8 \£?o(V)en Woman's Six Virtues By Ella Wheeler WUcox The Paris papers IMfthave been discussing H|thc six essential vir ■jtih-s nf woman. The H result is Bomewhat Hjamuslng. ■ Economy is placed ■ n rs-st with 1,420 ■ votes; fidelity and ■ modesty each re ■ celved 1,367; kindli ■ new received 1,182, ■ ;uid maternal love I 539. Cleanliness anil ■ patience were last ■ on the list. ijg Here we have the Sj? a c k nowledgements of the men of France, given by the newspaper votes, that the woman who eaves a man expense stands higher in his estimation than one who is faith ful to him! A little infidelity they do not mind, if she is economical in her financial expenditures! Were 1 a man and knew women as I do (which would, of course, be Impossible), I would wish a wife to possess the six virtues in the follow ing ratio: First of all, kindness. I would place kindness first—because the absolutely kind nature could not fail to be faithful to its highest obliga tions. Fidelity would come second, as the natural result of innate kindness. Cleanliness, too, would follow, as the kind, womanly woman could not offend or hurt her husband's feelings by being untidy in any way. Patience, also, would be an out-1 IN STERLING LIVES j GIRL Who Suffered As Many Girls Do—Tells How She Found Relief. Sterling, Conn.—"l am a girl of 22 years and 1 used to faint away every P month and was very weak. I was also bothered a lot with female weakness. I read your little book 'Wisdom for Wo men, ' and I saw how others had been helped by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound, and decided to try it, and it has made me feel like a new girl and I am now relieved of all these troubles. I hope all young girls will get relief as I have. I never felt better in my life.'M iss BERTHA A. PELOQUIN, Box 116, Sterling, Conn. Massena, N. Y.—"l have taken Ly dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and I highly recommend it. If anyone wants to write to me I will gladly tell lier about my case. I was certainly in a bad condition as my blood was all turn ing to water. I had pimples on my face and a bad color, and for five years I had been troubled with suppression. The doctors called it 'Anemia and Exhaus tion,' and said I was run down, but Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound brought me out all right." —Miss LAVISA MYRES, BOX 74, Massena, N.Y. Young' Girls, Heed This Advice. Girls who are troubled with paintul or irregular periods, backache, headache, dragging-down sensations, fainting spells or indigestion,should immediately seek restoration to health by taking Ly dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. HOW TO PREVENT ACID STOMACHS AND FOOD FERMENTATION By a Slnniarh SiieclnllNt As a specialist who has spent many years in the study and treatment of stomach troubles. 1 have been forced to the conclusion that most people who complain of stomach trouble possess stomachs that are absolutely healthy and normal. The real trouble, that which causes all the pain and difficulty, is excessive acid in the stomach, ag- ' gravated by food fermentation. Hyper acidity irritates the delicate lining of i the stomach and food fermentation causes wind which distends the stomach i abnormally, causing that full bloated feeling. Thus both acid and fermenta tion interfere with and retard the pro cess of digestion. The stomach is usually healthy and normal, but irri tated almost past endurance by these foreign elements acid and wind In all such cases—and they comprise over 90 per cent, of all stomach difficulties —the first and only step necessary is to neutralize the acid and stop the fer mentation by taking in o little warm or cold water immediately after eating, from one to two teaspoonfuls of bis urated magnesia, which is doubtless the best and only really effective antacid and food corrective known. The acid will be neutralized and the fermen tation stopped almost instantly, and your stomach will at once proceed to digest the food in a healthy, normal manner. Be sure to ask your drug gist for the bisurated magnesia, as I have found other forms utterly lack ing in its peculiarly valuable prop erties.—F. J. G. —Advertisement. Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect May 24. 1914. TRAINS leave Harrisbur*— For Winchester and Martlnsburz at 6:03. *7:50 a. m„ *3:40 p. m. For Hagerstown, Chamber tourg Car. lisle. Mechanicsburg and Intermediate stations at 5:03, *7:60. •11:63 a. m •3:40, 6:32. *7:40, *11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Uechanicsburg it 9:48 a. m.. 2:18. 3-27 6:30, 9:30 a. m. For DUlsburg at 6:03, *7:60 and •11:63 a. m„ 2:18, •3:40, 6:32 and f»0 p. m. •Dally. All other trains dally except Sunday. H. A. RIDDLE. J. H. TONGE. Q. p. A. EDCCATIONU, FALL TERM Begins Tuesday, September 1 Write for Illustrated Catalogue. SCHOOL OF COMMERCE 15 S. MARKET SQUARE, HARRIS BURG, PA. Harrisburg Business College Day and Night. Business, I Shorthand and Civil Service. In dividual Instruction. 28th year. (529 Sj, Harrisburg, Ba, "i lITTRSDAY EVENING, HAKRISBURG TELEGRAPH JULY 23, 1914 growth of a kind heart, and so would modesty; and, lastly, the ever kind wife would look to her hußband's best interests and see that she was not extravagant. Kindness of thought would act as the one great quality needed in the world, in the church, in the market, in the family life to-day. Kindness is the child of love, and its pedigree goes back to God. Economy is of questionable origin. It may be born of prudence and thrift, but it may be sired by avarice or born of greed and indolence. It is as often a virtue as a vice, and as often a vice as a virtue. While wastefulness is always a sin, economy is not always a virtue. The progress of the world comes, not through saving, but through using. Then would I add TACT as one of the essential virtues in woman. The tactful woman keeps her house in peace and harmony. She knows how to turn away wrath by a soft answer. The tactful woman does not intrude upon the quiet hour her husband has reserved for his newspaper and his cigar with conversation which can be reserved for a more agreeable time. The tactful woman does not allow her £reat virtue of orderliness to become a nagging vice and drive comfort be fore it from the home. The tactful woman does not antagonize relatives or business friends whose good will is of value to the husband. In a thousand ways, the tactful wife, even with a tendency to over generosity, is a better helpmeet for a man than the tactless paragon of economv. SMALL BOYS LOOK LIKE THE Ml-IIPS Make Suit AU of Linen or of Con trasting Woolen Materials 8315 Boy's Suit with Coat Effect, •" 4 and 6 years. WITH LONG OR SHORT SLEEVE! In spite of its coat effect, this little suit | really is all in one piece to be adjusted i with a single closing; consequently, it is j ideal for midsummer wear. In the pic- j ture, it is made of plaid with plain j 6ponge but the coat portion can be made ; to match the trousers if preferred or of | plain contrasting color. The blouse makes part of the trousers and the front edges of ! the coat are stitched into place and I beneath the lpwer edge of the coat in the 1 back, the trousers are buttoned to posi- j tion. In the back view, the entire suit is made of white linen with the sleeves and ! collar scalloped, giving a very pretty : effect for the younger boys, but the con- j trasting coat is somewhat more mannish in character and, consequently, likely td ! be more satisfactory for the six year old. ! For the 6 year size, the coat will require 1 yds. of material 27, 1 yds. 36, IY% j yds. 44 in. wide and the trousers and trim- 1 ming 1 yds. 27, 1 yd. 36, yd. 44 in. ' wide; the entire suit 3 1 / i yds. 01 material j 27, 2 yds. 36, I*4 yds. 44 in. wide. The pattern 8315 is cut in sizes for boys i of 4 and 6 years. It will be mailed to any adaress by the Fashion Department oi this paper, on receipt of tea cent*. Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. I AN ILL WIND "If nature had made me an ostrich," said young Mr. Lang, one morning, quite exasperated, "perhaps I could eat your cooking." "Yes. wouldn't that be fine?" re plied the wife, "then I would be able to get some new plumes for my win ter hat."—ln National Monthly. Business Locals t ARE YOU A LITTLE SHORT On money? Most all of us are long on desire but short when it comes to the 1 necessary kale that puts the desire! Into effect. But there are times when | emergency demands immediate sums of! money to carry through a defined pur- 1 pose. This is our specialty—supplying funds In reasonable amounts at the lowest rates of interest. Pennsylvania Investment Co., 132 Walnut street. THE FERN What prettier embellishment for the curtained window than a fern as the finishing touch that brings cheer to both the family and p.ssersby? We have them in all sizes, modestly pric ed, and a variety of the choicest bloomii { plants and cut flowers suit able foi - the most exacting require ment. Schmidt, the florist, 313 Mar ket street. Copyright. 1913. by Little. Brown 4k Company "Yes, sir," he replied, his voice trem bling as he begnn to realize that the prison garb was nbout to drop from him. "We have studied your case and think it worth while to give you a trial," the chnirmnn told him. "That Is all." He was free! It was hard for him to understand. A miracle had been wrought, it seemed to him. Kindness, mercy, compassion, had been offered him. a thief. Dazed and spiritually troubled, the old man walked to his sell. He had not asked for mercy, and yet it was given him. What would he Bnd Outside? No one was interested In hltn. Yes, the boy Jim was. Did the Ikj.v bring about his deliver ance? Surely with a life term banging over his head he could not have reach ed out from his hiding place and open ed the gates of Sing Sing. Perhaps it was the. God the boy used to pray to morning nnd night. Per haps Jim had been praying for him and he bud heard his prayers. The awakening soul of Bill Hawkins leaped to the beautiful thought. His knees trembled, and he sank upon them beside his iron cot. His head fell in his hands, and he prayed. Indeed, he prayed, for his eyes were wet with the tears of gratitude. Hawkins had come to Sing Sing with nothing but his sins and his sentence of fifteen years. He carried away with him a sense of thankfulness, a thing he bad never experienced before, and the intention of living the life of a decent man. The warden shook his hand and made a pretence of beaming upon him. He little knew what good had come from his base share in the plan of Detective Michael Kearney to use one friend to betray another. The probationer's gray suit was changed for a new black one. and a felt hat was pulled over his forehead, hiding the defective formation, in his pocket was enough money to take him whence be came—the morass of hu manity, the underworld of New York. He would return there because no other world would have him. but he would return a different man. He was not going forth to evangelize. He was going to seek the woman who had been a pretty girl once, the woman who had suffered ten thousand times what be had suffered. At the Ossining station he bought a ticket to New York and boarded the first train. Two men of all the crowd seemed to notice him. One of these got aboard the train directly behind him, while the other entered the coach ; he had chosen by the opposite door. ! The train was an express and they j were soon at Forty-second street, i where, in the swarm of thousands of I men and women, many coaches were | unloading to the station platforms, i Shorter of stature than the average I in the teeming crowd, the head of ; Hawkins disappeared in a sea of hats and bonnets, but the two men who i had come with him from Ossining ! were never more than ten feet away | from him. ! Leaving the Grand Central station. ! Hawkins struck to the east and board | ed a downtown Third avenue elevat ed train. He went all the way to Park j row. j In One of the more widely read of | the penny newspapers he sought a i means of finding the woman he want : ed. He entered the Park row newspa per office and, counting his cash, found that he had S2 and some odd change. He inquired of a clerk and found that a "personal" would cost him sl. He was given a pencil and an advertise ment blank. The personal was written and paid for. and Bill departed. As the probationer reached the side walk the two men who had followed him separated. One kept on his heels and the other, with a look of triumph in his eyes, hurried inside and to the advertising clerk. He showed a police badge. "I'm Captain Kearney of central of fice," he said briskly, "and I want to Colorado — Natures Own Tonic v For the tired business man or wom an, for the schoolteacher in need of rest and relaxation and for all others seeking relief from overstrain or cor roded systems—l hatfe just the proper tonic to offer—a trip to Colorado— where you can rest under glorious skies, drink in the invigorating, whole some air; deriving all the splendid benefits from outdoor life in the most wonderful climate in the world. And the best part of It all is the low cost in such a trip—l want you to know how it can be arranged at very mod erate expense. Let me send you descriptive matter which contains maps and pictures of Colorado and which features the at , tractive, comfortable hotels and board [ ing houses with their low rates. My personal service is at your dis posal and I will gladly help arrange your trip for you—relieving you of much detail. It is part of the Burling ton \(C. B. & Q. R. R.) service and will cost you nothing. Call at the office or write for a copy of the free illustrated handbook on Colorado and its atractlons. Wm. Austin, General Agent Passen ger Depts., C. B. & Q. R. R. Co., 836 Chestnut street, Philadelphia.—Adver tisement, v , glimpse the personal the old man Just left with .vou." The clerk produced It. Kenrney rend it slowly: "Jennie Hawkins. Send address this office. Want you. my wife." The detective uttered a growl of dis appointment as he handed back the slip of paper. "1 thought he was tipping Montgom ery thnt be was out and that the trail would be a short one," he said to him self. He turned to the clerk again. "Soon as you get nn answer to that personal," he instructed the young man,.'telephone headquarters and ask for Captain Kearney, if 1 ain't there the message will be delivered to me. See?" Hawkins moved from the respectable newspuper eud of Park row to that sec tion of the same iron pillared and track covered highway which melts into the Bowery. He had but little nione.?, and he was hungry. For 6 cents he could have entered one of a hundred and more saloons, had a glass of beer and his fill of beans, bread nnd corned beef. But be had learned hjs lesson from drink, and he passed these places, choosing a cheap restaurant nftpr carefully studying the prices of its various dishes 3isplayed on a frame of dirty white oilcloth in blnck letters. He found a seat in the rear of the place facing the door. Kearney's man had entered behind him and was seated with his back to him. But he faced a mirror, and he could see every move of the old proba tioner he was shadowing. The eye 6 of Hawkins shifted about the restaurant, taking in the dirty walls, tawdry pictures, faded artificial flowers and the little signs proclaiming special dishes and their prices. For only a second his eyes rested on the mirror, but it was long enough. "A bull." said Hawkins to himself. The glance at the mirrored face was enough to impress it on his mind. If this detective was shadowing him and not some other man Hawkins would know it In just a little while. He ordered a plate of ham and beans and a cup of coffee. Bread was served with It, three slices. He ate with a good appetite and paid the waiter 15 cents from his little store of money. It had been his intention to go to the Herald office and insert a reply to the personal- from Montgomery. He left the restaurant and continued his way north on the Bowery to Third avenue. He went as far as Twenty-third street and turned west. At Fourth avenue he entered the Metropolitan building arcade, which runs through to Madison avenue aud Madison square. He had not as yet turned about to make an attempt to find the shadow, aud Kearney's man was congratulating himself on having struck an easy job. Once in the arcade building Hawkins increased his gait until he came to the wide Madison avenue entrance. Here the storm doors had been put up In readiness for coming winter and the heavy weather of the late fall. He pushed through the door, but instead of continuing into the avenue he com pleted the circle and was back in the arcade. He retraced his steps, passing and recognizing the shadow, went to a bootblack stand and calmly took a chair. The shadow, surprised, at first thought that this was a ruse of the man he was stalking to avoid him, but when he saw Hawkins take the chair he stood off and under cover told him self that bis task was still a simple one. As a Greek boy rubbed and polished his shoes Hawkins pondered how best to proceed next. Had Kearney not un covered his hand In the attempt to bribe him to betray his friend he would have been puzzled to fathom the mean ing of this shadowing. Now he under stood why he had been released from prisou and why his steps were being dogged. It was not mercy and kind ness that had been the motive of his deliverance. It was police craft. Nev ertheless be was out ou probation and to stay out as long as he violated no law. The problem before him was to gain that probation by his own honest effort and not by being made a Judas. His knowledge of detective methods, gain ed in evil days, now stood him in good stead for a good cause. He knew that some time during the late afternoon or night his shadow would be relieved by another. If necessary, the man fol lowing him would arrest him as a sus picious character, take him to a sta tion and hold him Just long enough to have his relief look him over from under cover and then follow him. That j he would not be held for long, he | knew very well. The police wanted him free ,so that he could make his j way to his friend and guide them to their quarry. He was concerned chiefly in getting In print the reply to Montgomery's per sonal. To manage this best he would return to his old associates of the un derworld. ' Unwritten, the words of the brief message would be passed along until they reached the Herald office and fottnd their way to type and eventually to'the man tbey were in tended fO' £To be \ A Great Responsibility. T~'HE responsibility attached to the preparing of a remedy for infants and children is undoubtedly greater than that imposed upon the manufacturer of remedies for adults whose system is sufficiently strong to counteract, for a time at least, any injurious drug. It is well to observe that Castoria is prepared today, as it has been for the past 40 years, under the personal supervision of Mr. Chas. H. Fletcher. What have makers of imitations and substitutes at stake ? What are their responsibilities ? To whom are they answerable ? They spring up today, scatter their nefarious wares broadcast, and disappear tomorrow. • Could each mother see the painstaking care with which the prescription for Fletcher's Castoria is prepared: could they read the innumerable testimonials from grateful mothers, they would never listen to the subtle pleadings and false arguments of those who would offer an imitation of, or substitute fort the tried and true Fletcher's Castoria. Children Cry For IGjiKj ♦ if mm noroic.Ditotaa«w ! Extracts from Letters by Grateful nessandßest-Containsneitter! 1 111 NOTNAR^?[c tal!l,L ' Parents to Chas. H. Fletcher. S3air'i * - . ZeaMwrvmrnm G. J. English, of Springfield, Mass., say» : "It was your Castoria that cared my child." Eflp \ Mrs. Mary McGinnis, of St. Louis, Mo., says: "We have given our !»:■ ''l - JhcMteSdts- I baby your Castoria ever since she was born, and we reccommena it to all . Anise Seed* I mothers." i mkUt* | N. E. Calmes, of Marion, Ky., says : "You have the best medicine in 5# ® £ MirmSetJ- 1 the world, as I have given your Castoria to my babies from first to last." llß® ' Mrs. Albert Ugusky, of Lawrenceburg, Ind., says: "As I have had mmm i; _ your Castoria in use for nearly three years, lam pleased to say it is just HRI Aperfert Remedy as represented. My children are both well and happy—thanks to Castoria." tion,SourStOTO9CU.ll^^ r R. P. Stockton, of New Orleans, La., says: "We began giving your JjJMiffjj; Worms,ConWlSlons.rewnw Castoria to our baby when he was eight days old and have kept it up ever ll&I ) ness ami LOSS OF SLEEP- since, never having had to give any other medicine." MB 1j r Ttor Simile Sitoarare of Mrs. Dolph Hornbuckle, of Colorado Springs, Colo., says: "We com s-tf y/_f — T — menced giving your Castoria to our baby when she was four weeks old. SiftJ'l She is now seven months and weighs 19J pounds. Everyone remarks: okSliili —„ 'What a iealthy looking baby.' We give Castoria credit for it." IJ- THE CENTAUR COMPASX. H! GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS BEARS the y? - Exact Copy of Wrapper. THI CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY Fifteen Hundred Meals Served at Church Picnic Special to The Telegraph Columbia, Pa., July 23. Fifteen hundred meals were served to guests at Holy Trinity Catholic Church pic nic at Chlckles Park yesterday, which was the largest gathering at that re sort this year. It required to feed this crowd, twenty-eight hams, fifty pounds of frankfurters, fifty cakes, seventy gallons of ice cream, 1,200 bottles of soft drinks, five bushels of potatoes, three bushels of tomatoes, one bushel of red beets and twenty-five heads of cabbage. Among the guests were six priests from Columbia, Lan caster and Marietta, and also the Sus quehanna Canoe Club, of Williams port, whose members are making a trip down the river to Chesapeake bay. WORKMEN UNEARTH VATS MORE THAN 100 YEARS OLD Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., July 23. Workmen employed on excavations for a bakery to be erected here by W. R. Bushey and L. M. Brloker, Lemoyne, to-day unearthed two old dye vats that had been used in tannery that was aban doned, according to records in old newspaper files, more than 100 years ago. A portion of them is good yet and the wood might be used, W. H. Lyons, the contractor said. It is of yellow pine, and four inches thick. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward tor any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by HaU'a Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, hare known P. S. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. NAT. BANK OF COMMERCE. Toledo, Ohio. HaH*s Catarrh Cure is taken Internally, acting directly upon blood and mucous surfaces ot the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 cents per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Fills for constipation. ADVICE ABOUT HOW TO REMOVE UNSIGHTLY HAIR Many physicians use the Ingredi ents contained in El Rado for re moving hair in connection with their laboratory work. This shows con clusively how perfectly harmless Its action is. Thousands of women have discovered this, too, and have learned how totally unnecessary it is to go around witk unbeautiful growths on lip, chin, cheek, neck or arms. They apply a few drops of EI Rado, the liquid hair remover. Almost In stantly the hair vanishes, leaving tha skin smooth, velvety and even whiter than before. This is because, posi tively without the slightest harm, the hair has been dissolved. El Rado Is now a standard toilet article, used by thousands of women. You need have no more hesitation In asking for and using El Rado than In asking for and using a toilet pow der. Try El Rado on your arm: prove for yourself that It will do everything claimed. Your money back If you are not entirely satisfied. In 60c. and SI.OO size bottles at all lead ing drug and department stores, or direct from the Pilgrim Mfg. Co.. New York. Valuable Information sent on request. In this city. El Rado is toK rrromraended by: Golden Seal ITrugr Store, E. Z. Gross, Kennedy's Drug Store, Kel- I Jw'« Drug store, Geor*© A, Gorgaa. Buy Ice With Coupons With our ice coupons you get $1.05 worth of ice for 95c, or a 10; piece for nothing. The coupon system is a great help to any housewife. There is no delay through hunting a mis placed purse, or running out for change. The coupon book is always ready. Just give the driver a coupon for the ice purchased and the transaction is closed. Coupons good for the following amounts of ice in one delivery: sc, 10c, 15c, 20c. Our ice drivers sell these coupons and they will be glad to explain their use to you. United Ice & Coal Co. Main Office—Foster and Cowdcn Also Steelton, Pa. BERMUDA THE IDEAL PLACE FOR A SUMMER VACATION "CARIBBEAN" THE LARGEST (SHIP IN THE TRADE The Ideal Ship to Take You There First Class Passengers Only, Wireless Teleg raphy, Submarine Signals and Every Safety Device, Large Airy Double and Single Cabins, Electric Fans in Every Cabin, Perfect Ventilation, Excellent Cuisine and Service. The Royal Mail Steam Packet Co. SANDERSON & SON, General Agents 22 State Street, Nevr York 230 So. LaSalle Street Chicago OR ANY STEAMSHIP TICKET AGENT Coal Is Cheapest and Best Now To buy coal now Is 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. 80 to buy Montgomery coal now is to buy the beat quality of the best coat at ths lowest prioe* Place your ordei. J. B, MONTGOMERY Both Phones ' Third and Chestnut Streets