Bathe Your Blood Along With Skin Unsightly Skin Trouble* Will Soon Disappear Alone with a tub bath usa S. 8. 8. for the blood. It bathes your blood, wufhra out Impurities, gets deposits out of joints and muscles, converts impuri ties Into a substance easily expelled. The skin responds quickly. All sore spots dry, a Arm. dry scale or scab forms, new skin grows beneath, tho scale falls off and you are rid of eczema, psoriasis, aane, tetter, bolls, carhunclea, pimples or any other skin affliction. S. S. 8. has a wonderful action In the network of fine blood vessels In the skin and If you would understand this better write to The Swift Specific Co.. 112 Swift Bids, for a valuable book "What the Mirror Tells." It will tell you how the skin Is but a fine network of blood vessels and why S. S. S. haa such a wonderful Influence. Get a bottle of S. S. S. today of any druggist but do not be talked Into a substitute. Beware of them. Around each bottle Is an Illustrated circular sug gesting how you may obtain valuable i medical advice absolutely free. Get a Dottle of S. S. S. today. f -» Niagara Falls Personally-Conducted Eicnr»loni July 3, 17, 31, August 14. 28, September 11, 25, October 9. 1914. ROUND <jjg 7Q TRIP FROM HARKISBUnQ SPECIAL TRAIN of Pullman Parlor Cars. Dining Car. and Day Coaches through the Plrtureaque Simqiiehanna Valley Tickets good going on Special Train and connecting trains, and returning on regular trains with in FIFTEEN DAYS. Stop-off at Buffalo within limit on return trip. Illustrated Booklet and full In-, formation may be obtained frorn Ticket Agents. Pennsylvania R. R. THE | Barrisbarg Academy REOPENS SEPTEMBER 22ND "The School That Enables a Pupil to Do His Best." Prepares Young Men for Colleges and Professional Schools College Dormitory System Lower School EOR BOYS SIX TO ELEYEX Few Vacancies Matriculate Now ARTHTR E. BROWN, Headmaster Box fl!7 Bell Phone 1371.1 C -\ TO High School Pupils "We are going to hold our first annual contest for the finest collec tion of Insect Specimens gathered during vacation. They will be on display In our windows for one week. The win ner will receive one of our Seneca Scout Cameras loaded and roll developed free. All specimens must be entered by Thursday. September 3rd, under fictitious names. Contest starts Friday, Sept. 4th. Forney's Drug Store, 426 Market Street OR CLOCK REPAIRING or adjusting, jewelry cleaning or repollshlng. take It to SPRINGER Th :ZZT 206 MARKET ST.—Bell Phone Diamond Setting; and Engraving. Business Locals THINGS, THAT FLOAT Are exceptionally fascinating to the Juvenile mind. If you have to put a rubber coat on your children to keep them from getting wet, let them play- In the water occasionally. Our cellu loid floats In the form of swans, ducks, fishes, frogs, turtles, alligators, boats] canoes and dolls are Ideal for playtime sport. Marianne Kinder Markt, 220 Locust street. FOOD COST INVESTIGATION 1 Whether the war ib responsible for the high price of food or the spec ulator remains to be proved, but the fact remains that the best 25-cent noonday luncheon In the city remains the same In quality and price at the Court Dairy Lunch. John H. Menger, proprietor. Court and Strawberry avenues, FALL PAINTING September will soon be here and the ideal weather for exterior paint ing. And then you will want to get the Inside of the house touched up so as to be presentable for the social season of the long winter months. Use R. & B. Wayne paints, the best for all purposes. In small cans ready to use or in paste form for those who need large quantities. William W. Zelders & Son, 1436 Derjry street. MONDAY EVENING, Takes More Than Rainstorm to Stop Dauphin Lawn Fete Special to The Telegraph Dauphin, Pa.. Aug. 31.—Despite the Inclement weather, which interrupted a lawn fete on Saturday afternoon by the Sunday school school of Miss Ber tha Sellers on the lawn of the home of Harvey C. Forney, the sum ot sl9 was cleared, but not until the lawn fete was turned Into an Indoor festi val. The money was for the heating fund of the Dauphin Presbyterian Church. Long strings of Japanese lanterns had been festooned above the various booths during the afternoon and a bevy of young girls dressed in white were on hand to act as aids. Sweeping from across the rtver, a severe thunderstorm suddenly de scended upon the lawn fete. Aids armed with cakes and candy and male assistants tugging at ice cream freez ers sought refuge on the nearby porch. Refusing to be bested by the Miss Sellers directed the removal of all things edible to the Dauphin band hall. Within the shelter of the hall the following aids proved of valuable assistance In making the affair a financial success: Misses Ruth Shaffer, Esther Shaffer, Carrie E. Oerberlch. Helen L Wallls, Ethel Forney. Naomi Young. Margaret Talley, Ruth Delb ler, Elizabeth Knupp, Virginia Wallis and Mildred Kline. Recent Deaths in Central Pennsylvania Special to The Telegraph Marietta. —An infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Baker, of Lemoyne, who are visiting the home of Mrs. Baker, died Saturday of Infanttle troubles. - The child will be buried to-morrow in the Marietta Cemetery . Conestoga Centre. Benjamin F. Henry, 63 years old, died from heart disease. "He was a retired farmer and marketer. Mountville.—Mrs. Elizabeth Ram sey, 89 years old, died yesterday. She was the oldest member of the United Brethren Church and Is survived by three children. ATTEMPTED SUICIDE Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa.. Aug. Sl.—Harry Potter, a young man of this city, at tempted suicide early Saturday morn ing by cutting his throat. The wound he inflicted with a knife bled pro fusely and it took twenty-four stitches to close it. Young Potter, it is said, has been low-spirited ever since the death of his wife about a year ago. WANTED Rags! Millions of dollars' worth of Rags collected annually The Genera 7 says : My output of Certain - teed Roofing has grown to such enor mous proportions that I am hav ing difficulty in getting enough rags of good grade to supply this demand. I also need a lot of rags of lower grade for making my standard quality roofing, and also a still lower grade for making my Com petition quality roofing I will pay the best market price for roofing rags anywhere in any quantity. If they can be shipped • in carload quantities and in as sorted grades, we can have them shipped direct to any of our big mills, but if in smaller quantities or unassorted, we will arrange with one of our packers or as sorters near you, to buy your rags and prepare them for our use in the different grades. fieSEil / Churches, Societies, Charitable Institution! others are making good revenue by collecting all kinds of old rags. We consume scores and scores of tons of these rags every day—in fact the total rag sales of the country amount to several million dollars a year. It's an easy way to make money. The rags are generally given to the collectors or at Last sold for very little. Every kind of rag can be used for something. Use this plan to pay off your church debt or raise the minister's salary. The results are surprising. Certain-teed Mw ROOFING dSSSIS is the highest quality possible to make. It is guaranteed in writing to last S years for 1-ply, 10 years for 2-ply, and _IS years for 3-ply, and this guarantee is backed by the world's largest roof ing mills. There is a dealer in your locality who handles Certain-teed Roofing and our other wide line of goods. If you con sult him he will Be glad to give you full information about our goods and will quote you reasonable prices on all of them. Be sure the goods are made and guaranteed by us. General Roofing Mfg. Company U'orld'a largest manufacturer* of Roajing and Building Paper* Stock Exchange bldg., i'biUddpta, ft. . Bell Pboti* Sotoce 4531 N«w T*rk CHr laatn Hilait PkiUMpki* AtluU ClmluJ Detroit St. Lath Chdwuti Kami* CHr lttmiMß«lii SuFrucnca Snttk Lands* Haafcvs 3r4o«r JOHNSTON Paper Co. HARRISBURG, PA. of Certalu-teed Roofing WITMAN BROS. > I Wholesale Distributors of Certaln teed Roofing II THE LAST SHOT I By FREDERICK PALMER ; | Copyright, 1014, bjr Charles ScrlbaeA Son*. [Continued] , At the fa. v.. uu park he n« I another kind of dividend—another group of marching men. These were not In nnlform. They were the unem ployed. Many were middle-aged, with worn, tired faces. Beside the flag of the oountry at the head of tha proces sion was that of universal radicalism. And his car bad to stop to let them paaa. For an Instant the Indignation 9f military autocracy rose strong with in him at sight of the national colors in such company. But he noted how naturally the men kept step; the solidarity of their movement. The stamp of their army service In youth oould not be easily removed. He real ised thv advantage of heading an army In which defense was not dependent on a mixture of regulars and volun teer*, but on universal conscription that brought every able-bodied man under discipline. These reservists, in the event ot war, would bear the call of race and they would fight for the one flag that then had any significance. Yes, the old human Impulses would predomi nate and the only enemy would be on the other side of the frontier. Tbey would be pawns of his will —the will tbat Marta Galland had said would make him chief of staff. Wasn't war the real cure for the general unreet? Wasn't the nation growing stale from the long peace? He was ready for war now that he had be oome rice-chief, when the retirement of His Excellenoy, unable to bear the weight of hi 9 years and decorations in the field, would rnako him the supreme commander. One ambition gained, he beard the appeal of another; to live to see the guns and rifles that had fired only blank cartridges in practice pouring out shells and bullets, and all the battalions that had played at sham war In maneuvers engaged In real war, under his direction. He saw his columns sweeping up the slopes of the Brown range. Victory was certain. He would be the first to lead a great mod ern army against a great modern army; his place as the master of mod em tactics secure In the minds of all the soldiers of the world. The public would forget its unreet In the thrill of battles won and provinces conquered, and its clatter would be tbat of ao fintm for a new Idol of Its old faith. CHAPTER ill. The Second Prophecy. Marta, when she had received the Bote from Westerllng, had been in doubt as to her answer. Her curiosity to see him again was not of Itself com pelling. The actual making of the prophecy was rather dim to her mind until he recalled it. She had heard of his rise and she had heard, too, things about him which a girl of twenty-seven can better understand than a girl of seventeen. His reason for wanting to see her he had said was to "renew an old acquaintance." He could have lit tle interest in her, and her interest in him was that he was bead of the Oray army. His work had intimate relation to that which the Marta of twenty seven, a Marta with a mission, had set for herself. A page came to tell Westerllng that Miss Galland would be down directly. When she appeared she crossed the room with a flowing, spontaneous vital ity that appealed to him as something familiar. "Ten years, Isn't itT" she exclaimed as she seated herself on the other side of the tea-table. "And, let me see, you .took two lumps, If I remember?" "None now," he said. "Do you find it fattening?" she •eked. He recognized the mischievous sparkle of the eyes, the quizzical turn of the lips, which was her asset in keeping any question from being per sonal. Neverthleßs, he flushed slightly. "A change of taste," he averred. "Since you've become such a great man?" she hazarded. "Is that too strong?" This referred to the tea. "No, just right!" he nodded. He was studying her with the polite, ▼eiled scrutiny of a man of the world. A materialist, he would look a woman over as he would a soldier when he had been a major-general making an Inspection. She was slim, supple; he liked slim, supple w # omen. Yes, she was twenty-seven, with the vivacity of seventeen retained, though she were on the edge of being an old maid ac cording to the conventional notions. Necks and shoulders that happened to be at his side at dinner, he had found, when they we?e really beautiful, were not averse to his glance of appreci ative and discriminating admiration of physical charm. But he saw her shrug slightly and caught a spark from her eyes tbat made him vaguely con scious of an offense to her sensibili ties, and he was wholly conscious that the suggestion, bringing his faculties np sharply, had the pleasure of a novel sensation. "How fast you have gone ahead!" she said. "Tbat little prophecy of mine did come true. You are chief of staff!" After a smile of satisfaction he cor rected her. "Not quite; rice-chief—the right hand man of Hl* Excellency. lam a buffer between blm and the heads of divisions. This baa led to the errone ous assumption which I cannot too iorclbly deny—" He was proceeding with the phrase ology habitual whenever men or wom en, to flatter him. had intimated that they realised tbat he was the actual head of the army. His Excellency, with the prestige of a career, must be kept soporiflcally enjoying the forms of authority. To arouse his jealousy might curtail Westerllng's actual power. "Yes, yea I" breathed Marta softly, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH > arching her v. aide &s she would when looking all around and | through a thing or when she found any one beating about the bush. The llttl® frown disappeared and she ■mlled "You know I'm not a perfect goo«el" she added. ; "Had yon been made chief of staff In name, too, all the old generals would hare been In the su!ks and the young generals Jealous,'' she continued. "The one way that you might have th* power to exercise was by proxy." This downright frankness was an other reflection of the old daye before he was at the apex of the pyramid. Now It was so unusual In his experi ence as to be almost a shock. On the point of arguing, he caught a mis chievous. delightful "ißn't that so?" In her eyes, and replied: "Yes, I shouldn't wonder If It were!" Why shouldn't he admit the truth to the one who had rung the bell of his secret ambition long ago by recognis ing tn him the ability to reach his goal? He marvelled at her grasp of the situation. "It wasn't so very hard to say, was I ItT" she asked happily, In response to his smile. Then, her gift of putting herself In another's place, Tvhlle she strove to look at things with his pur -1 pose and vision, in full play, she went on lo & different tone, as much to her- i self as to him: "You have labored to make yourself master of a mighty or- \ ganlzation. You did not care for the | non-essentials. You wanted the reality of shaping results." "Yes, the results, the power!" he i exclaimed. "Fifteen hundred regiments!" she continued thoughtfully, looking at a given point rather than at him. "Every regiment a blade which you would bring to an even sharpness! Every regiment a unit of a harmonious whole, knowing how to screen itself from fl;-e and give fire as long as bidden, la answer to your will If war comes! That la what you live and plan for, Isn't It?" • "Yes, exactly! Yea, you have It!" | he said. His shoulders stiffened as he thrilled at seeing a picture of him self, as he Vanted to see himself, done In bold strokes. It assured him that not only had his own mind grown be yond what were to him the narrow ae ' I sociatlons of his old La Tlr days, but , that hers had grown, too. "And you— what have you been doing all these ; years?" he asked. "Living the life of a woman on a , country estate," she replied. "Since ' you made a rule that no Gray officers 1 should cross the frontier we have been I a little lonelier, having only the Brown " , officers to tea. IMd you really find It ' so bad for discipline in your own ' caee?" she concluded with playful solemnity. 1 i "On© cannot consider individual | cases In a general order," he explained. "And, remember, the Browns made the ' I ruling first. You see, every year 1 means a tightening—yes, a tightening, as arms and armies grow more compll- i 1 cated and the maintaining of staff r | secrets more important. And you have 1 been all the time at La Tlr, truly?" he " asked, changing the subject He wa« | convinced that she had acquired some i thing that could not be gained on the * j outskirts of a provincial town. "No. I have traveled. I have been j ' quite around the world." "You have!" This explained much, j E "How I envy you! That is a privilege ! I shall' not know until I am superannu- : ated." While he should remain chief * of staff he must be literally a prisoner ' * jln his own country. i "Yes, I should eay It was splendid! Splendid—yes. indeed!" Snappy little ; nods of the head being unequal to ex- 1 pressing the Joy of the memories that her exclamation evoked, she clasped i her hands over her knees and swung 1 back and forth in the ecstasy of seven teen. "Splendid! I should say so!" , ' Bhe nestled the curling tip of her t tongue against her teeth, as If the recollection must also be tasted. 5 "Splendid, enchanting, enlightening, i stupendous and wickedly expensive! Another girl and I did it all on our own." "O-oh!" he exclaimed. 1 i "Oh, oh, oh!" she repeated after him. 9 "Oh, what, please?" 1 i "Oh, nothing!" he said. It was quite s comprehensible to him how well ! * equipped she was to take care of her self on such an adventure. a "Precisely, when you come to think It over!" she concluded, i "What Interested you most? What ® i was the big lesson of all your Journey * lng?" he asked, ready to play the lls -9 tener. J | "Being born and bred on a frontier, ] of an ancestry that was born and bred r on a frontier, why, frontiers Interested 1 me most," she said. "I collected im * : pressions of frontiers as some people " | collect pictures. I found them all alike j | —stupid. Just stupid! Oh, so stupid!" , Her frown grew with the repetition of , j the word; her Angers closed In on her „ ; palm in vexation. He recollected that 1 he had seen her like this two or three j times at La Tlr, when he had found the outbursts most entertaining. He s | against the table edge could deliver a | stinging blow. "As stupid as It Is for " neighbors to quarrel! It put me at * war with all frontiers." | "Apparently," he said. y ; She withdrew her flst from the table, 0 dropped the opened hand over the j other on her knee, her body relaxing, y | her wrath passing Into a kind of l " shamefacedness and then Into a soft, prolonged laugh. | "I laugh at myself, at my own lncon- i '• slstency," she said. '1 was warlike | 6 against war. At all events, If there Is | 8 anything to make a teacher of peace ' lose her temper it Is the folly of i frontiers." r « |To Be Continued] j : STORE OPENS CALL 1991 -ANY 'PHONE."#" s c 3 l o °Z y D.JV r. Ifl. HABRISBURC'S POPULAR DEPARTMENT STORE < Boys' & Girls' School Wear; ► iCHOOL DAYS are almost here, and, of course, your boy and girl must look < ► spic and span—Special preparations have been made in our Boys' and Girls' < ► 'gHggwgn' Ready-to-Wear Departments to make it well worth your while to come < ► here for all school clothing needs —all purchased with a view of good ser- < ► vice and wear. Outfit your Hov and (iirl here —you will not be disappointed. 4 : Boys' School Suits \ ► Every style and every size—and every one all wool—for your 4 y boys. A real good honest suit at . $2.85 \ < Norfolk Suits—coats with patch pockets, sewed on belt; *o^ some suits have two pJfir of trousers; rich brown and gray mix- /4\ * tures, at .. ■ $5J.50 and #.">.00 y K 4 ► Blue serge suits—guaranteed strictly all wool, every gar- m) * ► ment sewed with silk, some with patch pockets. Newest vW ► models. Prices are $:$.9H #5.00, $7.50 and SIO.OO A tfel * . Blue serge pants by the hundreds—good stout materials, all \ w 4 of them for school wear, at (){)(", BoC, SI.OO, $1.25, $1.50 -' 5 All-wool pants, mixed cassimercs, at 50c, ► #I.OO, $1.85 and $1.50. , ; Wash Suits For Kindergarten Boys Ja < . Russian Suits in chambray, linene and galatea, at s W\ 4 oOf to $1.25 i Oliver Twist suits in ratine, linene and chambray, at fir 4 ► to $1i.50 Third FIoor—BOWMAN'S §New Shipment of Girls'; Dresses Just Received ; New Styles For School Wear ; Children's dresses plaid ginghams, striped and plain galatea; long < waist, belted models, long sleeves, collar and cuffs scalloped in contrasting ' colors. Sizes 4, 6 and 8 years. Special $1.25 * j Children's gingham dresses, double skirt with belt, long sleeves, flat * i collar of plain material. Sizes 6to 14 years. Special $1.25 < I Children's fine chambray Dresses, wide pleat down front and back, longer .j . waisted, belted, in pink, blue and buff; embroidered collar and cuffs. Sizes * 1 y j 1 4 to 6 years. Special $1.50 <\ y [\ Girls' gingham dresses, large plaid gingham, double skirt—lower one of < I JAJ plain material; belt, collar and cuffs of plain material Sizes 6 to 14 years. Special $1.69 J Girls'dresses of Scotch plaid crepe; skirt with pleated tunic, long waist with fancy leather belt and fancy collar. Sizes Bto 14 years. Special, $2.98 y spcontl KIoor—BOWMAN'S. " •< : Boys* and Girls' School Hose j| We take special pride in our hose for children for good and satisfactory wear. •< Boys' medium cotton, fine ribbed hose, collar and separate soft collar. Ages 5 to H . double knees, heels and toes. AH sizes. years. Each . and Pair Boys' dress shirts, tine quality of percale, 4 1, *tii 1 r 'll j 1 11 coat style, separate soft collar and French 1 ► Boys black cotton hose, line ribbed, double 'T- 1 cncn A y heels and toes. All sizes. Pair 1 n f V 'r-'1 f << I Musser cotton hose for boys and iris. Pair, Boys and Girls' Coat Sweaters! ► , , , . . an( !.f°f ° f course your boy or girl will want a warm < Children _s black cotton hose, hue ribbed, sweater for school 4 ► double heel's and toes. Pair 12'/,<- V-necks, shawl and roll collars; all the Children's black hose, silk lisle, double wanted .colors. Each, SI.OO, $1.50, $1.98, ► knees, heels and toes. All sizes. Pair . . 25 f $2.50 and up to s.'{.so. ► n , u j . . 1 CL . . Boys' leather belts 25?^ ► Doys Waists and ohirts ..Boys suspenders ... 12 '/ 2 F, 17<* and 25^" ► „ ~ . . . . , ; Boys' neckwear, 4-in-hands and Windsors, < Boys blouse waists, plain colors and neat 256 a * stripes, percales and madras, attached military I M»in FIoor— BOWMAN'S : School Shoes For Boys & Girls: ► New Fall Shoes for the Young People arc now in order—you'll buy wisely if you come to ► Bowman's. School Shoes in every popular grade. Come in and make your selections early. ► Boys' box calf and Girl's gun metal and Girl's patent colt and ► gun metal button and plump patent colt but- gun metal calf button < ► ■■QH blucher lace shoes with ton shoes with durable shoes with Goodyear i ► soles that will with- soles we guarantee the zcs sg to p r stancl hard knocks - ROod wear of - Sizes 8/2 to 11,' pair, Sizes 10 to l ,air ' S«^6to ß ,pa ir ,sl.oo $1.69 ► $1.49 zcs & 1 /* to 11, Sizes 11 J/2 to 2, pair, y ' ' ' Sizes to 2, pair. Young women's size, < y Third FIoor— BOWMAN'S $1.49 $2.50 4 Terrific Storm Destroys Property at Penryn Park Lebanon. Pa., Aug. 31. Penryn Park, a pleasure resort In the heart of the South Mountains nine miles south of here, was swept Saturday night by a storm of cyclonic fury. Hundreds of trees were uprooted and hurled into Penryn Lake, boats and boathouses were blown Into the woods. Fallen trees rlosed the Cornwall Railroad Company line for miles, and it was ] necessary to send out a relief train | with a large force of men to clear the tracks of debris that the late train ! might reach this dlty. The money loss at Penryn is con- I siderable. Four miles across the Corn- I wall hills, at a point midway between i Mount Gretna Park and Colebrook, ! the storm leveled trees and unroofed | the homes of Charles Flory and H. John Beamesderfer. The Mount Oretna summer colony of 800 cottagers es caped the fury of the storm. DAILY CONCERTS Demonstrating the new and won derful Edison Diamond Disc. More than a mere talking machine. Accept our invitation to hear It. J. H. Troup Music House, IB South Market Square. —Advertisement. t SCNSET SERVICES AT DAUPHIN Dauphin, Pa., Aug 31.—With the strains of "Lead. Kindly Light" wafted over the valley a* the sun sank he- I hind the mountains to the west and | "God Be With You Till We Meet ] Again" sung as a pale white mooh I rose In the east, the final highland 1 open-air services of the Dauphin Presbyterian Church were held on the steps of Harvey E. Knupp'a bunjrtOov s AUGUST 31. 1014. last evening. Next Sunday lowland open-air services will be conducted at M. A. Elgler's cottage along the river above town. Last evening's services consisted of an address by the Rev. Robert Fulton Sterling, pastor of the The Best Remedy For All Ages and proven so by thousands upon thousands of tests the whole world over, is the famous family medicine, — Beecham's Pills. The ailments of the digestive organs to which all are subject,—from which come so many serious sicknesses, are corrected or prevented by ftEEUAMSPILLS Try a few doses now, and you will KNOW what it means to have better digestion, sounder sleep, brighter eyes and greater cheerfulness after your system has been cleared of poisonous impurities. For children, parents, grand parents, Beecham's Pills are matchless as a remedy For Indigestion and Biliousness Sold everywhere. In boxes, 10c., 2Sc. The direction* with every box ore very valuable—especially to women. 3 Presbyterian Church, congregational singing and special music by a quar tet composed of Mis£ Dorothy Hel tnan, of Harrisburg, soprano, Mrs. William Worcester, alto, George Lan ids. tenor, and Harvey E. Knupp, bass
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