10 \)c7o(Y)en T A ,gy T& WHO MAKES THE BEST HUSBAND? By DOROTHY DIX they should not bo blamed for getting misfit husbands. Their range of selec tion is limited to what they can get. They have to take what is offered them, instead of the one they might have preferred. Still, there is a choice among blessings, and even if a woman has to pick a husband out of a limited assortment it is worth while to exercise care and judgment upon it. And here's one point for women to note—all of the qualities that make a man dazzling to the world, such as great beauty of face or form, social talents, cleverness, wit, genius, even extraordinary financial ability, mili tate against making him a good hus band. So the very things that attract a. woman to a man before marriage ere the ones that make him undesir- Hble as a husband. In choosing: a husband, girls, don't marry a very handsome man, for if you do you will always prevent an invidious contrast to him that people will remark upon, and beside him you will seem twice as homely and unat tractive as you are. Moreover, a handsome man never admires any body hut himself; and in a family, if there is going to be any bouquet throwing, it should be the woman who gets the nosegay instead of the man. Beware of the Man Who Makes i/ove to You Too Perfectly Don't marry a man who makes love beautifully and romantically. That is an accomplishment so rare aDd so fascinating that no man who Don't Say, "I Want a Box of Matches" Would you go into Ask for Safe Home a grocery store and Matches and you will Sa ?' iV6^^ e a get the very best matches cake ot soap. that money buy _ No! You would ask —by name —for the Non-poisonous—don't kind of soap that is spark —don't sputter — * best adapted to don't break —a real your needs. safety strike-anywhere So with breakfast match. Inspected and foods. Youwouldask labeled by the Under —by name —for the writers' Laboratories, kind that has the pleasantest taste or is most nourishing. Follow this rule with / .. • matches. Tell the ness knows what \![ you may get. sc. All grocers. Ask for them by name. ~™_ _ Wart Map i^LCoupon I Latest European War Map Given by THE TELEGRAPH to trrtirr reader presenting this COUPON and 10 canto to oorv promotion expenses. BY MAIL— In city or outside, for 12c. Stamps, cash or money order. This is the BIGGEST VALUE EVER OFFERED. Latest IW4 European Official Map (ft colors) —Portrsits of 16 European Rulers; all statistics and wsr data—Army, Naval and Aerial btresgth, Populations, Area, Capitals, Distances between Clues, Histories of Nstlons Involved, Prev:ou« Decisive Battles, His tory Hague Peace Conference. National Debts. Coin Values. EXTRA 2-eolor CHARTS of Five Involved European Capitals and Strategic Naval Locations. Ndsd. with handsome cover to fit the pocket. Try Telegraph Want Ads. TUESDAY EVENING. possesses it can refrain from prac ticing it. It's all right as long as you are the object of it, but after a while making love to his own wife palls on a man's taste. He wants something with more "pep" in it, and he begins to quote poetry to other women. There is great safety in a husband who halts and stumbles in his speech, and who has to screw his feet around the rungs of a chair in order to brace up enough to call a woman "angel face." Don't marry a man who is a philan thropist or who has a mission. All missions lead a man away from his own hearthstone, and philanthropy is too precious a commodity for family consumption. So far as his wife en- Joying his society is concerned or get ting any of his attentions, a man had as well be addicted to drink as to causes. Both will keep him out at night and use up his salary. The men who are uplifting humanity are gen erally letting their wives stand off the butcher. If charity doesn't begin at home it never gets there. Don't marry a man who is too clever, and especially avoid a wit. A man who is delightful raconteur and who can tell a good story is the most charming of acquaintances, and gen erally the most boring of husbands. Also, unless a woman is willing to be the butt of his jokes, she does well not to marry a humorist. He will make her faults, her foibles, her mis takes, her most sacred emotions, the subject of ridicule: and few women have a sufficiently well-developed funny bone to enjoy a good story at their own expense. Don't marry a man who thinks he knows it all. Every woman Is glad and proud to sit at her husband's feet for a limited space of time and burn a reasonable amount of incense be fore him, but patient Grizelda left few lineal descendants, and most femin ists in these days have a petty con ceit of their own opinions, and like to air them now and then. The days of Sir Oracle are gone, and the hen, as well as the cock, wants to share in ruling the roost. Watch Out For Too Fine Sensibilities —You'll Treat! on Them! Don't marry a man with too fine sensibilities, for if you do you are sure to tread all over them. When you ask hjm for money you will jar him with your commercialism. In times of household stress, when the cook leaves and the beds are unmade and the dishes unwashed, the terrible materialism of domesttclt* will get upon his nerves. When the baby howls with the colic, and you are walking it garbed In bedroom slippers and a dressing gown, his aesthetic soul will shiver away from you. The woman who marries a supersensitive man spends her life in doing the chords and trying to protect him from the hardships of existence; and, while he accepts her sacrifices, he considers himself a martyr for having missed his affinity. Don't marry a famous man, he cause he belongs to the world and not to you. The most that a wife of a famous man can hope for Is an in finitesimal portion of his heart, a fraction of his time, and a small de gree of his interests. His wife is merely among those "also present" in his life. She is not the whole thing and to read the exploits of your hus band in the newspapers is poor com fort compared to having his love, his tenderness and his every thought for yourself. Don't marry a financial wizard. It's nice of course, to have all the money you want to spend, but the man whose whole soul is engrossed In money-making has neither time nor thought to give to such small de tails as making his wife and children happy. Many Girls Would Trade Kntire Bank Accounts For I jive Husbands A cash register and a bankbook are cold propositions to espouse, and many a woman who has them would be glad enough to exchange them for a real live, human husband wtthout a dollar In his pocket. The best kind of a husband is just the plain, every-day, good, honest fel low who thinks that the woman he marries is aji angel and that he's done the biggest thing in the world in get ting her. Such a marriage is not spec tacular, but it is full of the happi ness that is all wool and a yard wide and that stands the wear and tear of domestic life. THE LATEST TONIC SKIRT FORJOUNG GIRLS A Model That is Adapted to Re making as Well as to New Frocks By MAY ~MANTON 8363 Two-Piece Skirt with Tunic for Misses and Small Women, 16 and 18 years. This plain circular tunic is apt to be effective over a skirt of contrasting ma terial and the greater number of girls unquestionably will like that treatment, but there never was a fashion more prac tical or more adaptable than the tunic skirt, and this model can be treated in many different ways. Since the founda tion is iust a plain two-piece skirt over which the tunic is arranged, it is easy to see that it is adapted to remodelling as well as to the new frock and the autumn has brought forth so many new and inter esting materials that it is a simple matter to find something to harmonize with almost any costume tnat may need to be re modelled. There are striped and checked and various fancy materials while again silk is combined with wool and silks Include moir£ and plain effects as well as plain surfaces. The tunic is made in three pieces and both it and the skirt can be closed at the left of the front, where the edges of the tunic overlap, or at the left side seam. For the 16 year size, the skirt will re quire 2 yds. of material 27, 36, 44 or 50 in. wide: the tunic 2% yds. 27, 2yds. 36, 1 % yds. 44 or 50 in. wide. The width of the slart at the lower edge is I yd. and 20 in. The pattern 8263 Is cut in sizes for t6 and 18 years. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper, on receipt of ten cent* Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. / THE Harnsburg Academy REOPENS SKPTEMBKR 22N1) "The School That Enables a Pupil to Do His Best." Prepares Young .Men for Colleges and Professional Schools College Dormitory System Lower School FOR BOYS SIX TO ELEVEN Few Vacnneles Matriculate Now ARTHFR E. BROWN. Headmaster PHPBWT RUDOLPH K SPICER . uneral Director and Embalmer •U Walnat It ««U Pk*H | fiARRISBUHG (6665 TELEGRAPH THE LAST SHOT! By FREDERICK PALMER Copyright, 1914, by Charlra Scrlbner's Sons. [Continued] i "And yet, » ,-v your plans i for him, Lanny. Thcro is another thing | to consider," she replied, with an ab-1 rapt chsnffA of tone. "But first let us j leave Feller's quarters. We are In- j "traders here." "A man playing deaf; a secret tele- i phone Installed on our premises with- 1 j out our consent—thlp 1b all 1 know so far," said Marta, seated opposite ' Lanstron at one end of the circular | seat in the arbor of Mercury. "Of course, with our 3,000,000 , against their 6,000,000, the Grays will talc* the offensive," he said. "For us, the defensive. La Tir is in an angle. | It does not belong in the permanent | tactical line of our defenses. Never theless, there will be hard fighting here. The Browns will fall back step , by step, and we mean, with relatively small cost to ourselves. *o make the ; Grays pay a heavy price for each step [ —Just as heavy as wo can." "You need not U3e euphonious j terms," she said without lifting her lashee or any movement except a I quick, nervous gesture of her free 1 hand. "What you mean is that you ! wfll kill ae many as possible of the ! Grays, ien't is? And if you could kill ' [ five for every man you lost, that would ; be splendid, wouldn't it?" "I don't think of it as splendid. There is nothing splendid about war," he ob- j Jected; "not to me, Marta." "And after you have made them pay five to one or ten to one in human 1 lives for the tangent, what then? Go on! I want to look at war face to face, 1 free of the will-o'-the-wisp glamour that draws on soldiers." "We fall back to our first line of de- j dense, fighting all the time. The Grays ; occupy La Tir, which will be out of the j reach of our guns. Your house will ; no longer be In danger, and we happen ! to know that Westerling means to make It hie headquarters." "Our house Westerling's headquar ters!" she repeated. With a start that 1 brought her up erect, alert, challeng- I lng, her lashes flickering, she recalled that Westerling had said at parting that he should see her if war came. This corroborated Lanstron's informa tion. One side wanted a spy In the : garden; the other a general In the house. Was she expected to make a choice? He had ceased to be Lanny. He personified war. Westerling per sonified war. "I suppose you have j ; spies under his very nose—in his very | 1 staff offices?" she asked. "And probably he has in ours," said j : Lanstron, "though wo do our best to j ' prevent it." "What a pretty example of trnst , among civilized nations!" she ex j claimed. "You say that Westerling, 1 who commands the killing on his side, 1 will be In no danger. And, Lanny, are | you a person of such distinction in the ' business of killing that you also wlJ' j be out of danger?" She did not see, as her eyes poured j her hot indignation into h:s, that hie : ; maimed hand was twitching or how ! I he bit his lips and flushed before he re- | ' plied: "Each one goes where he is sent, link by link, down from the chief of j staff. Only in this way can you have ! j that solidarity, that harmonious effl- j I ciency which means victory." "An autocracy, a tyranny over the j j lives of all the adult males In countries i that boast of thi ballot and self-gov- ! erning institutions!" she put in. "But I hope," he went on, with the 1 quickening pulse and eager smile that ' used to greet a call from Feller to "set | things going" in their cadet days, "that ' I may take out a squadron of dirigibles. I After all this spy business, that would ! ; be to my taste." "And If you caught a regiment in i 1 close formation with a shower of I bombs, that would be positively heav- j I enly, wouldn't it?" She bent nearer ! to bim. her eyes flaming demand and , satire. | "No! War—necessary, horrible, hell- • ! ish!" he replied. Something in her I j seemed to draw out the brutal truth I she had asked for in place of euphoni- \ \ ous terms. "When I became chief of Intelligence I found that an underground wire had i ! been laid to the castlo from the Eighth ! division headquarters, which will be j our general headquarters In time • of war. The purpose was the same as I ! now, but abandoned as-chimerical. All | that was necessary was to Install the I instrument, which Feller did. I, too, | saw the plan as chimerical, yet it v.na | a chance—the one out of a thousand. f If It should happen to succeed we j should play with o_r cards concealed j and theirs on the t2bl-s. "The rr~t of Fellor's p~rt you have guessed already," ho concluded, '"tfou can see how a deaf, inoffensive old gardener would hnrdly seem to know a Gray soldier from a Brown; how it j might no more occur to Westerling to •end him away than the family dog or cat; how he might retain bis quarters ' In the tower; how he could judge the ! atmosphere of the whether elatsd or depresced, pick up rcraps of conver sation, and, as a trained officer, know 1 the value of wfctt 1:3 heard and report i it over the phone to Partow's head- ! quarters." "But what about the aeroplanes?" | she asked. "I thought you were to de- ! pend on them fcr scouting." "We shall use them, but they are the least tried of all the new re- [ sources," he said. "A Gray aeroplane may cut a Brov.n aeroplane down be fore it returns with the news we want. At most, when the aviator may descend | low enough for accurate observation j he can see only what is actually being ! done. Feller would know Westerling's plans before they were even In the | first steps of execution. This"—play ing the thought happily—"this would be the Ideal arrangement, while our j planes and dirigibles were kept ow ! , our lines to strike uown theirs. And, • Marta, that is all," he concluded. If there Is war, the moment that ; Roller's ruse is discovered he will be ; shot as a spv?" g », e asked. I "I warned him of that.' said Lan i stron. "He is a soldier, with a sol j dler's fatalism. He sees no more dan der in thie than in commanding a bat tery in a crisis." | "Suppose that tfie Grays win? Sup : pose that La Tir is permanently ; theirs?" i "They shall not win! They must not!" Lanstron exclaimed, his tone as rigid as Westerling's toward her sec ond prophecy. ) "Yet if they should win and Wester ling finds that I have been party to this treachery, as I shall be now that I am in the secret, think of the posi tion of my mother and myself!" she continued. "Has that occurred to you, a friend. In making our property, our garden, our neutrality, which is our only defense, a factor in one of your plans without our permission?" Her eyes, blue«black iu appeal and reproach, revealed the depths of a wound as they had on the terrace steps j before luncheon, when he had been 1 apprised of a feeling for him by seeing it dead under hie blow. The logic of | the chief of intelligence withered. He understood how a friendship to her was, indeed, more sacred than patriotic : passion. He realized the shame of what he had done now that he was I free of professional influences, j "You are right, Marta!" be replied. | "It was beastly of me—there is no ex i cuse." i He looked around to see an orderly ■ from the nearest military wireless star ' tlon. "I was told It was urgent, sir," said the orderly. In excuse for his intrusion, ; as he passed a telegram to Lanstron. Immediately Lanstron felt the touch of the paper his features seemed to take on a mask that concealed hie thought as he read: I "Take night express. Come direct : from station to me. Partow." This meant that he would be ex -1 pected at Partow's office at eight the next morning. He wrote his answer; : the orderly saluted and departed at a rapid pace; and then, as a matter of habit of the same kind that makes some men wipe their pens when lay ing them down, he struck a match and | set fire to one corner of the paper, ! which burned to his fingers' ends be i fore he tossed the charred remains j away. Marta Imagined what he would | be like with the havoc of war raging around him—all self-possession and mastery; but actually he was trying to reassure himself that he ought not to feel petulant over a holiday cut short. 'T shall have to go at once," he said. "Marta, If there were to be war very soon—within a week or two week* — j hat would be your attitude about Fel- I ler's remaining?" "To carry out his plan, you mean?" "Yes." Tjere was a perceptible pause on j her part. "Let him stay," Bhe answered. "I shall have time to decide even After | war begins." ■ "But instantly war begins you must j gol" he declared urgently. "You forget a precedent," she re j minded him. "The Galland women ; have never deserted the Galland house!" "I know the precedent. But this I time the house will be in the thick of ; the fighting." ! "It has been in the thick of the fight ing before," she said, with a gesture of Impatience. "Marta, you will promise not to re ; main?" he urged. "Isn't that my affair?" she asked, i "Aren't you willing to leave even that to me after all you have been telling i how you are to make a redoubt of our j lawn, inviting the shells of the enemy I Into our drawing-room?" What could lie nay? Only call up • from the depths the two passions of | his life In an outburst, with all the I force of his nature in play. "I love this soil, my country's soil, | ours by right—and I love you! I would J be true to both!" "Love! What mockery to mention | that now!" she cried chokingly. "It's I monstrous!" "I—I—" He was making an effort j to keep his nerves under control. This time the stiffening elbow failed, j With a lurching abruptness he swung his right hand around and seized the j wrist of that trembling, injured hand ' that would not be still. She could not ! fail to noice the movement, and the ! eight was a magic that struck anger | out of her. "Lanny, I am hurting you!" she cried : miserably. "A little," he said, will finally domi nant over its servant, and he was •mlling ae when, half stunned and In J ugony—and ashamed of the fact—he had risen from the debris of cloth and ! twisted braces. "It's all right," he con cluded. She threw back her arms, her head . raised, with a certain abandon as if she would bare her heart. "Lanny, there have been moments when I would have liked to fly to your arms.. There have been moments when I have had the call that comes to every woman In answer to a desire. Yet I was not ready. When I really go it must bo In a flame, in answer to your flame!" "You mean—l—■' But if the flame were about to burst I forth she smothered It In the spark. "And all this has upset me," she went on incoherenily. "We've both been cruel without meaning to be, and we're In the shadow of a nightmare; and next time you come perhaps all the war talk will be over aiwi— oh. this Is enoueh for today!" 4To be Continued.! ■ i SEPTEMBER 8, 1914. Children Cry for Fletcher's The Kind Yon Have Always Bought has borne the signa» tnre of Chan. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one to deceive you In this. Counterfeits, Imitations and .Just-as-jrood ' are but experiments, and endanger tha health of Children—experience against Experiment. B , What is CASTORIA fjastorla is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare gone, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It de *troys Worms and allays Feverisliness. For more than thirty years It has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic,all Teething Trou bles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years British Casualties Reported to Be 15,000 Special to The Telegraph London, Sept. B.—A dispatch to the Times sent from Boulogne says thnt the Mayor of that city -is reported to have received a telegram stating that General Joffre had succeeded in turn ing the Qerman lines, and that Sir John French had gotten around on the left of the German aj-my. The German troops at l,ille left there hur riedly yesterday. Other dispatches say the Germans have also left Valen ciennes, Armentieres, Douai and Bal leuil. A third official list published last night completed the. casualties up to j^fagner '& Pork and Beans be regarded by everybody as a delicacy rfU® What you ought to find out is nhoie \ beans are the easiest for you to digtit. This is vitally important, seeing that wt get nutrition only from digcilta food. ( No. I, Luncheon S' Throe eiMee:< No. 2, Family MM SPSr l/Vo 3. Full Dinner Look for thm blum-band label. ||jjp|JMARTIN WAGNER CO., Baltimore, Md. j WWWMWWWWWWWWWWWMWWIIWWWWVMWWWWW || COMMONWEALTH TRUST COMPANY 222 Market Street, Harrisburg, Pa. Condensed Statement, August 27, 1914. RESOURCES LIABILITIES j; Cash and cash Items. $ 109.292 9« CapltM | sto ,. k $ 250,0011 00 (i Due Irom banks 183,011 < L .surplus fund 450.000 00 ] | Loans and investments 1,902.893 55 ( „dlvlded profits 00,091 29 J | Re"' estate and bank Deposits 1,751,l«0 02 '! building 277,073 92 |o hanks 2,050 17 j[ Overdrafts 1.113 81 Miscellaneous 17,715 91 11 Miscellaneous 902 00 $2,534,920 99 52.534.020 99 I > Trust Funds Invested . $1,490,201 83 ]! Trust Funds Uninvested, including advances 121.318 1« ;! $4,(111,519 99 OFFICERS II , . _ W. M. Ogelsliy. W. 11. Met/.ger, ,i William Jennings, , Vice-presidviit and Treasurer. President. Trust Officer. W. Grant Ranch. ! I ' Asst. See' y & Treas. DIRECTORS |! Charles E. Covert. W. O. Hickok. 11l T. W. Smallwood, i] Henderson Gilbert, • C. W. Lynch, John Kox Weiss, !> W. M. Haln, R. 11. Moflitt, Win. Jennings. j| R. C. Haldemaii, H. C. Ross, W. M. Ogelsby, e Francis .I. Ilail, \. t JUS u.stanim. W. H. Met/.ger. JUNIATA BOUNTY C FT ~ _ . _ „ September 9to 11 JL XjL JL JIV special trains PORT ROYAL Thursday, September 10 Leave Harrisburg Thursday. September 10, at 7.45 A. M., Newport 8.45 A. M.. Mlllerstown 8.54 A. M., Thompsontown 9.04 A. M. Re turning. leave Port Royal 5.30 P. M. for Harrisburg and intermediate L stations. J REDUCED FARE EXCURSION TICKETS sold to Port Royal September 9 to 11, good returning until Septem ber 12, inclusive. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD - ir - - - - -. B I Dodge Coal Trouble This Year | C Don't start off the first thing this Kali with a repetition of your A ■ coal troubles of former years. Keep your peace of mind and insure \ body; comfort by, using judgment I your coal buying. Montgomery A M cjal costs no more than inferior grades. and insures maximum heat, X \ even consumption, and lower coal bills. Dust -iand dirt is removed be # fore you gqt your coal from ( J. B, MONTGOMERY | C Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets ffl September 1. It is as follows: Killed—9 officers, 33 men. Wounded—27 officers, 120 men. Missing—49 officers, 4,558 men. THROWN INTO WINDSHIELD Special In The Telegraph Gettysburg. Pa., Sept. 8. When the seven-passengser Studehaker automo bile owned by Guy Hartma.n. of Kauff man's Station, struck a stone slab at a sharp curve on the Gettysburg Bat tlelleld Saturday morning, Miss Grace Brechbill, of Marion. Pa., was thrown violently Into the windshield and se verely cut about the face. There were six persons in the party touring the battlefield and Miss Brechbill was tht only one Injured.