Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, September 01, 1914, Page 5, Image 5

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    \&2oM&n isaJtrrenftft
Is Her Advice to Generous But Badly
UKJiy 1 Mistaken Young Woman
By DOROTHY BIX
Would havo to sk
economize in every possible way in
the present, but that she feels that
6he would be gloriously happy in the
future when the young man came
home with his diploma and married
her.
My advice to her is—DON'T. Don't
do it, little girl, as you value your
money and value your love. There are
many ways to kill love, but none Is so
swift and sure and deadly as for a
Wiman to put a man under financial
obligations to her.
Take your money and buy Wild Cat
preferred. Back a scheme for raising
the treasure of Captain Kidd from
the depths of the ocean. Buy a gold
brick from a sick Indian who has a
hidden mine if you are bound to throw
away what you earn. All of these tire
gilt-edged investment compared to
epeculatlng in a sweetheart. That is a
risk so great and hazardous that no
plunger on earth except a fool wo
man would even think about taking
it.
Sit down quietly in your room and
eize up the situation, little girl. First
consider the character of the man who
would take the hard earnings of a
working girl. If you were a million
airess and wanted to bestow a few
thousands that you'd never miss on
him it might not matter, although per-
Bonally I think that the education
MRS. WILLIAMS'
LONG SICKNESS
Yields To Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable
Compound.
Elkhart, Ind." I suffered for four
teen years from organic inflammation,
1:::: I female WeaknCSS,
tpain and irregulari
ties. The pains in
my sides were in
creased by walking
or standing on my
feet and I had such
awful bearing down
feelings, was de
pressed in spirits
•. y. >,.•;/./ 1• 1 and became thin and
VW/.'.'. pale with dull,heavy
' ————J eyes. I had six doc
tors from whom 1 received only tempo
rary relief. I decided to give Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a fair
trial and also the Sanative Wash. I have
now used the remedies for four months
and cannot express my thanks for what
they have done for me.
"If these lines will be of any benefit
you have my permission to publish
them." —Mrs. SADIE WILLIAMS, 455
James Street, Elkhart, Indiana.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound, made from native roots and herbs,
contains no narcotic or harmful drugs,
and to-day holds the record of being the
most successful remedy for female ills
we know of, and thousands of voluntary
testimonials on file in the Pinkham
laboratory at Lynn, Mass., seem to
prove thi3 fact.
If you have the slightest douht
that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta
ble Compound will help you,write
to Lydia K.l'inkliam Medicine Co.
(confidential) Lynn. Mass., for ad
vice. Your letter will lie opened,
read and answered l»y a woman,
and held in strict confidence.
mALB
Cumberland Valley Railroad
TIME T ABLE
In Effect May 24. 1914.
TRAINS leave Harrisburg —
For Winchester and Martlnsburg AT
6:03. *7:50 a. in., *3:40 p. M.
For Hagerstown, Chamber ..burg, Car
lisle, MechanlcsburK and intermediate
stations at 6:03, *7:60, *11:63 a. M.,
•3:40, 6:32, *7:40, *11:00 p. M.
Additional trains for Carlisle and
Mechanlcsburg AT 9:48 a. IC.. 2:18, 3:27.
6:30, 9:20 a. m.
For Dillsburg at 6:03, *7:60 and
*11:63 a. in.. 2:18, *3:40, 6:82 and «;30
p.
•Dally. All other trains DALW except
Sunday. H. A RIDDLE,
J. H. TONGB. O. P. A.
LOT OF NEW
Black Velvet Hats
Special at 98c
Miss Bomberger
1945 N. Sixth Street
TUESDAY EVENING,
that is bought at the price of a man
making a mendicant of himself costs
more than it comes to. Still, If you
had lots of money and he had none,
the man might justify himself In tak
ing part of It.
But how can he justify himself in
his own eyes, or in your eyes, for
taking your few little dollars, every
one of which represents some pitiful
economy, some crucifixion of a need or
taste, some hour of weariness? Any
man who had one spark of manliness
or Independence in him would die be
fore ho would touch such money.
Any man who had one throb of love
in his heart for a working girl would
perish before he would let her spend
her hard-earned money on him.
There are some things that a real
man just can't do. and one of them
Is to make a ladder by which to
climb up on the tender, soft young
shoulders of a girl, lie doesn't crush
the girl he pretends to love in his
efforts to get on, and so, before you
Invest In such a man, look him over
and see If you don't think he's a pretty
poor bargain, and not worth the price.
Also, little girl, turn a calmly ap
praising eye on the future and try
to visualize to yourself what is sure
to happen. Suppose you do spend all
your money on educating this young
man. At the best you must" put in
from four to six years of the hardest
kind of work, and of anxiety and wait
ing, You will have to live poorly and
deny yourself of all the pleasures of
your time of life, all the little luxur
ies, all the good clothes that go far
toward helping a woman along in
business.
The inevitable result will be that
you will age under tho process, that
you will loose your good looks and,
unless you are a marvel of self-con
trol, that you will get peevish and
sour. Also, with you in the counting
room and him in the college, he Is
practically sure to outgrow you men
tally.
Do you think that he will come
back then and marry you? Or, if he
does marry you, that he will marry
you lrom any feeling but a sense of
Signs Her Name on
Docket in "Yiddish"
When Joe Smith and May Sief,
both of this city, applied for a mar
riage license they answered all the
questions readyly and siprncd up ap
plication docket. May's signature
aroused a little curiosity however
among the marriage bureau attaches
and then she smilingly explained:
"It's in Yiddish!"
"Um-well," murmured a clerk in
the recorder's office, "I suppose it is!"
Whether or not it was the hot
weather of August attaches in the
marriage bureau wouldn't say to-day
in discussing the small number of li
censes issued, but the docket for Au
gust spoke for itself and demonstrated
plainly that Cupid didn't do so well
during the past month. All told there
were but eighty-four licenses issued.
Harrisburg Girls Will
Enter Irving College
The following young women Jrom
Harrisburg will enter Irving College
and Music Conservatory when the
fifty-ninth session opens September
23: Misses Vera Valentina Care,
Frances Rlizabeth Daniels, Margaret
Christine Fleisher, Edith Katharine
Flower, Mary Matilda Goodyear. Avis
Grove, Mabel Florentine Grunden,
Edna Margaret Hutton, Elba Irene
Romberger, Rachel Hilda Schlosser,
Marian Gertrude Smith, Olive Beatrice
Thomas, Esther Susan Wengert, Mar
ian Strouse.
Austrians' Position Is
Reported as Dangerous
London, Sept. 1. 7.15 A. M.—Com
menting on the temerity of the Aus
trians in crossing the Vistula, appar
ently with the intention of joining
hands with the army engaged in the
province of Lublin, the St. Petersburg
correspondent of the Times says:
"By placing the Vistula between
themselves and their base at Cracow,
the Austrians are running a terrible
risk. Wo must conclude that there
aid is urgently needed in Lublin, j
where according to the headquarters
staff, desperate fighting has been in
progress for nearly a week."
/■ 111 ■ ■ ■*
THE
Harrisburg Academy
REOPENS SEPTEMBER 22ND
"The School 'Hint Enables a Pupil
to Ho His Best."
Prepares Young Men for Colleges I
and Professional Schools
College Dormitory System
Lower School
FOR BOYS SIX TO ELEVEN
Few Vacancies
Matriculate Now
ARTHUR E. BROWN, Headmaster
Box 017 Bell Phone 1371,1
*■
EDUCATIONAL
~FALL TERM
Begins Tuesday, September 1
Write lor Illustrated Catalogue.
SCHOOL OF COMMERCE
15 S. MARKET SQUARE,
HARRISBURG, PA.
Harrisburg Business College
329 Market St.
Fall term, September first. Day
and night. 29th year.
Harrisburg, Pa.
PUDERTAMtM
RUDOLPH K. SPICER
1 Funeral Director and Embalmer
tU Walnut St. «eU FkiM
duty? And If he does marry you, do
you think that you will be a congenial
and harmonious couple? Believe me,
little sister, there are no husbands and
wives so widely separated as those
who have the width of an education
between them.
Of course, the man who wants
your money tells you that he will love
you forever and a day for giving it to
him, and that he will bless your name
with gratitude. That is what all bor
rowers say, and yet the whole consen
sus of human experience shows that
the debtor always hates the person to
whom he is under obligations. That
has passed into a proverb, so that we
say that when you lend money to a
friend you love your friend and your
money both.
If this is true of transactions be
tween men, it is doubly true when
the woman is the giver and the man
is the beneficiary. The sense of de
pendence on a woman i£ gall and
wormwood to a man, and he hates
her for the very favors that he ac
cepts.
Many rich women marry poor men,
but not once in a thousand times are
such marriages happy, no matter how
generous and tactful the wife Is in
dealing with her husband. Many men
sit down supinely and let their wives
support them, but you will never see
in such a household a husband who
Is not the ill-tempered dog that bites
the hand that feeds it.
You can buy many things 'with
money, little girl, but you can't buy
a real man and real love. The most
that you can get is an imitation man
loaded up with a lot of hot air about
affection, and gratitude, that won't
pan out pure gold in the test of life.
Don't waste your money on such
worthless truck. It isn't worth the
price of a single hour's extra work or
the cutting down on a single lunch.
And remember this, little girl—be
suspicious of the man who reaches
out for your pocketbook while he
makes love to you. He's no Romeo.
He's a con artist, and he has taken you
for an easy mark. Don't be silly
enough to fall for him.
BREAKFAST JACKET WITH
ELBOW FLARED EFFECT
A Becoming Negligee That is Sure to
Be in Demand
8368 House Jacket, 34 to 44 bust.
The negligee is always a garment
dear to the woman's own heart, for it
represents dainty charm and relaxation
at the same time. This one is quite new,
giving the flared ripple effect in the pep
lum and can be worn over any simple
pretty skirt or made with skirt to match
and from almost any simple material.
Some of the flowered chalfies are very
charming for garments of the sort, the
pretty Oriental silks are much liked and
Cotton voiles and cotton crfipes make up
most attractively in such ways while
among them are to be found the prettiest
and most attractive possible color effects.
The sleeves are separate but are joined to
the garment at the long shoulder line, so
giving the Japanese The jacket is
a very easy and simple one to make. In
the illustration, flowered challis is trimmed
with Valenciennes lace banding and ribbon
frills.
For the medium size, the negligee will
require 3H yds. of material 27, 3 yds. 36,
2% yds. 44 in. wide, with 10 yds. of
banding, s}s yds. of ruffling.
The pattern 8368 is cut in sizes from 34
to 44 inches bust 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.
Germans Tell Another
Story of Destruction
of City of Louvain
By .Associated Press
London, Sept. 1, 4.50 A. M. A
Copenhagen dispatch to the Times
says that the German difficulty in Jus
tifying the destruction of Louvain is
| shown to-day by the publication of a
new version, different from the for
mer and apparently equally untrue.
It is said that the inhabitants, find
ing only one battalion of reserves and
a transport column in the town, form
ed the impression that the Germans
were evacuating the town. Thereupon
the priests served out ammunition to
the populace which- fired upon the un
suspecting Germans from all sides,
wounding many.
The German patrol wagons were al
so attacked. Twenty-four hours of
street flghUng followed and as a re
sult, part of the town was burned. The
previous version had said that the
attack was deliberately devised by the
Belgian authorities to synchronize
with a sortie in Antwerp.
PERSONS AVHO WANT THE BEST
Willingly pay a little more for the
Angelus than any other player-piano.
Learn for yourself why this is so. J.
H. Troup Music House, 15 South Mar
iket Square.—Advertisement. ,
BAKRISBURGT TELEGRAPH
i! THE LAST SHOT!!
By FREDERICK PALMER
Copyright* 1914, by Charles Sorlbner's Sons. j [
[Continued]
"Yes?" ho "Vee? Go
on!" And he thought: "I'm really
having a very pood time."
"You see, I came homo from my tour
with an idea —an idea for a life occu
pation Just as engroEsing as yours."
she went on, "and opposed to yours. 1
saw there was no use of working with
the.grown-up folks. They must be left
to The Hague conferences and tho
peace societies. But children are quite
alike the world over. You can plant
thoughts In the young that will take
root and grow as thoy grow."
"Patriotism, for Instance," he ob
served narrowly.
"No, the follies of martial patriot
ism! The wickedness of war, which
Is the product of martial patriotism!"
The follies of patriotism! This was
the red flag of anarchy to him. Ho
started to speak, flushing angrily, but
held his tongue and only emitted a
"whew!" in good-humored wonder.
"I see you are not very frightened
by my opposition," she rejoined In a
flash of amusement not wholly untem
pered by exasperation.
"We got the appropriation for an ad
ditional army corps this year," he ex
plained contentedly, his repose com
pletely regained.
"Thus increasing the odds against
ÜB. But perhaps not; for we are deal
ing with the children Dot with re
cruits, as I said. We call ourselves
the teachers of peace. I organized the
first class in La Tir. I have the chll-
This Was the Red Flag of Anarchy to
Him.
dren come together every Sunday
morning and I tell them about the chil
dren that live in other countries. 1
tell them that a child a thousand miles
away is Just as much a neighbor as
the one across the street. At first I
feared that they would find It unlnten
esting. But If you know how to talk
to them they don't."
"Naturally they don't, when you talk
to them," he interrupted.
She was so Intent that she passed
over the compliment with a gesture
like that of brushing away a cobweb.
Her eyes were like deep, clear wells
of faith and purpose,
"I try to make the children of other
countries so interesting that our chil
dren will like them too wall ever to
want to kill them when they grow up.
We have a little peace prayer—they
have even come to like to recite It—a
prayer and an oath. But I'll not bother
you with it. Other women have taken
up the idea. I have found a girl who
la going to start a claas on your side
In South La Tir, and I came here to
meet some women who want to In
augurate the movement in your capi
tal."
"I'll have to see about that!" he re
joined, half-banteringly, half-threaten
lngly.
"There is something else to come,
even more irritating," she said, lees
Intently and smiling. "So please be
prepared to hold your temper."
"I shall not beat my fist on the table
defending war as you did defending
peace!" he retaliated with significant
enjoyment.
But 6he used his retort for an open
ing.
"Oh, I'd rather you would do that
than Jest! It's human. It's going to
war because one Is angry. You would
go to war as a matter of cold reason."
"If otherwise, I should lose," he re
plied.
"Exactly. You make It easy for me
to approach my point. I want to pre
vent you from losing!" she announced
cheerfully yet very seriously.
"Yes? Proceed. I brace myself
agatnet an explosion of indignation!"
"It 1b the duty of a teacher of peace
to use all her Influence with the people
ehe knows," she went on. "So I am
going to ask you not to let your coun
try ever go to war against mine while
you are chief of staff."
"Mine against yours?" he equivo
cated. "Why, j«ou live almost within
gunshot of the line! Your people have
as much Qray as Brown blood in their
veins. Your country! My country!
Isn't that patriotism ?"
"Patriotism, but not martial patriot
ism," she corrected him. "My thought
Is to stop war for both countries as
war, regardless of sides. Promise me
that you will not permit It!"
"I not permit It!" He smiled with
the kindly patronage of a great man
who sees a chermlng woman flounder-
lng In an attempt ai logic. "It Is for
the premier to say. I merely make the
machine ready. The government says
the word that makes It move. I able
to stop war! Come, come!"
"But you can—yes, you can with a
word!" she declared positively.
"How?" he asked, amazed. "How?**
he repeated blandly.
Was she teasing him? he wondered.
Wbai new resources of confusion had
ten years and a tour around the world
developed In her? Was It possible that
the whole Idea of the teacher* of peace
was an Invention to make conversa
tion at hia expense? If so, she carried
It off with a sincerity that suggested
other depths yet unsounded.
"Very easily," she answered. "You
can tell the premier that you cannot
win. Tell him that you will break your
army to pieces against the Browns'
fortlflcattone!"
He gasped. Then an inner voice
prompted him that the cue was
comedy.
Excellent fooling—excellent!" he
said with a laugh. "Tell the premier
that I should lose when I have five
million men to their three million!
: What a harlequin chief of staff I
i should be! Excellent fooling! You al-
I most had me!"
i Again he laughed, though In the
fashion of one who had hardly unbent
his spine, while he was wishing for
the old days when he might take tea
with her one or two afternoons a week.
1 It would be a fine tonic after his leola
! tion at the apex of the pyramid sur
| veying the deference of the lower
levels. Then he 6aw that her eyes,
shimmering with wonder, grew dull
and her lips parted in a rigid, pale line
as if she were hurt.
"You think I am Joking?" she asked,
j "Why, yes!"
"But I am not! No, no, not about
such a ghastly subject as a war to
day!" She was leaning toward him,
hands on knee and eyes burning like
coale without a spark. "I" —she paused
as she had before she broke out with
the first prophecy—"l will quote part
of our children's oath: 'I will not be
a coward. It Is a coward who strikes
first. A brave man even after he re
ceives a blow tries to reason with his
assailant, and does not strike back un
; til he receives a second blow. I shall
not let a burglar drive me from my
house. If an enemy tries to take my
land I shall appeal to .his sense of Jus
tice and reason with him, but if he
then persists 1 shall fight for my
home. If I am victorious I shall not
! try to take his land but to make the
| most of my own. I shall never croes a
! frontier to kill my fellowmen.'"
Very Impressive she made the oath.
Her deliberate recital of It had the
quality which Justifies every word
| wljh an urgent faith.
"You see, with that teaching there
I can be no war," she proceeded, "and
those who strike will be weak; those
J who defend will be strong."
"Perhaps," he said.
"You would not like to see thou
sands, hundreds of thousands, of men
killed and maimed, would you?" she
demanded, and her eyes held the hor
ror of the sight in reality. "You can
j prevent It—you can!" Her heart was
i in the appeal.
"The old argument! No, I should
not like to see that," he replied. "I
! only do my duty as a soldier to my
country."
"The old answer! The more reason
why you should tell the premier you
j can't! But there is still another reason
i for telling him," she urged gently.
Now he saw her not at twenty-eeven
I but at seventeen, girlish, the subject
i of no processes of reason but in the
i spell of an intuition, and he knew that
something out of tho blue In a flash
j was coming.
"For you will not win!" she declared.
I This struck fire. Square Jaw and
i sturdy body, In masculine energy, reso
i lute and trained, were set indomitably
i against feminine vitality.
"Yes, we shall win! We shall win!"
1 he said without even the physical dem
j onstration of a gesture and In a hard,
| even voice which was like that of the
machinery of modern war itself, a
I voice which the aristocratic sniff, the
| Louis XVI curls, or any of the old gal
j lery-display heroes would have thought
J utterly lacking in histrionic® suitable
|to the occasion. He remained rigid
' after he had spoken, handsome, self
| possessed.
[To Be Continued]
Tlirrp In more Catarrh In section of tl'
country tbon all other diseases put together, ai
intil the list few years was supposed to 1
Incurable. I'or a great many years dootm
ironounced It a local disease and prescribed luce
remedies, and by constantly falling to cure wit,
local treatment, pronounced It lucurable. Selene
has proven Catarrh to be a constitutional dlseasi
and therefore requires constitutional treatment
Hull's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. .1.
Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, Is the only Conatltu
tlonal cure on the market. It Is taken Internsll;
In doses from in drops to a teaspoonful. It act.,
directly on the blood and mucous surfaces o!
the system. They offer one hundred dollsrs for
any case it falls to cure. Send for circulars and
testimonials.
Address: F. J. CHENEY Ic CO., Toledo, Ohio.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Take V>U'a Family Pills for constipation.
"Needless to Have
Superfluous Hair"
Says Mm. Osgood
After years of disappointing; experi
ments, Mrs. Osgood has found a Won
der-Remedy thp.i quickly and safely re
moves all signs of superfluous hair on
face, neck, arms, or elsewhere, with
out the slightest annoyance, or risk of
injuring the skin. No nerve-racking
needle or evil-smelling depilatories.
Simply apply the prescription as direct
ed and all unsightly embarrassing hair
quickly disappears.
Mrs. Osgood's Wonder 1* sold on a
Money-Back basis by Kennedy's Drug
Store, who reports many satisfied cus
tomers. All first-class druggist and
department stores carry it now. Get
this famous prescription to-day—at
once —and rid yourself of every trace
of superfluous hair without delay. j
SEPTEMBER 1, 1914.
{New Fall Styles!
\ HERE IN ALL ITS SPLENDOR I
J AN EARLY FALL SPECIAL 1 1
■ Women's & Misses' Silk and Cloth Dresses < |
c $<5.95
■ ACTTTAT, VALUES $lO AND $12.50. J
1 Materials of fine Silk Poplins and Silk Mfssalines, also all-wool I
K Mens wear Serge. A splendid collection, of pretty models In the 1
1 Basque and tailored styles. Colors, Black, navy, Russian green I
I nn " chocolate brown. Just the dress you will want for Immediate 9
» wear. »
I AN EARLY FALL SPECIAL ] f
I Women's and Misses' Cloth Coat Suits 1
5 $15.00
J ACTUAL VALUE S2O. ,
( Materials of all-wool Men's wear Serge, novelty cheviots and
a wool crepes. Stunning: models In the long and short coat effects. All ,
r coats lined with guaranteed satin and are hand-tailored. Colors, 1
1 "lack, navy, Russian green and chocolate brown, In all sizes for wo
f men and misses. I
J L Many have already taken advantage of this early Fall special.
| Women's and Misses 1 Cloth Coats
} $2.95
( ACTUAL VALUE, $6.50 1
C The favorite Balmaeaan Cant, made of good quality English I
1 mixtures, Rnglaii shoulder, turnback etiffs, button trimmed, and pUit
# flown the back. Will make a very desirable coat for early fall wear. I
i A lucky purchase of last week enables us to quote this low price. All
slaps for Women and Misses.
( V
AN EARLY FALL SPECIAL | (
, Women's and Misses' Separate Cltth Skirts i
$2.45
I ACTUAL VALUE $3.50. 1
M Made of all-wool men's wear Serge. Colors, black and narv. The I
6 new yoke style, also the long Russian tunic and Roman stripe bounce.
g All regular waist bands, 23 to 30.
\ Separate Cloth Skirts For Large Women
1 $2.95
1 ACTUAL VALUE SI.OO. I
% Made of all-wool men's wear serge. Colors, black and nary. Jnst
g the sensible style for big women, with kick plaits on sides and cut
% very full. All large size waist bands 30 to 38 inches.
tSave MONEY on
5 Your Purchase of Quality]"
(Boys' School Suits, iowfloTroFj
/Pants and Waists. r«v|f
I Follow the crowds here |fxl| (
l to-morrow. Jal/Am \
J Read These Prices ji S3('jSjiTy f
(50 Dozen Boys' $1 Knickers . . . 50c?
I Boys' Waists That Cost Boys' 75c Corduroy Knickers 2
S You 50c Elsewhere 49c \
< 25c I One Lot of Boys' Norfolk |
9 . Suits, $3.00 Values r
j Boys' $3.50 Norfolk Suits Q/T
J c/ oc _*
> Boys'NorfolkSuits
j Boys' $3.75 Norfolk Suits 2 Pair of Pants
j $2.50 $3.95
t MEN'S SUITS 500 Pair of Men's i
} $5.00 Good $2.00 PANTS
( Another Chance I. Secure > Will Be Put On Sale j
f $lO, sl2 or sls To-morrow 1
{ A L^h°a 0 nHau u,t AtOne Dollar j
f * _ _ _.n/|
War.f Map
i^LCoupon
Latest European War Map
Given by THE TELEGRAPH
to arery reader presenting this COUPON and 10 caota to cow
promotion expenses.
BY MAIL—In city or outside, tor 12c- Stamp*, cash or money order.
This la tha BIGGEST VALUE EVER OFFERED. Latest 1014 European
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to-. Hasue Peace Conference, National Debts, Cotn Values. EXTRA I-color
CHARTS o( Five Involved European Capitals and Strategic Naval T oratiora.
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5