Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, July 09, 1914, Page 9, Image 9

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    A Word of Precaution.
[UST wherein lies the reason for the use of vegetable preparations for infants
J and children ?
Why are any but vegetable preparations unsafe for infants and children ?
Why are Syrups, Cordials and Drops condemned by -all Physicians and
most laymen ?
Why has the Government placed a ban on all preparations containing, among
other poisonous drugs, Opium in its variously prepared forms and pleasing tastes,
and under its innumerable names?
These are questions that every Mother will do well to inquire about.
Any Physician will recommend the keeping of Fletcher's Castoria in the
hoUse for the common ailments of infants and children.
Children Cry For
|»> nessandßest.containsneio*r Letters from Prominent Druggists
Opium .Morphine nor MioaaL ~~
fe not narcotic. addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher.
MB S. J. Rriggs & Co., of Providence, R. 1., say : "We have sold Fletcher's
H!?'!: . jtix.Sman * \ Castoria in our three stores for the past twenty years and consider it
( one l ' le b p st preparations on the market."
Blfi'nll /Ww"' - \ Mansur Drug Co., of St. Paul, Minn., says : "We are not in the habit
111 Wm Strd- * ( lof recommending proprietary medicines, but we never hesitate to say a
' gord word for Castoria. It is a medical success."
MM fi—B-. Hegeman & Co., of Ne,w York City, N. Y., say : "We can say for your
Kip 51 I Apetfect Remedy forr(m!W& Castoria that it is one of the best selling preparations in our storea.
i W* 11 ' That is conclusive evidence that it is satisfactory to the users."
"sand LOSS OF SLEEP. W. H. Chapman, of Montreal, Que., says: "I have sold Fletcher's Cas
§Wl|l - ——; toria for many years and have yet to hear of one word other than praise of
IN njk Signamre oi I look upon your preparation as one of the few so called
BiS® l j patent medicines having merit and unhesitatingly recommend it as a safe
Ell COMPASS household remedy."
fifl GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS BEARS
P" the
I Signature '
Exact Copy of Wrapper. tmb c . ntauw com „ anv . '« w vo „ k CITY
4 —; »I
Miss Fairfax
Answers Queries
PARENTAL OBJECTIONS
DEAR MISS FAIRFAX:
I am 18 and am in love with a man
two years my senior. He acts, talks
and looks as if he were much older.
He loves me, but our friendship has
to be kept secret because of his par
ents' objections. I repeatedly ask him
to tell his parents that he loves me and
has serious intentions, but he says he
has already told them, but to no ad
.J ing Pro6fe^S, |^p' ' '
]\fO more "back-breaking"—-"dirt a fly- ''|
the cleanest, easiest and most economical way
to shine up you have ever tried, and you can't possibly get soiled because
Veta polishes come in a "Clean tube." A pressure does it.
In addition Veta polishes are made of the best
materials that can be put into a polish.
VETA STOVE POLISH VETA SHOE POLISH
will make that red, rusty stove look like new and keep it Shines shoes in a jiffy. No dirty, sticky lids to
looking that way and then it's so very easy to apply. knock off, you just press the tube and go to it
" fireproof and lasts long. mm and get the dandiest looking "shine"
Tit £± a of £*? "£s* 4 W» havener had; a brilliant ra»
penmts thumb to press it when applying. H|9 M P ro °f lasting •Tune.
That's all—no fuss, no dirt; always H J Veta outfit, consisting of tube, mitt
ready for instant use. H or dauber with polishing cloth—2sc*
Single tubes, 10c. Brush and dauber, 40c. In black or tan, at all dealers.
The Veta Manufacturing Company
ALLENTO WN. U. S. A.
THURSDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JULY 9, 1914
vantage. If he should happen to meet
me when he is accompanied by his
mother he only nods and walks on.
Kindly advise me what both he and
I should do under these circumstances
and if It is wise to continue this secret
love affair with his people in ignorance
because of their objections?
G. E. M.
Are you sure that you have not
given this boy's parents some cause to
feel that you are unworthy of their
son's love? Perhaps if he arranges
a meeting between you and his mother
you can win her regard. If not, I
should not permit myself to be in the
position of having a friendship that
had to be hidden from the man's par
ents. He must either defend you loy
ally from slights—or give you up.
AT A DANCE
Dear Miss Fairfax:
Will you please tell me the proper
thing to say when a gentleman thanks
you for a dance, and also if it is prop
er to go out for refreshments with
one fellow when you have come to a
dance with another?
PERPLEXED.
Say, "Thank you, I enjoyed it too."
or any gracious, friendly words that
occur to you. It is very discourteous
to go out for refreshments with any
but your escort.
Women and
Their Interests
The Wire Type
BY BEATRICE FAIRFAX
ISe ver a 1 corra
sponde nts have
written to ask me
to help them in de
termining the type
of woman who will
make a good wife.
Immediately there
leaps Into my mind
the old quotation,
"Home keep in n
hearts are best."
I believe in wom
en in business and
in the business of
government. I re
spect the efficient
woman wage-earner
and include her In
the category* of "home keeping
hearts," even though she be forced
out of home and into the office dur
ing many hours of each day. For in
the heart of every womanly woman
there is an instinct for home making
and home keeping that must express
itself even in a fifth floor hall bedroom
or in an expensive three-room suite of
a modern hotel.
The Wrong One
The gadabout woman who fills all
the spare moments of her life with a
feverish hunt for happiness will not
make a good wife.
The woman whose mind is littered
with such "junk" as is formed by a
kaleidoscope of tango teas, bridges,
promenades in th'e avenue, shopping
tours, flirtations, massages, Turkish
baths, Joy rides and beautiflcation of
face and gratiflc>ation of body is a
"gadabout." Beware of her.
George Du Maurier once wrote a
beautiful bit of verse on life. The
ideal wife would be the woman with
whom a man would naturally and in
evitably share such a simple and
happy life.
A little work, a little play
To keep us going—and so,
Good day.
A little warmth, a little light,
Of love's bestow K g—and so.
Good night.
A little fun to match the sorrow
Of each day's growing—and so.
Good morrow.
6
A little trust that when we die
We reap our sowing—and so,
Goodby.
For a happy marriage many thing 3
are needed —love, sympathy, under
standing, tenderness, congeniality.
Both man and woman must bring this
to the marriage.
No one can name the "type" of
woman who will mjike a good wife—
for the type depends on the type of
man to whom it Is to be mated.
In general every man would do well
to consider character, health, con
geniality, sweetness of disposition, re
liability, ability to economize and
manage consistently, common sense,
domesticity, capability, of affection
and tact. But each individual man
will require these things in varying
degree.
An Important Requirement
Congeniality is fully as important
as love's self. For without sympathy
and interests in common love diss
from lack of food. Without tenderness
he freezes to death. Jealousy and lack
of faith murder him.
The woman who loves him and
children, and who is also interested
in the affairs of nation and world—
the woman who is not flghty and silly,
with pleasure her great goal; the
woman who is not weak enough to be
Influenced by what her next door
neighbor is doing, Is the woman who
makes a helpmate as well as a wif^.
But real love is a wonderful trans
muter of dress to gold, and even the
society butterfly sometimes becomes
an earnest, faithful wife.
IF VOIR PI jAYER-PIANO PLAYS
65-note rolls, don't miss the. 90 per
cent, discount sale this tfeek. J. H.
Troup Music House, 15 South Market
Square.—Adertisement.
§ A Wonder Value For Friday A. M. |
% Just at the Opportune Time— Season
H Special. Two Pieces of Guaranteed Pure Alumi- -
H num Ware, worth $4.00, for. ||
H This Special consists ef one |l| I Jl
§| large 7-qt. Preserving Ket- IBfj 1 | "jjjljf I
I tie worth $3.25 and one Col- IH| I I 1
ander worth 75c—both for 19H 1 | iM
98c vy fy
Guaranteed pure aluminum and full size, as ad- §
J vertised. Don t take any chance making your jl
jl "goodies with granite cooking utensils when you jl
gj can get pure aluminum at these prices. i|
g ( NONE DELIVERED—PLEASE BRING CORRECT CHANGE ] Jj
jj|j Our Store Will Close at Noon on Friday During July and August 'J
|j Home Gately & Fitzgerald Supply Co. Family p
| Furnishers 29-31-33 and 35 S. Second Street Clothiers i
Our Location Meant a Great
THIS LONG KIMONO
FOUND MOST USEFUL
Pattern May Be Shortened to Dress
ing Sack if One
Wishes
Baß6 Long or Short Kimono, Small 34
or 36, Medium 38 or 40, Large 42 or 44
bust.
WITH OR WITHOUT SHIRRINGS. WITH
THREE-QUARTER OR LONG SLEEVES.
The simple, plain kimono is after all
one of the best. It is easy to slip on and
there is no unnecessary fullness. It can
be run up in no time so that it is easy to
h?.\c a variety. This one means only two
seams but, in spite of that fact, it repre
sents three such distinctly different pos
sibilities as practically to represent three
different garments. The plain long
kimono is a most comfortable and satis
factory negligee. The plain sacque makes
a good dressing jacket. If either the long
kimono or the jacket is made with the
shirrings, it becomes slightly more formal
ami can be used for the home breakfast
an I occasions of the sort.
For the medium size, the long kimono
will require yds. of material 37,
yds. 36 or 44 wide_, with I % yds. any
width or 4% yd*, of ribbon 6 in. wide for
the bands: the sacque 2 yds. 27, yds.
36 or 44 in. wide, with yd. of material
or ji yds. of ribbon 6 in. wide for the bands.
Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns.
The
QUARRY
Bu JOHN A. MOBOSO
Copyright, 1813, by Little, Brown & Co.
Dp from the distant ocean the clouds
rolled In great black folds, ripped rag
gedly In white streaks us the lightning
played and as the thunderous voices
I proclaimed that a hot sky and a smil
ing sea bad brought forth a summer's
storm.
The gale increased as the afternoon
waned, and as his cloth reservoir filled
be squatted beside it. making fast the
sticks that held the corners and care
fully guarding It Twice he leaned
over and drank thirstily when It filled
and began to overflow.
He was groping for more sticks of
driftwood to strengthen his reservoir
lupports when a white object In the
marsh grass struck his eye.
In the gloaming of a stormy twilight
he could not make out Just what the
object was, and he parted the grass
and leaned nearer. He recoiled with
a little cry of horror. He bad looked
upon the face of a drowned man!
For several minutes he stood naked
•nd shivering, awed but not frightened.
Then he parted the grass again, reach
ed down and dragged to his little is
land the abandoned tenement of a
man's soul.
James Montgomery knelt beside the
body and prayed. And as he prayed
there came to bis mind the thought
that none other than bis merciful Fa
ther In heaven had sent to him this
outcast of life. He bad brought with
him an offering of a suit of clothes.
In the pitch black of a night of storm
the fugitive put upon the dead man the
blouse with the white disk and white
star of honor and the baggy trousers.
In the soaked and muddied suit of
working clothes be took In exchange
Montgomery knelt for a final prayer
In parting with the dead and then dis
appeared In the marsh grass toward
the nearest shore lights.
• ••••••
As the men directing the bands of
bunters reported by telephone from
boar to hour that no trace of the es
caped convict bad been found the
warden of Sing Sing extended bis zone
of search. Inspector Ranscombe was
reached by telephone at bis New York
borne. He gave orders for a search of
■ll railroad yards, and tbe Oak street
police station was instructed over tbe
telephone to send a man to the little
fiat in Oliver street and rout out Mike
Kearney.
At headquarters the lieutenant In
charge of the detective bureau Inform
ed Kearney that there was no reason
for baste, .
I "The Inspector Just telephoned for
you to wait here until he comes," he
said. "Jim Montgomery, the yegg you
! Bent up for life, escaped from Slug
I Sing last night and"—
"What?" gasped Kearney.
The tone of his voice was that of a
man who had been deeply aggrieved.
"How'd he get out?"
"Here's a morning paper. It will
give you all the details."
Kearney read the story carefully and
then went to the identification bureau
and secured all the records in the case
of the police against James Montgom
ery. The Inspector arrived at 0 o'clock,
and Kearney was summoned before
him immediately.
"Well, Mike," hailed the inspector,
"what do you think of the departure
of Mr. Montgomery?"
Kearney shrugged his shoulders.
! "He ain't the first yegg to get out," he
said. "They got plenty of money and
don't mind spending it. The papers
say he was the best machinist in the
! prison. I guess he'll be using electric
I drills on safes around the country."
I "He was only a boy as I remember
i him," suggested the Inspector, "and
| somehow he impressed me as truthful,
I although the evidence convicted him
of the crime."
"There's lots of boy wonders among
I the crooks," replied the detective.
"There's the Boston Kid, Little Jimmie
Moran. Baby Bernstein and a whole
raft of them that's Just out of short
pants."
"Well, everything Is pretty quiet
now," said the inspector, "and we
might just as well spend a little time
on the Montgomery escape. Do yoa
think you can find him?"
"1 gotta good start on the Job,"
Kearney replied. 'We got his record.
He can grow whiskers, change his
name and hide where he wants to, but
If 1 ever get the print of one of His
Angers and check up on It be comes
back to Mulberry street with me."
it is only a part of an hour's jour
ney from the Urand Central station,
in Forty-second street, to the prison
village of Ossining.
Detective Lieutenant Michael Kear
ney presented himself in the warden's
office at Sing Sing at 10:30 o'clock the
morning after the escape of convict
Wo. 00,108.
He showed bis authority to the
warden and said abruptly, "We put
biui in here for life, and we want to
get him back here and keep him here."
The warden flushed, but controlled
bis anger.
"Well, this isn't exactly the place to
hunt for No. 60,108," said be. "He left
here about 11 o'clock last night"
"Did he have any help from the out
side?" asked Kearney.
"None that we know of. He man
aged to slip out ID a box with a lot of
machinery."
"•Did he get any Inside help?"
I "None that we know of."
[To Be Continued]
EACH YEAR MORE PEOPLE BUY
PIANOS
At the J. H. Troup Music House. Why?
Investigate for yourself. We're glad
to have you do so any time. Ware
rooms, 15 South Market Square.—Ad
vertisement
9