10 XKfower) Business Woman Needs a Wife fcy tXVKOT«\ |>l x S"l *GttC*s" ?«aid tbe succewfnl business woman, "th.« CV>n\v mission* 1 * Kathertne R »\? \hav * h»t she needs most 5s an official hua band to r#rrwf«t hw st public din ners and lunches. as the wivt® of the mayor and dlstrW «M«rmr charmingly represent them at such functions while the\ are in their offi.vs doing their work. M> is tIMI what a busi ness or professional womsn heeds must is wot * husband. but ;* nice wife. who will ma fop h.r comfortable home, »rtd pet and "COddl* her up after her Hard days WMk is done. , s work. I'd like to And my slipper* toasting on the radi ator. and my soft warm dressing sown hanging ready for me to put on. and Just the things tha* llike best for din ner waiting to be put on the table. It would soothe and comfort me beyond all telling to be cooed over and pitied and flattered and made to feel that I was a great big, strong, noble creature The New Baby is World's Wonder Rvery tiny Infant makes life's per spective wider and brighter. And what ever there Is to enhance Its arrival and to »**e and comfort tho expectant mother should be given attention. Among tho real helpful things Is an external ab dominal application known as "Mother's Friend." There Is scarcely a community hut what has its enthusiastic admirer of this splendid embrocation. It Is so well thought of by women who know that most drug stores throughout the United States carry "Mother's Friend" a.i one of their staple and reliable remedlest It Is applied to the abdominal muscles to relievo the strain on ligaments and tendons. Those who havo used It refer to the ease and comfort experienced during the period of expectancy; they particularly refer to the absence of nausea, often so prevalent as a result of the natural expansion. In a little book are described more fully the many reasohs why "Mother's Friend" has been a friend Indeed to women with timely hints, sug gestlen* and helps for ready reference. It should be In nil homes. "Mother's Friend" may be had of almost any druggist, but If yoli fall to find It write us direct and also write for hook to Rrsdfleld Regulator Co., 403 l.aumr llldg.. Atlanta, tin. Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect May 24, 1914. TRAINS leave Harilsburg— For Winchester and Martlnsbura at 6:03. *7:60 a. m„ *8:40 p. m. For Hagerstown, Chamber burg, Car lisle, Meclianlcsburg and Intermediate stations at 6:03, *7:60, *11:63 a. in., •3:40, 6:82, *7:40, »U:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanlcsburg at 11:48 a. m.. 1:18, 3 : a7. «:30, 0:30 a. m. For Dlllsburg at 6:03, *7:60 and •11:63 a. m„ 1:18, *3:40, 6:32 and (:30 p. m. •Dally. All other trains dally except Sunday. H. A. RIDDLE. J. H. TONOB, O. P. A. Announcement Extraordinary! Bernard Schmidt Proprietor of Schmidt's Bread Bakery Has Leased Paxtang Park and Its Amusements FOR Thursday Augus and Takes Pleasure in Announcing Schmidt's "BUTTER NUT DAY" The Great Event of tht Season. One mar.imoth day's flood of fun-inno cent fun for all. More exclusive and sensational features than ever be fore presented in a single day Free! Free! Free! Buy Schmidt's Butter Nut Bread from your grocer to-morrow and ask him for full particulars regarding this extraordinary event. TUESDAY EVENING, H>RRISBURG tflgjiftl TEEEGPAPH JUNE 30, 1914. thta somebody looked up to, and these ' things would he the pleasant reward of my labor tf 1 were a man. "Rut the woman worker never pets them. If she has a home, she not only has to earn the money to support It. but to make the home Itself after ward Tf she has her favorite dishes for dinner it is because she h«s seen to , her housekeeping before she went oft J to work In the morning. If her slippers are toasting on the radiator It i» because ahc has carefully drilled a maid into putting them there; and Jlusi beeau»<> a busy woman Is too busy to look after these details they not attended to at all, and the business woman eats what is set before her. and digs her own cold slippers out of the closet. "I think that the tragedy of the busi ness woman consists In this—that when she assumes the work of a man she merely adds It on to the heredi tar> laboring woman—which, perhaps, explains why more women do not suc ceed, and why so many break down in midcareer. They are playing the name, both ends against the middle, llow could they win out under such a system ? "If the professional woman marries, she merely acquires a" new burden, [ because the one thing above every thing else that matrimony means to" a j man is physical comfort. Somebody I to sew on the buttons, and darn the I i sox, and keep track of the laundry, j and order bis dinners. Is what he ex > I pecta to get in exchange for giving up June Wedding Ceremonies in Central Pennsylvania Sunbury.—Miss Goidle Welsh and Lester A. Seal, both of Sunbury, were married at the Second Methodist Epis copal Church, Sunbury, by the Rev. F, G. Yost. They left on a honeymoon trip to Chicago, 111. Sunbury.—Oeorge P. Neidig and Miss Cora A. Marks. Sunbury, were married here to-day. I. A. DeWltt. a squire, who Is a personal friend of the bridegroom, tied the kuot. Rarevllle.—A double wedding was solemnised yesterday, when the. Rev, H. W. Warmkessel, of Reading, united in marriage Misses Bertha W. Becker and Grace Ellzameth Becker, daugh ters of Mr. and Mrs. John Becker, and L. Joseph l.enig, of this place, and A. Abner Kellenberger, of a rod's Store. Dlllsliurg.—On Saturday evening Miss Florence Cassel and Samuel Baker were united In marriage. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. O. R. Krenz. pastor of the Calvary United Brethren Church, at the par sonage in Dlllsburg. Mrs. Baker is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Levi Cassel, of Carrol township, and Mr. Baker is a son of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Baker, of South Baltimore street. EQUIPMENT FOR CAVALRY Sunbury. Pa.. June 30. Saddles, bridles and other equipment for Troop I, Third Squadron of Cavalry, N. G. P., Captain Charles F. Clement, com mander, and headquarters, Sunbury, arrived here to-day. They will he used for the ilrst time at the encamp ment at Rolling Green Park, July 18-25. r \ "Candy Kid" Pop-corn and Peanuts —EAT SOME his personal liberty, and no matter what else his wife does or what she achieves he expects her to do those things for hint. "Men arv generous enough about giving their wives the things that money buys, hut they very rarely give their wives any personal service, such as a woman bestows upon her hus band. They would not know how to go about It. Not one man (n a thou sand even knows what his wife likes to eat, and whether she takes one lump of sugar or two in her tea, while as for her other little peculiarities just observe a man's bewilderment when he has to buy his wife a present. He can t remember, for the lite of him. a single taste she has got. "The truth is husbands expect wives lo do all of the fussing over people that is done in a household, and they are so accustomed to being the fussees that it never occurs to them to reverse the process and fuss over a worn and tired woman who has done a man's work out in the world. "And there you are," said the busi ness woinaa with a sigh. "Marrying a husband doesn't help the profes sional woman to acquire a nice, com fortable home with somebody to take care of her. and she can't marry an other woman, so there's nothing for her but the apartment hotel. But I certainly would like to have a real nice domestic little wife to toast my slip pers for me and meet me at the door with a giad sweet smile and a cup of steaming hot bouillon." Miss Fairfax Answers Queries YOU MVST S.WK YOUIIELF ' DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am deeply In love with a young | man who works in the same place I do. Me is married, but his wife does 1 not live In the same town. He goes | to see her about once a week or once iln two weeks. I have allowed him to take me home and have grown . very fond of him. I know he thinks '■i great deal of me and treats me very j nice. I have tried very hard to give j him up, but It seems I just can't. I l don't want to leave my work, as I | have a nice position, and I see him ; nearly all day. I am 26 and he 27. IWhat shall I do? BESSIE. | If you permit yourself to foster your love for a married man you are in danger of ruining three lives—his, his wife's and your own. If you are strong enough to meet this man with an air of frank friendliness and to allow no romance or lovemaklng. you will be safe In keeping your position. You must not permit yourself to think of love for this man. A man who Is not true to the wife to whom the law and the church and his sacred vows bind | him is not likely to be faithful to a girl who holds herself lightly, is he'.' NOt DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am a young girl. 18 years of age and deeply in "love with a young man two years my senior. He is very fond of me, but he only earns $lO a week. Do you think it advisable for us to marry on this small salary. BESSIE. You are young enough to wait for j marriage until the boy vou love is I earning enough to undertake the re | sponsibilities of supporting a home j and family. Just figure out for your- I self what your necessary expenses will I be, and you will realize that ten dol ! lars is not enough on which to marry. YOU OUGHT TO KNOW I am a young girl and have been ! keeping company with a young man | for three years, and we are now en- I gaged. Would it be proper for me to ask him what his salary is and how much money he has saved, or shall I wait until he tells me? I SALLY. Marriage is a partnership In which i man and woman are equal. You ought to know Just exactly what the condi tions under which you start are going to be. Tell him very sweetly that you think It will be for your mutual hap piness If you discuss your finances be fore marriage. Copyright. 1913. by Littlo. Brown • Company At Inst she turned away and suf fered herself to bo taken back to the little cottage out In the country. A month before she had been a sprightly old lady, quick of step, delighted with every household task, and always tind- Ing her reward In the pride that a mother takes In a good son. Rut In the city she had found the waters of Marnh and the city's system had forced her down, dowu, down to drink of them. Her little, old limbs became heavy, her tiny face whiter than the untouch ed scroll of judgment before sin and sorrow had ever come under heaven, and her heart—her good, gentle, tender, compassionate heart—was turned to lead. A week after her departure her son was taken from his cell in the Tombs and over the Bridge of Sighs to the criminal courts buikliug to be sen tenced. The boy stood up when the clerk bade him. He heard the question ask ed whether there was any reason why the penalty of the law should not be exacted from him. He could think of nothing to say save, "1 am innoceut." The formula of sentence was mum bled by the judge and an officer took him by the arm and led him away. As they reached the bridge over Franklin street, connecting the Tombs and court building, and the sunlight from the square windows struck upon them for a moment, Montgomery ask ed his keeper: "How many years did he say? I could not hear him." The officer looked at him uneasily and hesitated. "Life imprisonment." Montgomery staggered and the offi cer released his grip and caught him under the arms, thinking that he would faint. There was a sob, hard and bitter, and then the young man cried as a child would cry when an ugly temper ed servant took from the nursery floor its toys newly given. The sentence of the court had swept from him the toys of young manhood and had cast them as grass into the furnace. He would never hear the sound of a woman's voice, nor the sound of laughter by man or child. He would never again see the magic line where sky and sea or woodlands meet. Even the seasons of the year were taken from him. The beauties of na ture familiar to the eyes of a whole some country boy, the spread of smiling fields, tasseled corn waving in the wind, bending roads, glimpses of the sunlit river through foliage, quiet lit tle gardens in front of quiet little houses, were all taken from him as if the tail of a comet loaded with cyano gen had swept the earth and had wiped out all the loveliness that God had fashioned for his children. As the sentenced prisoners were be ing taken from the Tombs for the jour neys to the state's various prisons De tective Lieutenant Michael Kearney sat In the office of his inspector and received the congratulations for his ex cellent work in the Montgomery case. Inspector ltanscombe looked over his list of assignments for the day and found nothing worth the time and skill of his favorite man hunter. "You have a day off, Mike," he told the detective. Kearney rose, saluted and left head quarters. A man absolutely unappre clatlve of the ordinary pleasures of life, he found himself at a loss what to do. There was only one thing worth while on a day off—his little flat-in Oliver street. He made his way home. He rang the bell in the vestibule. The lock clicked and he entered. Kearney mounted the stairs and opened-his mother's kitchen door with out knocking. "Well, Mike," exclaimed Mrs. Kear ney in surprise, "what brings you home at this time of day?" "I gotta day off," he told her. "Ye're ■crubbing the kitchen flure agnin. When'll you be done?" "Pretty soon, Mike. You go in the parlor and make yourself comfortable, and I'll bring the beer and your pipe." He did as she bade him, and she fol lowed, clearing ofT a center table and placing his beer, pipe and tobacco on it He tried several chairs. They were •11 stitiiy tufted—bought for "compa ny." He could adjust himself to none of them comfortably. He returned to the kitchen. "Could ye spread down some bagging BO I can stay in! here?" he asked. "Sure, lad," she replied from her knees. "I'm finished now." She made him comfortable in his old chair by the window. He was engag ed In balancing himself at his favorite angle when he noticed something black on the end of the kitchen table. "What's that, old lady?" he asked curiously. The mother's face paled. He reached over and picked it up. It was a filmy and torn veil. Beneath It was a little black fan. ! "She forgot them—Mrs. Montgom ' ery," explained the mother, taking the | two articles from the hand of her son. | "The poor little woman, the poor little woman!" She hurried with thetn to her bed room, which opened on the kitchen When she returned and begun shaking down the aubes lu the Ftore she slgheil. "It'i terrible. Mike." *he said. "The fioor 014 »Wasr to lalUUli iB-the wurld to starve or die of a broken heart, j Blessed Mother In Heaven, look after j her." Some of the cosiness of the room seemed to leave it. Was there chill In the air, or did he Just Imagine it? He closed the window back of him. "The evidence was all one way." he grunted. "I didn't try him. I wasn't the judge or the jury. I didn't decide whether he was guilty or innocent. That ain't my job. My job is to get the,evidence for the prosecution." He tried to think of something to say that would turn the conversation to some more agreeable subject, but he was a one Idea man, and there was no fancy in him. From the open door of his mother's bedroom came a soft, ruffling sound. It startled him. "What's that?" he demanded. "It's that dlvll of a kitten. Mickey," nhe told him. As If in answer for himself. Mrs. Kearney's mouser rolled into the kitch »n. slapping and playing with a black object, the mourning fau of Mrs. Mont gomery. Kearney left his chair and went to a closet, taking down a rusty felt hat and n raincoat. "I think I'll walk around to th' Oak street station f'r a bit of gossip,"' he said. "But I'll be gettin' lunch f'r ye pret ty soon, Mike," she protested. "Xaw: I guess I'll eat out f'r a change." With a grunt of goodby he left the flat. CHAPTER IV. No. 60,108. OF tlie men sentenced with James Montgomery six were sent to Sing Sing, while the others went to Clinton and Auburn. The six Sing Sing ineu were manacled in couples, but as Montgomery was a "lifer" additional precaution against attempted escape was taken by hand cuffing him to a guard as well as to his prison mate. There were three links in the chain of humanity and steel. Montgomery found that the prisoner locked to his right wrist was a heavy, i long armed man with the prognathous jaw who had sworn heartily and bit terly the morning of the lineup at po lice headquarters. The six men and their guards piled into an automobile van in front of the Tombs on Center street. Above the clanging of the gong of the machine and the heavy roar of vehicular traffic as they were taken toward the Grand Central station Montgomery could hear the man beside him keeping up a low growl, as of a beast dreaming of bat tle. Had he known the length of this man's sentence he might have envied him, for he was to serve only fifteen • years. His offense was burglary, j They boarded a train for Ossining at the Grand Central station. At Tarrytowu, where the electric zone ended, the train was delayed while an engine was coupled to the ! coaches. Here the tracks run on the I very edge of the Hudson, the river I splashing the ties during high winds [ from the west. Across the river Montgomery could | see a pretty cluster of houses half hid j den In the trees. It was the village of | N'yack. Just over the skyline and be yond the last peaked roof was a cot tage standing back from the broad au tomobile road which leads to Tuxedo. Within that cottage was the little mother with the faded eyes and the heart that had turned to lead in the criminal courts building in New York. His eyes peered hungrily through the coach window. He had written to her from the Tombs. It was a brave letter of determination to some day prove to i the world that he was innocent of the crime of which he had been convicted. He advised her to cast about for a boarder so that she could keep the taxfs paid 011 the home. His father had been a Mason in good standing, and the Masons had helped her before, j They would help their dead brother's I widow again, he told her. The boy pressed his forehead against the window pane nnd feasted his eyes for the last time the heavily wood ed farther shore. One of the strongest swimmers among the sturdy country boys about Nyack, he had swum the river, a good three and a half miles, more than once, and this scene In all its simple loveliness was old, and sweetly old, to his young eyes. The train paused at Scarborough and was off again in less than a minute. Suddenly the eyes of the boy at the window encountered total darkness and to his ears came the din of a rail road funnel. The short tunnel was di rectly under the entrance to Sing Sing prison. In a few seconds the train cleared the tunnel and stopped at Os sining station. A covered tumbril was ready to take them up the steep road from the sta tion to the highway running south and to the prison. The team of horses struggled upward, straining and pant ing, and, reaching the highway, stop ped to blow. The convicted men had a few more precious moments iu which they could feast their eyes with glimpses of sky, river and bills through the open front and rear of the vehicle. {To Be Continued J Don't ask for lubricating oil, ask for ffiolarine> THE STANDARD OIL FOR ALL MOTORS and insist on getting it Years of experience in oil manu facture enable us to say—"lt is the best motor car oil that science and experience has produced." Its increasing sales are conclusive evidence of the satisfaction of its many users. A gallon will convince you. If your dealer cannot supply it, telephone or call THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY Absolutely No Pain / My latest improved nppll anres. Including an oxygen- V QW S 1 a,r apparatus, makes k extracting and all den- '.O • jfi**' Jr tal work positively k painless and is per- O fejtly harmless, EXAMINATION SL™™* pnpp x a r x Gold fillings SI.OO " ""I-' Hlllnga in silver alloy cement 50e. Gold Crowns and Registered x A x Bridge Work. $3, $4, $5. a —. 22-K Cold Crown .... $5.00 Graduate Office open dally 8.»0 a. . , S \ ▼ m. to « p. in.: Hon., Wed. Assistants \ 7 r and Sat. Till 0 p. m.; Sundays, 10 n. m. to 1 p. m. f S BeU Phon ° 33a2R /Ml*.-. S it • S EASY TERMS"OF S S PAYMENTS MWM VV32O Market Street "(Over the Hub) ' X Harrisburg, Fa. it ntdn-t Hurt n Bit PAIITinN I When Coming to My Office Be uflU I lUli ■ Sure You Are in the Right Place. B™" FOURTH OF JULY Why not open a charge account by using our Store Or ders. They are accepted as cash for any and all merchandise purchased at Leading Department and Best Cash Stores. You CREDIT Whore You Vfcnt It BELL PHONE 2749R Coal Is Cheapest and Best Now To buy coal now la 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 mlnea at thla time of the year may be thoroughly acreened before delivery, a difficult matter in cold weather when froat will cause ti:«i dirt to cling to the coaL So to buy Montgomery coal now la to 'j/ »ha beat quality of the beat coal at the loweat prices. Place you.* orde». J. B. MONTGOMERY Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets 0r? V I Painless Dentists 1 m 1 \ I 1 A N. MARKET SQUARE We make a specialty of the painless extraction of teeth. Free ex traction when plates are ordered. Reasonable, reliable, artistic dentistry. Hours —8 A. M. to /. P. M. # Sundays—lo A. M. to 1 P. M. LADY ATTENDANT