8 >&2o(Y)&n r^Unren&g ''Spooning" Sh By FAIRFAX brace and fondle her under the sneer ing eyes of any passing stranger. The girl who cheapens herself by permitting a man to lavish his em braces upon her while amused or dis gusted passers-by hurry away or lin ger to ridicule the affair is not the sort of girl worthy men seek in matrl- I mony. Very Active In the Spring and summer Cupid j seems to be a very active little god. : But the little demons of infatuation and flirtation and passion And this an open season for target practice, too. Girls, beware lest the men for whom you feel a real affection are feeling only the Springtime madness i of desire for any pretty girl who will be affectionate and sweet during a few months of philandering. Beware, lest a really line man whose sincere love would bless you and make you happy all through life see you belittling yourself in some I of the many ways "Midsummer mad- i May Help If You Have Tuberculosis Proper diet, fresh air and temperate habits aid persons suffering from Tuberculosis. Often more is needed. Reports show that Eckman's Alterative has brought about many recoveries. Head what it did in this case:— Madison Lake, Minn. "Gentlemen:—ln December, 1908, I was taken with hemorrhages of the lungs, which confined me several weeks, each time to my bed. My doc tor advised me to go West. In No vember I started for Denver, Col. After my arrival I met Michael Brody, who, upon learning of my condition, urged me to take Kckman's Alterative. I kept on taking the medicine and im proved fast. In March', 1910, I return ed home. I am entirely well, have a good appetite and sleep well. When I left Denver my weight was 130 pounds. I now weigh 165, my normal weight. I thank God and your Alterative for my health." (Abbreviated.) (Affidavit) PAUL, 1,. FASNACHT. Eckman's Alterative is most efficaci ous in bronchial catarrh and severe throat and lung affections and upbuild ing the system. Contains no harmful or habit-forming drugs. Accept no sub stitutes. Sold by leading druggists. AVrlte Eckman Laboratory, Philadel phia, Pa., for booklet of recoveries. Advertisement. ni in' inr==inr=ini in • THE ij Harrisbur£ Academy g To educate and develop young I men along the line of sound |l jj scholarship and genuine man- q r liness is our business. Our sys- [j] tem provides: A full day ses | sion; small classes with atten- lj| g tion to the individual pupil; □ m experienced masters; super- |j| HI vised study periods; wholesome II jlj associates; ideal environment HJ 0 and good athletic facilities. q it] For information about the [jl Day School, Boarding School, | School for Small Boys and | 0 Summer Coaching School, com- q n munlcate with Headmaster, fil | Arthur E. Brown, Post Office Box 617, Bell Phone 1371 J. | Summer Tutoring School | I August 3rd to September 11th. Coal For Preserving Housewives are busy preserv ing and the kitchen range is fill ed with bubbling kettles. It all depends upon the coal whether the work is progressing satisfactorily. If you burn Kel ley's coal you will have all the heat necessary to boil the jellies to the right consistency. All pea or pea and nut sizes mixed any way you want it. Just phone your order. H. M. KELLEY & CO. 1 N. Third St.—loth & State Sts. Jj> CHAS.h.MAUK (11 UNDERTAKER r **l Sixth and Kelkcr Streets Larfmt Mtibllibment. Beit facilities. Nesr to i you •• your phone. Will lo anywhere at your call, i Motor aarrice. No funeral too amall. None too |«cp«naiyc. Chapels, rooms. w«ulr ate. oaed witfc- WEDNESDAY EVENING HARRISBURG $&&&& TELEGRAPH JULY 22, 1914. lanae of Parks ness" and Springtime silliness bring about. "Spooning"—or vulgar public love making—is the shame of parks and beaches all through the summer. In boats and on street cars, in parks an ! at the open air gardens—wherever young folk gather for the outdoor life of summer, dignity is offended by being forced to view the secrets of this imitation love-making. The dignified girl permits caresses only from the men who are her blood kindred. from her husband or from the man who will be her husband. Do any of the men in this category take her to public places and there flaunt what should be sacred and holy be fore the eyes of a sneering, scoffing world? No! Don't cheapen your love by permit ! ting an unworthy man to kindle it ! unworthily. Don't squander your emotions on men who might like you honestly if you insisted on respect, but who will only despise you if you lightly let them make love to you. And above all don't advertise your weak, silly lack of dignity and cheap emotionalism by sitting in a public place and exchanging caresses with a man who will lower you in the eyes of all who chance to see by "spoon ing" with you, Love is a sacred, private thing. Keep it so". What He Is The man who won t restrain his emotions for the sake of a girl's dig nity does not care for her in a way that will bring her happiness. The girl who squanders her emo tions gets no return on her Invest ment. The best way to become a bankrupt in Love is to throw it away by wast ing it in public "spooning." I BUSTLE STUE LIKED FOR SUMMER SKIRTS Taffeta, Foulards and the Soft Cot ton Materials Adaptable to This Design 8309 One-Piece Draped Skirt, 24 to 32 waist. The skirt that is draped to give the bustle effect is one of the best liked of the season. This one also falls in soft, jabot like folds at the sides. It is extremely pretty and attractive, graceful in its lines and adapted to many uses. It makes up charmingly in taffeta, it is eminently smart for cotton crPpe, cotton voile and other materials of warm weather wear, it is charming for foulard and it can be utijized for various silk and cotton ma terials with great success. There is just one big piece and, to obtain the needed width, it is only necessary to join straight lengths of the material. After that is done, the draping is accomplished by a simple arrangement of folds and plaits. For the medium size, the skirl will require yds. of material 27, 4 yds. 36 or 44 in. wide. The width of the skirt at the lower edge is I}A yds. The pattern 8309 is cut in sizes from 24 to 32 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. Remove the | THAT °TIRED FEELING Horsford's Acid Phosphate re stores strength and vitality and relieves mental and nerv ous exhaustion. It dispels that dragged out feeling during Spring and Summer, the brain fag of the overworked teacher, oince or business man. HORSFORD'S Acid Phosphate (Non-Alcoholic) Richelieu & Ontario Division Vacation Trips on Lake and River Steamers "Rochester" and "Syracuse," leave Toronto and Charlotte (Rochester Port) and Clayton dally, for Thousand Islands, and through the Rapids to Mont real. Quebec, Saguenay River, Quit of St. Lawrence and Labrador. For particulars write; 1* Kast Swan Street. (Elllcott Sq ), Buffalo. V. T. CLONET, District Put. Agcaf Copyright. 1913. by Little. Brown ® Company Furniture, bedding, equipment in abundance for his workshop and stores were takeu within the castle, and the last of the workmen departed. Employing the mountain people as laborers. Nelson patched the roads until he felt that he could use the full power of his heavy motor in travers ing them if it became necessary to tax Its speetl. He had promised Mr. Brynn to remain in an advisory ca pacity as the vice president of his mills, and to keep this promise he stretched from pine to pine a private telephone wire between his castle and the office and home of the mill presi dent. He started his hermit life with two things before him besides his work as a mechanical inventor. One was to wait the coining of Bill Hawkins, to whom he would intrust the task of seeking in the underworld the mur derer of the watchman of the West End bank In New York. The other was to prepare himself to face the day, shot«d it ever come, when a man from Mulberry street would confront him and charge him with being .lames Montgomery. He told himself that he would never be taken back to it alive. His good, capable, well ordered brain had mapped oat n careful course. Should the bloodhounds of the law come upon him In this place he had built for final refuge he would make his fight to pass them. During his visits to Greenville he cashed checks paid him for royalties on his inventions until he secured SIO,(MX) in certificates of denominations he could use anywhere. Each morning he passed through the door to the attic stairs and locked it behind liim. For an hour he -worked with the weights and bars, changing his measurements slowly, but surely. The fraction of an Inch in the length of arm or k'g would discredit the Ber tilion record made of him and filed in tbe bureau of identification at police headquarters in New York. He gave many an hour of agony to achieve this, and his face was chalky white when he left the attic and locked its door behind him each day. With the anxiety and the hard work in his laboratory a touch of gray came to his hair and beard. He looked a man of forty-five, snve when he smiled, but tbe purity and goodness of his nature shone forth in his coun tenance. More money camo to him us the for eign rights of his inventions were dis posed of, und lie cast about liira for an opportunity to put it in use for others. He employed us many of the sturdy mountaineers as he could In road work, paying them good wages. He patched their cabins, provided medicines for their sick, and blankets and stout clothes for the women and the chil dren. The scattered families of these poor people looked up to him with mingled wonder and gratitude. When time rid them of their childlike timidity they came to know him and to love him. There is no statute of limitations for an escaped convict. He is always legitimate quarry. Nearly ten years had passed since James Montgomery was brought be fore the desk of Inspector Ranscombe at police headquarters in Mulberry street. There had been changes at headquarters in that time. The ad ministration of the city was in other hands The police department bad gone through the throes of more than one shakeup. and there had been sev eral police commissioners. lianscoinbe had been relieved of his important post as the chief of the city's little army of plain clothes men. but he had played the game of depart ment politics well and had won his way back to the central office. On his return he found Detective I.ieutenaiit Mike Kearney, stolid, emo tionless, waiting for an assignment to a case, as usual. The inspector knew his value and had him promoted to the grade of captain He assigned Kearney to take charge of the hoini citlp squad The men under Kearney were the pick of the 700 and more de tect I vies of the department. Kearney started out In his new post with a slate clean. save for one in scription—tile number (10,108 He felt that he wits being cheated every day that the escaped convict enjoyed life outside of Sing Sing's walls. Had Montgomery been a thief, a forger or a bigamist he could have turned the matter over to his inspector as a case still pending. But he hud been convicted of murder, and bid case properly belonged In the homicide bureau. Gradually Kearney got the nfTairs of the bureau working to suit him, and he could pause and prive some study to the Montgomery matter. His mind turned from the evil corners of the metropolis to the walled city up the Hudson. Time hud changed the prison staffs throughout the state. There was a new superintendent of prisons and a new warden at Sing Sins. Kearney culled up tbe new warden lind asJted for 1111 appointment tbe ncT* time ho came to tbe city. The warden was even then about to start for town, and he would drop iu at headquarters. Within two hours the guarcUan ot Sing Sing's population was seated be- Kide Kearney's desk. "1 gotta case." explained the detec tive. "that I'm anxious to clean up. Ten years ago 1 seut a young feller named Montgomery to Sing Sing for murder in the second. He was put away for life. Five years ago, before you got on the job. he escaped. A crook named Hawkins, his ceil mate, helped him to get out. 1 want Haw kins turned out, but 1 don't want him to know that 1 had anything to do with it. I'll have a shndow put on him the momeut he leaves prison, and if he joins that young feller he helped get out I'm gonna get the 'lifer' and put him back where he belongs. "After Hawkins flushes the bird for us and we get the real game then we can lay back and watch Hawkins. He'll go back to his old tricks, and soon we'll have him back where he be longs." The warden nodded approval, a smile | of admiration playing about his lips. I "The probation board is now in ses- I sion." he said, with a laugh. "We'll : turn him out as an act of mercy and in ! the hope that he will reform and make | a good citizen." I "I'll get a couple of shadows up tbere I in the morning." Kearney told him. | The warden departed, and Kearney | closed his desk and started for dinner In his mother's little Hat in Oliver j street. CHAPTER XI. Out For a Purpose. TtlE silent Influence of five years with a man who prayed to his God morning and night and kept a brave heart in his bosom, although he was suffering bitter injus j tice. had a lasting effect on Bill Haw kins. ! The old burglar had come to look j upon James Montgomery as if he were his own son grown to manhood, and I tills affection, which had grown within ! him gradually, drove bitterness from j his heart. It was as if the tragedy of | his own life had been veiled by a klnd | ly hand. | As the days passed in Sing Sing and i the boy was not brought back to his ! cell Bill found his spirits gradually j brightening. I He learned to conform to the prison regulations, and his new course of con duct was not without its good effect. His red disk was gone forever, of course, but he could still win chevrons j and turn them into stars of honor with 1 each five years of exemplary behavior. 1 In the cutting room "The Butcher" still kept a good record and received the benefits thereof in letters and news papers. The message finally came, and Bill was signaled by "The Butcher * to stand by to receive it. He quickly comprehended the use of the numbers and knew that he would find Montgom ery in Greenville. S. C. As if fate had determined to make up for all the bad luck of the past with one happy surprise. Bill was sum moned before the probation board that very day. Bill's old thatch was now as white as snow. Ten- years after the mid-century mark leave heavy traces. The ex pression of cunning and craftiness was gone t'rom his features. The jaw was still heavy and low set and the brow sloped, but there was the faint light of regeneration.in his face. "No. 00.110." he heard the warden say, "has been a splendid prisoner for the last four years. lie is getting old. and it looks as if he straighten out if given a chance." "If you are released on probation, will you try to be worthy of the chance you and will you report to the hoard once every month by letter?" the chairman asked. [To be Continued.] footer's Friend Before Baby Arrives During several weeks of expectancy there is a splendid external embrocation in our "Mother's Friend" in which women have the most unboundod®confldenco. They have used it and know. They tell of Its wonderful influence to ease the abdominal muscles and lir>w the/ avoided those dreaded stretching pains that are so much talked about. This safe external application is gently used over the skin to render It amenable to the natural stretching which it undergoes. The myriad of nerve threads just beneath the skin is thus relieved of unnecessary pain-producing causes and great physical relief Is tho result as expressed by a ho3t of happy mothers who write from personal experience. It is a subject that all 1 ."O Ladies' white canvas button d* "1 A(\ Men's Scout Shoes; values 1 QQ shoes, $1.75 to $2.50 values. Now X iT I */ $2.50. Now L ««/0 Children's and Misses' Goodyear welt white Men's patent lace or button