10 XfcfoMen ,sff.Jtrreßa« REPOSE MAKES FOR BEAUTY The love of beauty i and the desire to possess It is born in the soul of man. The reason of this lies In the dormant psychic memory. That memory knows that. Beauty Is God. As we were "One with God" In former eras, so we will once again become One with Him, In time to come. When wc sprang forth from the par ent source we were all beautiful. Just in proportion to our wandering away from that ■E«9> * source have we receded from beauty. And woe unto him who possesses beauty and does not recognize its "no blesse oblige," and does not make his thoughts and actions chord with the divine gift. Unto him in future Incar nations shall come ugliness and defor mity until he understands the law and abides by it. Every woman should seek the goal of beauty, and she should know that t lie path is threefold which leads to the centre of that goal. Physloal, mental and spiritual quail lies must nil combine to produce the beauty which leaves its lasting impress on the observer and which brings any measure of satisfaction to the seeker after beauty. The body, which Is tho house of the mind and spirit, should be cared for with loving wisdom and painstaking pride. Just as we build over, and change, and refurnish a house which we may Inherit as our property, but which does not satisfy our taste or our needs, so we should set about reshaping and burnishing our mortal bodies lr they do not please us. With proper physical exercises, calis thenics, right Dreathlng, bathing and diet, the gross body may be made slen der, the thin body rounder. And the features may be remolded and refined hy skilled care, combined with a posi tive mental attitude. There are women who pass the en lire morning in beauty parlors and who set apart small fortunes to recompense specialists for the care of their persons. Then, appareled In beauteous raiment, they go forth to gossip, listen to scan dal, indulge In feelings of envy. Jeal ousy and ill will, with never one up lifting thought, never one noble high aim, to mark the day; never one hour of even Intellectual enjoyment to re lax the features. An exterior and ephemeral beauty only can belong to such women. The woman who is all Intellect, even when given beauty at birth, rarelv re mains with her possession. There must lie something softer, sweeter, less aus tere than intellect to mold beauty—tho beauty which remains, grows and de velops with time. One sees often intellectual women STEAMSHIPS STEAMSmi'H [ARCADIAN to EUROM J TWIN SCREW, 9.000 Tons Reg 14,120 Oisp NURWAT l|K Suites de Luxe with Private Baths. Swimming \ Summmr Cruise • |||UvPool, Gymnasium. Orchestra And Other Features. |T/ BEDS THROUGHOUT jL,. lilfff thrvi No Berths soutma^pto!? ! || W MINIMUM If \ —^►• # AZORES f \B~ ) "THE BALMY SOUTHERN ROUTE" Jll I L The Royal Mail Steam Packet Company II || III] |l| K >AMilillM)> tV M>». l.rnrrnl Aurno, Mini' HII l||| r "Ij St., Mew York, ur i*. Lome lluiiimell,. 10:t llf 111 l A Market Street, llnrrlatnirtc. 'jj |jj| r N Personal School tf -f Tax For 1913... Hr * All persons owing this tax must pay the same at the office of the City Treasurer before May Ist, 1914, on which date the unpaid accounts will be placed in the hands of an Alderman for collection and costs will be added. OWEN M. COPELIN City Treasurer. New Series of Building and Loan Association Stock The Franklin Building and Loan Association of Harrlsburg, Pa., Is now issuing stock in a new series. Shares can now be taken at the office of the treasurer, S. W. Fleming, No. 26 North Third street. This association has been doing a successful business for twenty-six years. Shares can be cancelled at any time; and interest at six per cent, will be paid on all cancelled stock that Is one or more years old. J. H. MUSS ER , Secretary 213 WALNUT STREET !; Most headaches are due to de- !! fects of vision. | w Glasses properly fitted will cure I || ======== you. Don't be satisfied with an or- j| !j f \ 1 dinary test. We devote our entire !> jj & time exclusively to scientific eye ;;! il examinations. Reasonable prices il !! ; for high grade service. |! GOHL OPTICAL COMPANY !i ( I WHEIIK GLASSES ARE n w I . n ' 1 ;; MADE RIGHT O Market oquare : «*"—************* l Coal Is Cheapest and Best Now To buy coal now 1B to buy It at the cheapest price for which it can be obtained during the year. And then you gain In quality, too, for the coal sent from the mines at this time of the year may be thoroughly screened before delivery, a difficult matter in cold weather when frost will cause the dirt to cling to the coal. So to buy Montgomery coal now Is to buy the best quality of the best coal at the lowest nrtce« Place your order. J. B. MONTGOMERY Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets SATURDAY EVENING, By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX who were beautiful In early youth, but at middle life, a cold expression of their eyes, a straight line of a too firmly closed mouth and a Bet look of tho fea tures destroy beauty. Meditation and faith and religious i reverence, mingled with tolerance and largo sympathies, all arc beauty-mak ing attributes. Almost all nuns and Sisters of orders are beautiful. The habit of daily repose of the fea tures in solitude, while praying and meditating, and the lifting of the mind above the common, vexatious thing's or ordinary life, and the close approach to the realms of the Invisible Helpers, these things are of great value in build ing beauty of the body as well as or the mind. . , , Women should study her type and apparel herself accordingly. She should endeavor to accent her personal attractions by attractive, beautiful attire. Woman's love of dress Is always a subject of sarcasm and Jest to the world at large. Clprgymen and priests decry it, and reference to Eve and the wicked ng leaf have become platitudes. Yet woman continues to adorn her self. And wherefore? , _ . „ Prom whence came the instinct? Woman herself does not know, but without question "Mie developed love of personal udornment Just as the flower developed colored petals, that she might hand down her peculiarities to future generations. Woman originally was unclothed. The flower, originally, was without pet als. But as time went on, cunning flowers observed that the insects who visited them in search of honey we.o most attracted by brilliant masses ot color, which the stamens of some plants displayed. . At the same time they observed that the plants so visited were fertilized by the insects und their species perpetu- i ated. „ , Then into the mystical hearts of the flowers crept the ambitious desire to be brilliant and gay in color, to attract the bee and the beetle, and to survive in their children. The more they thought about it tho more effort they made to achieve their aim. and so their stamens broadened and flattened into petals, and strange new colors began to tint these yellow petals: blue be cause it pleased the bee; purple to af trnct the beetle, and red to suit the fancy of a meat-loving blue-bottle fly. This is the accepted doctrine of men who have devoted their lives to the study of plants. It is a scientific fact. And woman has this support of science in her efforts to beautify her self with garments which render her more attractive in men's eyes. Every religion represents Angels as beings of beauty attired in lovely robes, and heaven is always described as a place of surpassing beauty. ,It is, therefore, right for us to anticipate heaven and the Angelic State by mak ing ourselves and our homes here as beautiful as possible. But remember always'the greater power of the men tal over tho material. Home Is the earthly expression of what we will find waiting for us after death. Every religion represents Angels as beings of beauty attired in lovely robes, and heaven is always described as a place of surpassing beauty. It is, therefore, right for us to anticipate heaven and the Angelic State by mak ing ourselves and our homes here as beautiful as possible. " But remember always the greater power of the men tal over the material. Home Is tile earthly expression of what we will find waiting ror us after death. If you are letting the fretful tone and the trrltable mood and the nervous habit destroy the comfort of your household you are wasting the whole effort of your life, the effort to bestow happiness. If you sit down to a gloomy table, where despondency and ill temper pre vent sociability, you might better stand in the bread line now, and take your repast in the park. There, at least, you would not depress others by your presence. If a man prepared a bower of beauty for his family and then introduced a swarm of mosquitoes and carefully bred the insect so that the bower was never free from them, you would think him a fool or a lunatic. Yet many a man and many a woman do a similar act by building and fur nishing a beautiful residence and filling it wit irritability, petty tempers and selfishness. Irritating trifles present themselves to every life. They await us at every corner along the journey. They should be treated as trifles, and brushed aside; not dignified to the po sition of tragedies, and permitted to destroy the peace of a household, to shadow feasts and darken the hours of repose with bitter memories. When we allow the small worries and annoyances of daily life, the mistakes of others and the jarring of domestic machinery to ruin the pleasure of a home we insult God. It is like pulling down the blue can opy of heaven and using It as a door mat for soiled feet. Money, education, position, power all are worse than useless unless they bring helpfulness and happiness to others. To ilo this they must he supplemented by affection, good will, self-control. Though you give to your family all the advantages wealth can offer you are worse than a highwayman If you de prive your household of peace, love and contentment in the family circle. In fact, in this pursuit of beauty, in this effort to find satisfaction for the beauty hunger which is born In every soul, there Is an immortal phrase which mav serve as the best guide: SEEK YE FIRST THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN \NI> ALL OTHER THINGS SHALL BE \l>l >ED THEREUNTO. And the Kingdom of Heaven is WITHIN. HERSHEY BOY MISSING Special to The Telegraph Lebanon, Pa., April 25.—John Dressier, of Hershey, has requested Chief of Police John G. Zimmerman to endeavor to locate his 18-year-old son, Norman, who disappeared from home Thursday without disclosing his intentions. The missing lad is medium build, weight 155 pounds, hair light, eyes blue. MEAT SHOP ROBBED Special to The Telegraph New Cumberland, Pa., April 25. While J. W. Wright, who keeps a meat store in Third street, was at din ner yesterday, the cash register was robbed of sls. The thief Jumped a high fence at the rear of the store, took a windowpane out, and gained entrance. MME. ISK'BELL Right Thing to Use After Motoring ]V/| ME. ISE'BELL'S Turkish Bath Oil is absolutely unique. There is nothing else like it the world over. It is far more cleansing than any soap or cream. It is bland and emol lient in action and keeps the skin beautifully smooth, clear and healthy. It is the right thing to use after motoring, golfing or any outdoor sport. Two sizes, 50c and SI.OO. Other Toilet Accessories Mme. Ise'bell's Exquisite Face Powder, 50c. Mme. Ise'bell's Natural Blush Rouge, 50c. Mme. Ise'bell's Rose Blush Stick Rouge, 26c. Mme. Ise'bell's Lilac Hand Whlte ner, 25c. Mme. Ise'bell's Skin Food and Wrinkle Paste, 50c and SI.OO. Mme. Ise'bell's Flesh Worm Eradi cator, SI.OO. Mme. Ise'bell's D. C. Depilatory Powder. SI.OO. Sold by Good Stores Everywhere. Central GEORGE A. GORGAS ltt N. Third Street, Harrisburg, Pa. GEORGE A. GORGAS Pennsylvania Railroad Station Hill Distrlet W. B. GOODYEAR Nineteenth and Dcrry Streets Central GOLDEN SEAL DRUG STORE 11 South Market Square West End C. F. KRAMER 3rd and Broad Sts„ Harrlsburg, p a . Hill District BRIXDLE'S PHARMACY Thirteenth and Derry Streets Made by Mme. Ise'bell 352 No. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. If your dealer's name Is not In the abo/e list he can get Mme. Ise'bell's Toilet Preparations for you from his wholesale druggist. L JP CHAS.H. MAUK OR UNDERTAKER Siath and Kalkar Straata Larfeat eitabliihment. Best (tcMtiai- Near to you •• your phone. Will to anywhere at your call. Motor arrvicr No funeral too •mall. Nona too rrpaptire Chapala. room, vault. et«„ mid with out charge. Barrisburg l£s£& telegraph FAVORITE SKIRT HAS LONG, FLARED TUNIC Good Effect Given by Figured Blouse and Tunic Over Plain Skirt 8203 Two-Piece Skirt, 22 to 30 waist. WITH ONE-PIECE CIRCULAR TUNIC THAT IS PERFORATED FOR SHORTER LENGTH AND ROUND CORNERS, WITH HIGH OR NATURAL WAIST LINE. The very long tunic that flares at the lower edge is among the newest to have appeared. It is worn both for street costumes and for indoor gowns an'd thi» skirt can be utilized for different cos tumes and in different ways. As shown here, it is made from silk and cotton Sponge but it is just as well adapted to taffeta and to charmeuse satin, to broad cloth and gabardine suitings and to the various of indoor garments. The skirt is made in two pieces, the tunic in one and, since this tunic can be made shorter, it can be adapted to all figures. A smart and quite different effect from this_ one can be obtained by making the tunic and the coat or blouse of one ma terial and the skirt of another, as skirt and coat trimmings of black moir6 velours, tunic and coat of poplin, in green or other color. For the medium size, the skirt will re quire 2 1 /* yds. of material 27 or 44, 2 yds. 5? in. wide; the long tunic j yds. 27, yds. 44, iJ-3 yds. 52 in. wide; the short tunic 2 yds. 27, I yd. 44, % yd. 52 in. wide. _ The pattern of the skirt 8203 is cut in •tecs from 22 to 30 waist. 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. News Items From Points in Central Pennsylvania Special to The Telegraph Scran tou. —In an announcement by tho sunuay campaign committee, $22,- 3»8 is given as the amount the evange list collected for his seven weeks' work here. Shenandoah. —The patriotic young men of this city, headed by J. F. Man ley, captain of police, and Spanish- American war veteran, issued a call for a meeting to be held here Sun day, to organize a company of volun teers for service in Mexico. Hazleton. —Charges were made yes terday by the striking trolleymen that detectives trom out of town have been brought here and that they are insulting the idle hands to provoke trouble. .Vluhunoy City. —Following the an nual inspection of Company E, Eighth infantry, by Lieutenant Hunt, of the United States Army, Captain Hencli was besieged by applicants anxious to go to Mexico, should tne National ws CUSTOM HATCHING IS GOOD BUSINESS Hatchibility of Eggs Influenced by Many Various Cir cumstances At this particular season of the year many people are planning to hatch as many chicks as possible without giv ing very much thought as to how they will raise them. To meet this demand for chicks cus tom hatcheries ate springing up all over the country and they are very ably filling a long-felt want. Custom hatching is a business that is full of tribulations for both the hatcher and the customer. The custom hatcher is bound to receive a good many com plaints, even though he does his work with the utmost skill, because maity people believe that an egg is an egg and will hatch if properly Incubated. This is not a fact, as the hatchability of the egg is Influenced by many fac tors before it reaches the incubator. As a rule the custom hatcher will get the best results possible from eggs entrusted to his care because his watchful eye is constantly on the look out for any deviation from the propel conditions of ventilation, moisture and temperature. The first point to insure good, strong, fertile eggs is comfortable, well-ventilated winter quarters, such quarters as will insure perfect heulth of the breeding fowl. In the second place, the male at the head of the pen or flock must be active, not too closely related to the hens, and must be a bird that matured quickly for the breed. PARASITES WIIjL SOON BEGIN TIIEIK RAVAGES That season of the year is again here when unrelenting war with the poultry house parasites will be In or der. The campaign should start with a thorough disinfecting of tho poultry premises, nest boxes, etc. There are many good formulas that can be successfully and easily com pounded at home and the cost will be found trifling as compared with a com mercial article. Siceni Nori, Indian School Clerk, Is Held For Court Special to The Telegraph Carlisle, Pa., April 25.—Assistant Federal District Attorney McCourt, of Scranton, in the hearing of Siceni Nori, late chief clerk at the Carlisle Indian School, yesterday attempted to prevent evidence being given by Miss Beatrice Herman, now resigned from the Indian service, but for some time an assistant to Nori. McCourt glowed an interior depart ment order directing Miss Herman not to testify and told Magistrate Hughes not to accept her testimony. Hughes, however, allowed her to speak and Miss Herman testified that she knew Nori had diverted student moneys to his personal account und that he has said that he would go to jail. She also.said that Nori had put the blame on a fellow employe whom he said owned a farm. She said Nori had acknowledged one item of one hundred dollars of student money had been sent by him to his wife. Magistrate Hughes held Nori for court under SI,OOO bail. FIRE PROTECTION DISCUSSED Special to The Telegraph Dauphin, Pa., April 25.—A public meeting was held in the Methodist Episcopal church last evening in the interest of fire prevention and fire protection. Addresses were made by Mr. Spangler, of Carlisle, and Mr. Morgan, of Harrisburg, of the Fire Marshal's Department, laying great stress on the importance of necessary lire equipment. Music was furnished by the Dauphin band. V CHIC^^B Hw. / It carries the new hatched brood safely through the danger « WjAltfr period. Prevents intestinal trouble and leg weakness— I makes bone and muscle—insures early maturity and strong R healthy chicks. | igk PRATTS WHITE DIARRHOEA REMEDY 1 HMB positively prevents and corrects this common disease. jJI is the time to give ////(/Jmfl to the grown tires. i/JHg ]/lll[. Refuse substitutes; Insiit on Pratta. , UmUV Get Pratta ICO paje Poultry Book. lUfIBBSj Sold on Money Back Cuaractee . Dealers Everywhere No Votes For Women! ■■ You Are Cordially Invited to Attend the Sessions of Pennsylvania Anti-Suffrage Convention Y. M. C. A. HALL Thursday, April 30th, 1914 Afternoon 2:30 Evening 8:15 i Addresses by Able Speakers at Both Sessions APRIL 25,1914. HIVE FOUND FOOL PROOF POULTRY SHED And It's the Old-fashioned 4 Room and a Top Kind at That T. E. Quisenberry and Ralph Searle, director and vice-director, respectively, of the Missouri State Experiment Sta tion, have issued a bulletin entitled "The Fool-Proof Poultry House." In the last half-dozen years many new-fangled designs of poultry houses have been recommended to poultry keepers, but in the opinion of the«e Missouri experts the old shed kind with four walls and a plain roof slant ing one way is the best type of all. It is the cheapest kind, too, they claim, and with proper arrangement for ven tilatlon and sanitation it beats all other designs. To produce winter eggs, to keep the flock healthy and at work, the shed is the real thing. Among the essentials taken from the bulletin are: Concrete floors are the best floors for poultry houses. They are rat proof and are the most easily cleaned and no farmer should build a poultry house without concrete floors. If the floor is troweled to a smoothness in the making, and four to six Inches of dry, -clean straw kept on it, all objections against it are re moved. Dirt and wooden floors are unclean, unhealthy, damp and expen sive, more expensive in the long run than concrete. A unit favored for the fool-proof house is a structure 14x14 feet, 6 feet high at the rear and 8 feet at the front. That will house comfortably llfty hens of the larger breeds and about sixty-five smaller fowls. In stead of building a larger house, the building of more units to accommo date more chickens is advised. Brooderhouse Chicks Have Leg Weakness Chicks that are closely confined to brooders and brooderhouses arc most certal nto have leg weakness develop when two or three weeks old as a result of hard floors, a lack of mineral matter or a lack of exercise. If they are heavily fed under such conditions chicks become lame because their oodies become too heavy for their legs, which have become weakened by a lack of exercise, though this par ticular form of leg weakness usually occurs at a later date, or when three or four weeks old. On the other hand, chicks that are allowed to run out doors in rain or snow are liable to develop rheumatism, the symptoms of which are much the same. Except in unusual cases, such as chicks' feet be coming injured by wood ashes, lye, etc., the causes above mentioned are practically the only ones that affect chicks' legs, it is not difficult to pre vent either disorder with proper at tention, but there is little hope of a cure when the chicks are badly affected. Perhaps it should he added that brooders with bottom heat are also liable to cause leg weakness, but in these days bottom-heat brooders are practically unknown, so this need not be considered. DON'T FKFI> OinCKS UNTIL THEY'RE 50 HOURS OLD Don't feed the chicks anything until they are from fifty to sixty hours old. The first feed should be finely broken grains and fine grit; often bowel trouble in chicks is traceable either to feeding them too soon or to feeding at the start some soft, wet mash. On leaving the shell chicks are for tified with enough rations to last sixty hours. The chick uses up a good deal of Its meager energy in fighting its way out of the shell and in order that it may recuperate by sleeping and avoiding toil of any kind the first few days of its life Nature has made the wise provision that the yolk wf the egg he available for the chick's sus tenance during such period. To sup ply feed before this egg yolk has been absorbed results in indigestion and subsequent bowel trouble MRS. MABEN WAS MADE WELL By Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg table Compound and Want* Other Suffering Women To Know It Murfreesboro, Tenn. "I hav« wanted to write to you for a long time to tell you what your wonderful remedies have done for m$ was a sufferer fio.M female weakness 1 and displacement and I would have Buch tired, worn out feelings, sick head aches and dizzy spells. Doctors did me no good so I tried the Lydia E. Pink- ham Remedies —Vegetable Compound and Sanative Wash. lam now well and strong and can do all my own work. I owe it all to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound and want other suffer ing women to know about it"—Mrs. H. E. MABEN, 211 S. Spring, St, Mur freesboro, Tenn. This famous remedy, the medicinal ingredients of which arc derived from native roots and herbs, has for nearly forty years proved to be a most valua ble tonic and invigorator of the female organism. Women everywhere bear willing testimony to the wonderful vir tue of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Wliy Lose Hope. No woman suffering from any form of female troubles should lose hope un til she has given Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a fair trial. If you wnnt, special advice write to Lydia E. Pinklinm Medicine Co. (confi dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by A woman and held in strict confidence. The lice question is settled if you dust yoiw fowls with^^ m Conke/s Lice Powder% H It's safe, quick and sure. 1 B H Saves your poultry profits because it I Kills the Lice M Doesn't Harm Chickens 0 Price 23 cents 50 cents and $ 1.00. For the mites that hide in the cracks by day and prey on chickens at night, spray . c your poultry house with k Conkey's Lice Liquid Cleans them out thoroughly Quart 35 IpMIeSR cents, half gallon 60 cents gallon 51.00. ■ For the deadly head louse use w lififfirn '] LICE ■ Ippyi Effective and dorsn't harm chicks. 10 Hgf [r and 25 cents. Money back if these Mr -Hi preparations do not satisfy. • The G. E. Conkey Gx, Cleveland, Ohio Walter S. Scliell, 13QT Market St.; E. Z. GroMM, 110 .Market St., Elk View Poultry A Supply Houne, 1701 Logan St It. 11. Holme**, Euula, Pu. We Can Hatch 40,000 Hen Eggs In lots of 150 each or more at 2c for each egg set. Send eggs to Stouffer Poultry Farm WHITE HILL. PA. or write to C. A. STOUFFER, Box 224, Harrisburg, Pa. Single Comb White Leghorn EGGS FOR HATCHING From Locust Grove Layers Hred for superior egg production and com bining the finest strains of English and American blood. ! Several pens headed by Tom Rarron's Cockerels whOße parents have records of ?20-262 eggs per year. per urttlnic. s