10 Xfcforoen TALK TO YOUR CHILDREN OF HIDDEN PITFALLS BY ELLA WHE 9 When foolish young young t) ,n<>n asking Young men do not j spect girls who call | them nn the telephone, or who write unsol cited letters, or who try to at tract iheir attention In any way. They inu\ respond to such advances, but they feel only pity or contempt in their secret hearts for such girls. Here Is a portion of a letter sent by a girl of seventeen to a man she never saw. She explains that she ob tained his address from a letter he wrote to a little girl of nine, regarding some Christmas gift. She says: "So T take the advantage of writing to you. Hut if you see any of my friends or relatives please don't mention my let ter. Slip (iave a Romantic Description of Herself T am five feet four Inches tajl, weigh J 30 pounds, have hazel brown hair and blue eyes. I have been attending high school, but am at home now, taking music lessons. I will be seventeen my next birthday. T attend the Metho dist church. Please do not forget the secret; do not mention my name. Hoping to hear from you soon as pos sible. Respectfully yours" Then follows her name and address. Of course the parents of this child have no idea that she could be guilty of such an Indiscretion. But there is where the misfortune I lies. The parents have not realized that I their daughter is growing out of child- | liood into womanhood. That she is j following the natural bent of all j created beings, and thinking along ro mantic lines. Every normal girl and youth of that •ige is romantic, and it should be un derstood by parents, and the slttia- ' I Be Clean! I J r.ppy. Baths keep the skin Inside 811(3 Outside f. what anouSe PnSe'of the n body ? *■ -.T,*'l. LA 11 « You can no more afford to neglect it than the outside. It is just as fmport • ant l ' iG system be cleansed of the poisonous impurities caused by weakness of the digestive organs or by inactivity of the liver. DR PIERCE'S Golden M@di.cal Discovery (In Tablet or Liquid Form) Cleansoa the system—and mora. It puts the liver in such a condition of health that it purifieo tho blood—as it should. It helps tho stomach HV digest food so that it makca good blood—rich, red blood to nourish and Otrengthen all the organs. You may avail yourself of its tonic, revivifying influence by getting a liottle or a box of tablets froci your medicine dealer—or send BOc for ft trial box. Address as below. T7O 3? E" !' Dr Pierce's Common Gws<> Medical Adviser"—a French cloth bound book of n\E:C- r characa. Address JUNIATA COUNTY ITT". n . n I „ _ _ September 9to 11 JL XJL JL SPECIAL TRAINS PORT ROYAL, Thursday, September 10 Leave Harrisburg Thursday. September Ift, at 7.45 A. M„ Newport 8.45 A. M., Millerstown 8.54 A. M., Thornpsontown 9.04 A. M. Re turning, leave Port Royal 5.30 P. M. for Harrisburg and intermediate stations. REDUCED FARE EXCURSION TICKETS sold to Port Royal September 9 to 11, good returning until Septem ber 12, Inclusive. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD Now Is the Time Prepare for Winter, have Your Windows METAL WEATHER STRIPPED and reduced the cost of heating YOUR RESIDENCE Estimates cheerfully furnished. Chamberlin Metal Weather Strip Co. 405 Telegraph Bldg. Bell Phone 1045-R L—————— ——r—i— | Dodge Coal Trouble This Year , C Don't start off the first thing this Fall with a repetition of your coal troubles of former years. Keep your peace of mind and Insure' || I body comfort by using judgment i your coal buying. Montgomery '.c.ial costs no more than inferior grades, and Insures maximum heat, I even consumption, and lower coal bills. Dust and dirt is removed be- ' j fore you get your coal from S J. B. MONTGOMERY > ' I Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets { ! i Let me send you FREE PERFUME Write today for • testing bottle of PINAUD'S LILAC v* » W' 1 .y or ' d '.*. mns * famous perfume, everv drop as sweet 1 T s kinr IS thellvlna blossom. For handkerchief, atomizer and bath. SantaSE® »\ S ffIWX Mneafter shaving. All the value l» In the perfume-you don't KEgi \v iM\ J) pay extra for a fancy bottle. The quality Is wonderful The iiiaflLSj) v price only 75c. (Sor ). Send 4c. for the little bottle-enough R"» lor 50 handkerchiefs. Write today. A « PARFUMERIE ED. PINAUD, Department M. ED. PINAUD BUILDING NEW YORK SATURDAY EVENING, EOLRRaSBURG TELEGRAPH SEPTEMBER 5, 1914. 2ELER WILCOX tion should be met as naturally as the j teething time is met previously. I Girls in their teens often do foolisl j things, as this girl did, simply becausi they have an excess of vitality an< I their brains are excited and thei; ; imagination unduly developed. Given the right occupations, thi ! right reading, the right diversions and I the wise guidance they should have, at this time, they are saved from follj I and indiscretion. j Social distractions under the can j of older people, outdoor sports, danc i ing, music and nature studies in thi open air, would use the surplus energj I of a girl like this, so tliat she would | not be seeking a clandestine corre spondence with a young man she has never seen. Fortunate the Young Mini Was X<ii Kvilniinded There is nothing vicious in her lei ter; but the most lamentable conse quences could easily result if th< young man had been evilmindo enough to lead her on to further fol lies. When any girl feels tempted t write a letter, or communicate with ; man secretly, and hide the matte, from her parents, she is on the path to danger; she is nn the road which leads to folly, and more than possible shame. No man respects such a girl. If he meets her advances and ac ceeds to her wishes to enter into se cret correspondence, he does so be cause he wants to see how foolish and silly she will be; and he is not her friend, but her worst enemy. Men al ways want to make the advances to women. It is their nature. And they hold in light esteem any woman of any age who usurps this privilege. Mothers, look after your young daughters. Talk to Your Children of These Hid den Pitfalls Become their Intimate friends and | confidants. Talk to them on all these j subjects; give them interesting books i to read: give them helpful and health- I ful occupations and pleasures; give i them the society of the opposite sex, hut guard them through all these I years of adolescence. It is not the girl with a sensible, wise, tender mother, who writes such a letter as the one quoted above. >vw*wy*vvv>»%'% v», THE LAST SHOT By FREDERICK PALMER Copyright* 1014, by Charles SpriUnpr'n Minn. [Continued.] "Hello!" Lanstron called softly. "Hello!" he called louder and yet loud-r. Receiving no answer, he retraced his eteps srated himself on the second terrace in a secluded spot In the shadow of the first terrace wall, where he could see anyone coming up the main flight of step 6 from the road. When Marta walked she usually came from town by that way. At length the sound of a slov; ste»> from another di rection broke cn his oar. Some one was approachir.3 along the path that ran at his feet. Around the corner of the wall, in his workman's Sunday clothes of black, but wearing his old straw hat, appeared Feller, the gar >denr- He paused to examine a rose bueh and Lar.stron regarded him thoughtfully. A he turned away he looked up, and a glance of definite and unfalter ing recognition was exchanged be tween the two men. They had the garden to themselves. "Gustave!" Lane Iron exclaimed un der his K t ath. I "Lanny!" exclaimed the gardener, , turning over a branch of the rose bush. (He 3eemed unwilling to risk talking openly with Lanstron. "You look the good workman in hla Sunday best to a T!" said Lanstron. "Being etone-deaf," returned Feller, ■with a trace of drollery in hlB voice, "I hear very well—at times. Tell me" —his whisper was quivering with eagerness—"shall we fight? Shall we fight?" "We are nearer to it than we have ever been in our time," Lanstron re plied. The hat still Bhaded Feller's face, ! his stoop was unchanged, but the branch in his hand ehook. "Honest?" he exclaimed. "Oh, the chance of it! The chance of it!" "Gustave!" 1.-anstron'a voice, still low, came in a cust of sympathy, and the pocket which concealed hie hand rave a nervous twitch as If it held something alive and distinct from hla own being. "The trial wears on youl Do you want to go?" "No!" Feller shot back Irritably. "No!' he repeated reeolutely. "I don't want to go! 1 mean to be game—l—" He shifted his gaze from the bush which he still pretended to examine and suddenly broke off with: "Miss Galland is coming!'* Lanstron started toward the steps that Marta was asonding. She moved leisurely, yet with a certain springy energy that suggested that she might have come on the run without being out of breath or seeming to have made an effort. "Hello, stranger!" she called as she saw him, and quickened her pace. "Hello, pedagogue!" he responded. As they shook hande they swung their arms back and forth like a pair of romping children for a moment. "We had a grand session of the school this morning, the largest class ever!" she said. "And the points we scored off you soldiers! You'll find disarmament already in progress when you return to headquarters. We're Ir resistible, or at least," she added, with a flash of Intensity, "we're going to be some day." "So you put on your war-paint!" "It must be the pollen from the hy drangeas !" She flicked her handker chief from her belt and passed It to him. "Show that you know how to be | useful!" He performed the task with delib erate care. "Heavens! You even have some on your ear and some on your hair; but I'll leave it on your hair; it's rather be coming. There you are!" he concluded. "Oft my hair, too!" "Very well. I always obey orders." j "I oughtn't to have asked you to do It at all!" she exclaimed with a sud- ' den change of manner as they started up to the house. "But a habit of friendship, a habit of liking to believe in one'e friends, was uppermost. I j forgot. I oughtn't even to have shaken j hands with you!" "Marta! What now, Marta?" he asked. He had known her in reproach, in I anger, in laughing mockery. In mill- j tant seriousness, but never before like this. The pain and indignation in her ) eyes came not from the sheer hurt of! a wound but from the hurt of its' source. It was as if he had learned by the signal of its loss that he had a , deeper hold on her than he had real-; lzed. "Yes, I have a bone to pick with you," she said, recovering a grim sort of fellowship. "A big bone! If you're half a friend you'll give me the very marrow of it." "I am ready!" he answered more pa thetically than philosophically. "There's not time now; after lunch eon, when mother is taking her nap," she concluded as they came to the last step and saw Mrs. Galland on the veranda. Ater luncheon Mrs. Oalland kept bat tling with her nods until nature was victorious and she fell fast asleep. Marta, grown restless with impatience, suggested to Lanstron that they stroll in the garden, and they took the path past the house toward the castle tower, stopping in an arbor with high hedges on either side around a statue of Mercury. "Now!" exclaimed Marta narrowly. "It was you, Lanny, who recommend ed Feller to us as a gardener, compe tent though deaf I I have proved him to be a man of most sensitive hearing. I didn't let him know that he was dis covered. You brought him here—you, Lanny, you ar,e the one to explain." "True, he is not deaf!" Lanstron re plied. "He is a spy?" she asked. "Yes, a spy. You can put things in a bright light, Marta!" He found words coding .Wife difficulty & less. QJ &a pain and u aimi 01 ucr set look. "Using some man as a pawn; setting him as a spy in tho garden where you have been the welcome friend!" she exclaimed. "A spy on what—on my mother, on Minna, on me, on the flow erß, as a part of this monstrous game of trickery and lies that you are play ing?" There was no trace of anger in her tone. It was that of one mortally hurt. Anger would have been easier to bear than the measuring, penetrating won der that found him guilty of such a horrible part. Those eyes would have confused Partow himself with the steady, welling Intensity of their gaze. She did not seo how his left hand was twitching and how ho stilled its move ment by pressing it against the bench. "You will take Feller with you when you go!" she said, rising." Lanstron dropped his head In a kind of shaking throb of his whole body and raised a face white with appeal. "Marta!" Ho was speaking to a pro file, very sensitive and yet like Ivory. "I've no excuse for such an abuee of hospitality except the obsession of a loathsome work that tome man must do and I was set to do. My God, Marta! [ cease to be natural and human. lam a machine. I keep thinking, what If war comes and some error of mine let the enemy know where to strike the blow of victory; or if there were infor mation I might have gained and failed to gala that would have given us the victory—lf, because I had not done my part, thousands of live* of our soldiers were sacrificed needlessly!" At that she turned on him quickly, her face softening. "You do think of that —the lives?" "Yes, why shouldn't I?" "Of those on your side!" ehe ex claimed, turning away. "Yes, of those first," he replied. "And, Marta, I did not tell you why Feller was here becauce he did not want me to." CHAPTER VI. A Crisis Within a Crisis. Following the path to the tower leisurely, they had reached the tower. Feller's door was open. Marta looked Into the room, finding in the neat ar rangement of Its furniture a new sig nificance. He was absent, for it was the dinner hour. "On my recommendation you took him," Lanstron said. 'Yes, on yours, Lanny,on a friend's! You" —she put a cold emphasis on the word —"you wanted him here for your plans! And why? You haven't an swered that yet. Y.liat purpose of the war game does he serve in our gar den?" His look pleaded for patience, while he tried to smile, which was rather dif ficult in face of her attitude: "Not altogether in the garden; part ly In the tower," he replied. "You are to be in the whole secret and in such a way as to make my temptation clear, I hope. First, I think you ought to see the setting. Let ua go in." Impelled by a curiosity that Lan ■tron's manner accentuated, she en tered the room. Apparently Lanstron was familiar with the premises. Pass ing through the sitting-room into the room adjoining, where Feller stored his tools, he opened a door that gave on to the circular stone steps leading down into the dungeon tunnel. "I think we had better have a light," he said, and when he had fetched one from the bedchamber he descended the steps, asking her to follow. They were in a passage six feet In height and about three feet broad, which seemed to lead on indefinitely into clammy darkness. The dewy walla sparkled in fantastic and ghoetly iridescence under the rays from the lantern. The dank air lay moist against their faces. "This is far enough." He paused and raieed the lantern. With its light full In her face, she blinked. "There, at the height of your chin!" She noted a mgtal button painted gray, set at the side of one of the stones of the wall, which looked un real. She struck the stone with her knuckles and It gave out the sound of hollow wood, which was followed, as an echo, by a little laugh from Lan stron. Pressing the button, a panel door flew open, revealing a telephone mouthpiece and receiver set in the recess. "Like a detective play!" were the first words that eprang to her lips. "Well?" As she faced around her eyes glittered in the lantern rays. "Well, have you any other little tricks to show me? Are you a sleight-of-hand artist, too, Lanny? Are you going to take a machine gun out of your hat?" "That Is the whole bag," he an swered. "I thought you'd rather see it than have It described to you." "Having seea it, let us go!" she said, In a manner that implied further reck oning to come. "If out of a thousand poesible sources one source succeeds, then the cost and pains of the other nine hun dred and ninety-nine are more than re paid," he was laying urgently, the sol dier uppermost in him. "Some of the best service we have had has been ab surd in its simplicity and its audacity. In time of war more than one battle hae been decided by a thing that was a trifle in itself. No matter what your preparation, you can never remove tjie element of chance. An hour gained in information about your enemy's plans may turn the tide in your favor. A Chinese peasant spy, because he hap pened to be intoxicated, was able to give the Japanese warning In time for Kurokl to make full dispositions for receiving the Russian attack in force at the Sha-ho. There are many other incidents of like nature in history. 80 is is my duty to neglect no poesible method, however absurd." £To be Continued.J eWS BEWARE OF OVER CROWDING POULTRY This Condition Kills More Birds Than All Other Evils of the Yard Combined . I So many chickens are well attended _ I during the early period of their I growth, and they steer clear of sick ! ness. and look like developing into big, sturdy birds; then, for some reason 1 unknown to the attendant, they'gradu ally loose vigor, go off their feed, droop their wings, and chirp in a piintlve manner. Often the cause of st eh a change in the birds is traceable to the fact that overcrowding has been permitted—a condition that an nually kills more chickens than all ■•ther evils of the poultry yard com bined. If chickens are allowed to outgrow their sleeping quarters, sickness among them must he expected. What the growing youngsters require to keep them lively and vigorous is roomy and airy sleeping quarters. So many people after removing the brood hens from their coops allow the youngsters to occupy the latter and for a time the little ones farewell, and then they begin to droop. It is tha close confinement to stuffy coops night after night to which the mis chief is due. Rather than allow the chicks to go on occupying the coops in which they were brooded, the attendant will do well to place them in a roomy shed, the floor of which is well covered with fine ashes or dry sand, and on top of which is placed a good covering of chaff or other litter. Several broods, after leaving the care of hens may be placed in a building such as an ordi nary scratching shed, and there (hey may be allowed to sleep. During per iods of unfavorable weather there could be no better place to exercise the youngsters. Throw their grain into, the litter and thus make work compulsory. Do Not Feed Fattening Food During Molting Period No special formulas are needed for feeding fowls through the molting season, contrary to a quite general belief. But the rations should not consist of fattening foods, such as corn and buckwheat, exclusively. While growing new feathers the pro tein element of food is needed as much as while producing eggs, and this should he furnished in the form of meat, meal or scrap, skim milk and the grains of good protein content. The whole wheat products, oats, gluten feed, oil meal, alfalfa and clover are all good. In short, feed the fowls as well as though they were laying. Neither are any special formulas necessary for breeders, but if they can be induced to eat them, either >vhole or ground, oats may well form ;i considerable portion of their grain food. They should have ample range and not be forced for laying through the Fall and early winter; to this end but little meat should be given. MAW A TTK ACTIONS AT HERSHEY PARK. I.AriOK DAY, SEPTEMBER 7 Never was Hershey Park so beautiful as it is now. The mammoth flower beds scattered over the park are a mag nificent sight to behold. There are ai res of pretty lawns, plenty of shade, attractive buildings, etc. It is little wonder, after all. that strangers on their first visit, remark. "What a beau tiful place." There will, 110 doubt, be thousands of people who will take ad vantage of Labor Day.. The management is gradually placing amusements of the highest type at different sections of the park, so that no matter what part of the park you are in, there is something of interest. Of tiie amusements, perhaps the most popular one is the swimming pool and the shute-the-shute. Two baseball games will be played here on Labor Day, one In the morn ing and one in the afternoon. Hershey Park has two beautiful large dancing pavilions and every holi day you will tlnd these pavilions filled to their capacity. Labor Day there will be dancing afternoon and evening. At the theater a high-class vaudeville show and 4,000 feet of war pictures await those who are fortunate enough to see them. Then there Is the beautiful three abreast Jumping-horse carousei, situat ed perhaps at the most breezy spot in the park. The electric train of minia ture ears also is a very high-grade at traction—one never getting tired of it. Indeed, as stated before, it is necessary that you see these many attraction, such as boating, bathing, shooting gal lery, photo gallery, etc.. to appreciate them. Added to all this, is the ever-increas ing Zoo filled with many wild animals, birds, alligators, etc. Thousands of people visit this free Zoo daily. We owe it to ourselves to visit this beau tiful resort while in Its height of beauty. Hershey Park maintains a band of forty pieces, which will render open air concerts afternoon and evening. This band Is composed of expert musi cians and. no doubt, have played to more peonle this season than any other hand In the I'nited States.—Advertise ment. THE VICTORI \ SHOWS STROXfi FEA TURES The Victoria Theater has for a long j time had the reputation of showing strong snecial features. To-day's bill Is no exception. The headllner for to dav. entitled "Darkness and Dawn," is a f!reat Northern special multiple reel picture, which Insures its being a high class production. "The Village 'Neath' the Sea" Is a two nart offering of ex ceptional merit. "The Masquernder" is I a Keystone cornedv, and that means a j crood laugh. On Mon''«v we •■•how the | eleventh enNode of "The Million Dol lar Mystery."— Advertisement. '•H lf»H JIN KM" I The action of "High Jink'." the musi cal farce which Vrtbnr H:>mmorsteln : will present at the Majestic Theater. 1 Thursday evening, revolves around an j oscarintio at a French watering place. I in which a doctor exchanges wives in order to nroteot himself from a .lealous ' and revengeful Frenchman, who insists I on kissing his wife because he kissed the FfenehmHn'* wife. The kissing that . [pi'iped a'l the trouble results from the effects of a magic perfume, which made everyone who got a whiff of It hilari ous. The perfume, as well as the nlav. Is called "High .Tinks." and "High Jinks" is also the title of the dancing gem of the score of the musical Jollity. —Advertisement. "t'NCI.E TOM'S CABIN* Local theatergoers will be Interested in the announcement of the appear ance. Monday and Tuesday, of the fa vorite Southern drama, "Uncle Tom's Cabin." the greatest of all emotional ' pi a vs. The comnanv has been selected with din rlmlnatlon. and in the matter of scenic equipment and accesories the presentation of "Uncle Tom's Cabin" •r. ill measure up to a high standard. 1' The engagement at the Majestic is for two da»s, with daily matinee.—Adver tisement. ' POULTRYMEN WANT HELP FROM STATE Fanciers' Association Quizzing Can didates to Learn Their At titude on Question Pennsylvania poultrymen have con cluded that it is due alone to their modesty that the State has never Kiven the poultry industry recognition worth while. They have never asked for State support, it just occurs to them, and the fault they admit is therefore all their own. But if the State defaults in this matter in the future, the responsibility will rest with others than the poultrymen. poultry associations in Penn sylvania are asking: questions of the candidates for State office. The Johns town Fanciers' Association has ap pointed a committee to interview the State candidates and learn of their at titude on the following points: First—State aid for, poultry asso ciations holding annual shows. Second—Proper equipment and buildings at Pennsylvania State Col lege in keeping with the extent and value of the poultry product in this State. Third—Creating a bureau of poul | try husbandry in the Department of Agriculture and the appropriation of funds sufficient for the maintenance of same. Hen's Attitude Tells Her Laying Abilities The hen's attitude tells to a very I large extent whether she is a good or a poor layer. A sluggish, listless :.nd slow bird is always a poor layer. On the other hand, a singing, contented, i alert, quick, snappy and nervous fowl is generally a good layer. Some breeds are of course not as nervous or quick in the movements as others and allowance should always be made for this fact. The larger the breed, the slower its movements. Those in dividuals that are the first off the roosts in the, morning and the last on them at night are the best layers, all other factors l eing equal. Those ; individuals that are noticed to lie busy all day long, scratching in the litter, eating and drinking, are un questionably the best layers. EDISON DIAMOND DISC RECITALS Given daily at our store are largely attended by music lovers. You are invited. J. 11. Troup Music House, 15 South Market Square.—Advertise ment. I' AXT A Xt; PA UK To-day will see the ending of the summer vaudeville season at I'axtang Park. An excellent show of six acts makes up the closing bill and to-night will be your last chance to pay the park theater a farewell visit until next summer. On Monday evening there will be a band concert in the park then r The Commonwealth Band will be Hie at traction anil an elaborate program has been arranged. No admission will be charged for seats in the auditorium. A free concert by so popular a band should make Labor Day one of the big days of the park season.—Advertise ment. AT THK PHOTOPLAY "The Convict Hero." a four-act drama: "The White Mouse," two-act Selig drama, and a special John Bunny Vitagraph film. "Bunny"s Birthday," along with the eleventh episode of "The Perils of Pauline," make the program at the Photoplav to-day. Sec funny John Bunny and the terrible time Bunny has at his birthday party. Flora Finch, as his wife, cannot be equaled as a commedlene.—Advertisement. <■ " ■""" \ Second Fly Contest of the Civic Club AUGUST .1 TO SEPTKMIIRJI 2(1 sr> f»>r flr*t prlfej "rvornl othi-r prlrcn, nu<l 5 rent* n pint for nil fife* brought ID on the 'JOth of Sep There 1b more Catarrh In 'ala aectlon oi « •uutry tbau all other illseaaos put together, a utll the list few years was supposed lt» 1 icurahle. lor a great many years doct" .-enounced It h local disease aud prescribed lo« •medles. and by constantly falling to euro \\l t ocal treatment, pronounced It incurable. Selet. ias proveu Catarrh to be a constitutional dlseas ind therefore requires constitutional treatmcn. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. .« Cheney & Co., Toledo. Ohio. Is the only Const Itu tlonal cure on the market. It is taken intcrnall In doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It act directly on the blood and mucous surfaces i. the system. They offer one hundred dollars fo any case it falla to cure. Send for clrculaVs am. testimonials. Address: F. j. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio Sold by Druggists. 75c. Take Family Pills for constipation. _ How to ' Buy Lumber It's no easy matter to select the kind of lumber that will wear long-est. Some lumber is high priced, but you don't have to specif}- ''clear'' throughout your building. There's more than one grade of lumber and many kinds of wood. What you need is a sug gestion here and there from some one who knows lumber. We can easily tell you if No. 1, 2 or 3 quality will suit and the kind of wood to buy. United Ice & Coal Co. MAIN OFFICE: Fnratrr anil Cmvdrn St*. Business Locals MORNING, NOON, NIGHT, Whether it's breakfast, luncheon or dinner, you will always find Mensrer's Restaurant an ideal place In which to dine. Refined, quiet surroundings, with the best the market affords, pre pared under the personal supervision of Mte. Mender, is an assurance that every bite is a relish. The place that serves the best 35-cent dinner in the city. 110 North Second * treat. Getßidof CutlcuraSoaD and Ointment Will help you when all else fails. Unsightly complexions are often a bar to social advancement and business success. Start life with a clear skin and good hair. Samples Free by Mail Cutlctira Soup and Ointment sold throucliout the world. Liberal sample of i-nch mnllcd free, with 32-D book. Add row "Cutlcura." Uem. IfiH, Boston. SOU S A —AT— Willow Grove SUNDAY, AUG. 30 SEPTEMBER 13 1914 Special Excursion Train S|M»4*i!ll liV. Prom l-'nrt* A.M. Harrisburg | $2.00 6.00 Hummelstown ..j z.,00 6.18 Swatara ) 2.00 6.24 1 lershey | 2.00 6.27 Palmyra | 2.00 6.35 Annvillc I 1.85 6.45 Lebanon ........ I 1.75 6.57 Myerstown | 1.75 7.11 Richland | 1.75 7.17 Sheridan 1.75 7.21 Womelsdorf .... | i.70 7.27 Willow Grove, arr | 10.15 Returning, Special Train will leave Willow Grove 9.00 P. M. for above stations. Tickets <?ond only on date of ex cursion on above Special Train In each direction. Children between 5 and 12 years of age half fare. V- J Cumberland Valley Railroad TIMETABLE In Effect May 24, 1914. TRAINS leave Harrisburg— For Winchester and Martlnsburg at 6 US, *7:50 a. m., p. m. For Hagerstown, Chamber-burg. Car lisle, Mechanlcsburg and intermediata stations at 6:03, *7:60, *11:63 a. in •3:40, 6:32. *7:40, *11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanlcsburg at »:48 a. ir. , 2:18, 3 37 6:30, 9:30 a. m. For DUlsburg at 6:03. *7:50 and •11:63 a in., 2:18. *3:40, 6:32 and 8:3(1 p. m. •Daily. All other trains dally except Sunday. H. A. RIDDLE, J H TONGE. Q. P. A. EDUCATION Al, Enroll Next Monday DAY AND NIGHT SCHOOL Positions for nil Graduates 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. MISS JEANNE PRATT pupil of Wiiliam H. Sherwood, will resume PainoforteTeaching at 114 West State St. September, Bth ifCHAS.J.MAUK So UNDERTAKER Sixth and Kelker Streets Largest establishment. Rest facilities. Near to you at your phone. Will go anywhere at your call. Motor aervicc. No funeral too tmall. None tool •xpensive. Chapels, rooma, vault* etc.. uaed with* out charge ELECTRIC WORK Yes! We will repair your bell. For 22 years we have specialised in concealing wires in homes while occupied. We guarantee to leave your home just as we found It. YI\OMT KI.KCTHICAI, CO. 1423 .North Third St. PIH>BBT4K)WII " '■ RUDOLPH K. SPICER * Funeral .Director and Embalmed Wnlast 1L K«U Hum j
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers