makes his throat get a little tight when he thinks about her she will become the wearl : ness of death to him. A man may be a very paragon of perfection, but un less every time she looks at him a woman sees him through a rosy mist I ol romance the bondage of her wife j hood to him becomes iron fetters on her that olauk In her ears as she | moves. 1 Nor is there any way to change this, ir men and women wyre not in love with each other before marriage they ; do not fall in love with each other af ter marriage, for matrlmonv is not a promoter of romantic sentiments. It is J«e fell destroyer of Illusions, when : both husband and wife Inevitably see I each other In their worst lights. An Inevitable Conflict There are bound to be conflicts of opinion, clashes of temperament, days I of taut nerves and Irritability, all the sorry parade of little weaknesses, and I vanities, and selfishness that disfigure j poor humanity, and nothing else on earth but that Inexplicable and lnde- J scribable something that we call love, ■ and that makes one person's faults dearer to us than anybody else's vir tues, ono person beautiful to us, no matter how disfigured, that can make the touch of fever-parehed lips sweeter to us than all the kisses of flower-scented rosebud mouths, can offset all the disenchantment of matri mony. Yet, on the other hand, if one fol ; lows the heart and disregards the head, there Is only too often a hitter awakening after the first rapture of i love has spent Itself, for unfortunately life is a very practical affair and ro mance and sentiment are not legal ten der with the butcher and baker and ; candlestick maker. And. as Mr. .lames would sav, "There you are!" Happy the few : whose judgments approve their own I choice! I CON VICTS ABE BI IIDIXO SCHOOL/ I <OK THEMSELVES Special to' The Tegraph I Columbus, Ohio, April 10. For many years the Rev. Francis L. Kelly, <>. P.. Catholic chaplain at the Ohio penitentiary, has argued that the pris oners should have the benefit of ele mental Instruction and school train ing. Now a two-story building of stone and brick is being completed for that purpose. Upon the ground floor are ten schoolrooms, while the upper floor is to be the Catholic chapel, as well as the private office of father Kelly, who has given nearly twenty years of his life to work within the prison walls. It has been under construction for the past seven months. The work has been done entirely by the convicts. I THE CHARM OF DICKENS [ Where other writers have thousands |of admirers. Dickens has millions. He Is equally beloved by all classes, be cause his stories go straight to the heart. He possessed to a remarkable degreo the power to delineate character. His people are regarded more as human beings than mere characters in books. And his tales! You open a book and immediately a flood of delightful entertainment bursts upon you. You are unconscious of th<; effort of read ing; you forget the printed page. So wonderful Is the charm of Dickens that you seem to experience the things portrayed. Where else will you find such lum bering, comfortable old stage coaches filled with such good company? Where else can you enter such dear, old-fashioned inns, pull your chair be fore- a rousing lire and pass the even ing with such jolly companions? In what other books will you find such vivid contrasts? Here tho most joyous of humor, there somber tra gedy. Then passages of infinite ten derness, followed by scorching denun ciations of laws and customs that op press the poor, the downtrodden, tlic weak. The debtor's prison, the almshouse, the thieves' den, the foundling asylum, quaint corners of old London, rural old Kngland, Paris seething in the grip of the French revolution; you see them all. Finishing one of his books is like parting with old and deor friends; you cannot remain away long, because Dickens is one of the few authors you enn read over and over again, each time finding new Interest and charm. TUXLEH AT LANCASTER Ira B. Bixlcr, grand chief of Knights ol the Golden Eagle of Pennsylvania, went last night to Lancaster, where he will confer with the general commit tee from Lancaster castles in regard to arrangements for grand lodge ses sions in May. Grand Chief Bixler, Tuesday night, was the guest of Pride of Cambria Castle at Johnstown. It Kills 'Em Dead by Contact or Drives 'Em Out—by Odor "In Tim* of Peace Prepare lor War." p^™™I)(SECTIIjJ if Non-Explo«lv« ~ V J Amy Reliable Dealer bcOM "tuccttM." : Ln from Cellar to Garret I TOII CANT BRUSH OR' WASH OUT DANDRUFF The Simplest and Quickest Way Is to Dissolve It The only sure way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve It, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when re tiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it In ently with the finger tips. Do this to-nig'.it and by morning most if not all of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more ap plications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy, every single sign and trace of It, no mater how much dan druff you may have. You will find, too, that all Itching and digging of the scalp will stop at once, and your hair will be fluffy, lus trous. glossy, silky and soft, and look and feci a hundred times better. If you want to preserve your hair, do by all means get rid of dandruff, for nothing destroys the hair more quickly, it not only starves the hair and makes It fall out. but it makes it stringy, straggly, dull, dry, brlt- - tie and lifeless, and everyone notices j it. You can get liquid arvon at any ! drug store. It ia inexpensive anil 1 never fails to do the work.—Adver- , tiseincnt. HAJUUSBURG TELEGRAPH TAFFETA IS FAVORED 1 FOR BUSTLE SKIRT Either High or Normal Waist Line Used For This Model }217 One-Piece Skirt, 22 to 30 waist. WITH BUSTLE EFFECT. HIGH OR NATURAL WAIST LINE. Drapery at the hack that conveys the suggestion of a bustle is new and smart and here is a skirt that shows it handled with unusual success. The drapery is arranged to form pretty folds at the front and width over the hips and, inci dentally, the skirt is all made in one piece, so that it can not mean much labor. Beneath the upper portion, there is a smooth fitting yoke and the skirt is slashed across the back to allow of plaits and folds. The model is an excellent one for the taffeta that has taken such a firm hold upon the fashionable world and almost all the fashionable silks and crfpt's and it also is much liked for the spring suiting materials, for the model is equally smart for the indoor gown and for the street costume. Since the finish can be made at either the high or the natural waist line, ail figures can be accommo dated. Taffeta is the material illus trated and taffeta seems to suit the mode peculiarly well. For the medium size, the skirt will re quire yds. of material T],2% yds. 36, 44 or 52 in. wide. The width of the skirt at the lower edge is I yd. and 14 in. _ The pattern of the skirt 8217 is cut in sizes from 22 to 30 inches waist measure. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper, on receipt of ten cents. Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. "Then Are Matty Causes For An Infected Breath" Say Madame Ise'bell "Some Come From The Stomach And Some From The Head" THE BREATH—Part I. Carelessness, X believe, is the basis ok most eases of offensive breath. This means disregard of perfect cleanliness of the mouth and nose and of the fundi mental laws of physical hygiene. By carelessness I alsy Include the neglect of overcoming some passing cause that may taint the breath. Other cases of offensive breath come from physical causes that are sometime* deeply rooted and difficult to cure. When recognized they may be overcome, and. In any case, care will mitigate their un pleasant effects. Clean the Teeth Properly. Anyono desirous of keeping the breath •weet will pay strict attention to the con dition of the mouth and nasal passages. Brushing the teeth Is not sufficient. The mouth, the gums, the tongue should be wiped dally with a piece of absorbent cotton. The throat should be gargled. Learn to clean the teeth properly with en up and down movement of the brush that will get between the teeth and dis lodge particles of food. Never go to sleep without being sure that the teeth are absolutely free of any food particles. For this purpose a tooth brush Is rarely sufficient and dental floes is necessary. Pay particular attention to any artificial attachments in the mouth. With some bridge work It Is possible to pass the dental floss between the bridge and the gums and keep the space clean in that way. If this is not possible, provide your self with one of the small mouth sprays that dentists use. Remember that particles of food left 1b the mouth will ferment and cause not only an offensive breath, but rapid decay of the teeth. A pleasant wash for the mouth to be used after the teeth have been brushed, and dental (loss used and the mucus wiped from tongue. gumß and roof of mouth Is a few drops of ttneture of myrrh In a half glass of cold water. If there !B any reason to suppose that the breath Is tainted, make this preparation a little stronger. Gargle the throat and rinse out the mouth with It as well Catarrh. Catarrh Is a frequent cause for offen sive breath. Many cases of this trouble some malady are cured by the systematlo practice of deep breathing and absolute 1 cleanliness of the nasal passages. I be- 1 lieve that children should be taught to wash out their nostrils morning and night with soapy water, inhaling a little of It ! Into the nostrils and expelling It. Per- 1 feet cleanliness of the nasal passages Is ■ the best protection against head colds ! snd catarrh and the best guarantee that the breath Is not tainted with any odor < eomlng from he head. In the following lesson I will take up : the subject of offensive breath due to ' disturbances of the digestive trsxit || message from jjj I is now sealed with j "SEAL OF PURITY." J P The mint juice is kept fresh. Not the I H tiniest atom of anything can get at it It's fl m\ sealed so tightly that it's even waterproof. W I J No wonder it's always so dainty and de- i V V licious besides beneficial to teeth, breath, y appetite and digestion. h yi " ,T " TT BY THE BOX i for 85 cents |l at most dealers. || contains twenty 5 cent pack- AT rhey stay fresh until used. Y can, pure, 11 (LEY'S. Look f<M^he^sp^i%^f RETURNED FROM SOUTH AMERICA Special to The Telegraph "Waynesboro, Pa„ April 16.—Mr. and Mrs. Frank Barnett, who have been spending the past ten weeks touring South America, returned to Waynesboro yesterday evening. Mr. Barnett says he does not see much show for Americans In Brazil or Argentine, as the countries are on the verge of bankruptcy and taxes are exceedingly high. In some places they were required to pay a tax on every receipted bill they received. Prices of staple articles are very high. BUSINESS SHOW OPENED Special to The Telegraph Lebanon, Pa., April 16.—Yesterday the Lebanon business show was opened under most favorable auspices with the largest number of exhibitors and the finest display of merchandise and industrial wares in the history of the annual show. The affair is be ing conducted under the auspices of the Lebanon Board of Trade, with Secretary Frank P. Hammar in di rect charge. The Favorite Breakfast jgf Amour's "STAR" Ham /■I I or Bacon, j uic X rich noSS ' th C [f SL the famous yj« APRIL 16, 1914. FIRE DESTROYS HOUSE Special to The Telegraph Lewistown, Pa., April 16.—An oil stove accidentally overturned at the home of Mrs. Fannie Wilson yester day, causing a conflagration that strip ped the house. The house, a frame structure owned by W. S. Dellet, was : almost totally destroyed. Mrs. Wilson was packing her goods to move, and : a man by the napie of Wayne Sher- 1 wood, who was to occupy the house, i had stored some of his goods there. A portion of the goods of both fam- I ilies was destroyed. MONEY FOR CONFERENCE | Special to The Telegraph Wilson College, Chambersburg, Pa., ! April 16.—The Y. W. C. A. of Wilson' College gave an entertainment for the benefit of the conference fund, j The affair was directed by Ruth 1 Campbell, of Marlon, Virginia, as | chairman. The association is working hard to raise its money for the sum- j mer conference. Work is going forward on the lit-! erary contests which are to be held on April 18. 25 and 27. SMALL BOY SCALDED Special to The Telegraph Marietta, Pa., April 16. —Lloyd Ney, aged four years, son of Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Ney, residing on tha Engle farm, near town, is in a critical I condition from being scalded. While : the mother was preparing the even j ing meal she went into an adjoining | room, and the lad crawled upon the J coal bucket and pulled a teakettle of | scalding water over his body. His .lower limbs are frightfully burned and i there are a number of Internal burns. FUNERAL OF J. Q. A. WOLFE j Funeral services for John Quincy ' Adams Wolfe, the aged Civil War vet | eran who died early Monday morning |at his home, 101 South River street, I from hiccoughs, took place last even ing at 8 o'clock at the house. Tho I services were in charge of Post No. 58. They attended the services in a body. ' The zody was taken to Shermansdale, Perry county, this morning by Under taker T. M. Mauk & Son for burial.
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