8 MRS. LYON'S AGNES AND PAINS] Have All Gone Since Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound. ferre Hill, Pa.—"Kindly permit me i to give you my testimonial in favor of 1 ... .... n Lydia E. Pinkham's j Vegetable Com- 1 pound. When I first | began taking it I waa suffering from j jffi female troubles for »|j| 1 jgH 80me time and had ~ almost all kinds of aches—pains in low /yCC~\J er part of back and l—_ in sides, and press '"7'f<l« ' n K down pains. I —Ll— t ill I 1-1 could not sleep and had no appetite. Since I have taken j Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- j pound the aches and pains are all gone | and I feel like a new woman. I cannot I praiso your medicine too highly."—Mrs. Augustus LYON, Terre Hill, Pa. It is true that nature and a woman's work has produced the grandest remedy for woman's ills that the world has ever known. From the roots and herbs of the field, Lydia E. Pinkham, forty years ago, gave to womankind a remedy for their peculiar ills which has proved more efficacious than any other combination of drugs ever com pounded, and today Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is recognized from coast to coast as the standard remedy for woman's ills. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., are files containing hundreds of thousands of letters from women seek ing health many of them openly state over their own signatures that they have regained their health by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound; and in some cases that it has Baved them from surgical operations. | Home Complexion Peeler Works Wonders To keep the face, neck, arns and hands truly beautiful and youthful in appearance, the treatment which seems most sensible is one which will actu ally remove the skin itself immedi ately it begins to age. fade, coarsen or discolor. The only known treatment which will do this, aside from a pain ful. expensive surgical operation. Is the application of ordinary mercolizeil wax. which is as harmless as it is effective. The wax is put on at night, just as you apply cold cream, and washed off in the morning. It absorbs the dead and half-dead surface skin in almost invisible flaky particles ,a little each day. no disennfort being experienced. With the disappearance of the old cuticle, the newer, healthier skin un derneath gradually «appears, richly beautiful with the flush of youth. This mercolized wax, which you can get at any drug store in original pnr-kage, is indeed a veritable wonder-worker.— Advertisement. \ THE Harrisburg Academy REOPENS SEPTEMBER 32ND "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 Vacancies Matriculate Now ARTHUR E. BROWN, Headmaster Box 617 Bell Phone 1371J Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect May 34. 1914. TRAINS leave Harrisburg— For Winchester and Martlnsburg at i:Oit, "7:»0 a. m . *3:40 p. m. For Hagerstown, Chamber., burg, Car lisle, Mechanicsburg and Intermediate stations at 6:OS, *7:50, *11:61 a. m •S:4O, 5:82, *7:40, •11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mech&nlcsburg at 9.48 a. IE., 1:1(, 5:27. «:30. »:S0 a. m. For Dlllabura at 1:03, *7:60 and •11:13 a. m- 3:18. *3:40, 1:33 and 4: JO p. m. •Dally. All other trains dally except Sunday. H. A RIDDLB, i. It TONGB. Q. P A. Business ix>caia MORNING. NOON. NIGHT. Whether It's breakfast, luncheon or dinner, you will always And Monger'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 Mrs. Menger, is an assurance that every bite is a relish. The place that serves the best 3 5-cent dinner in the city. 110 Jrorth Second street. Try Telegraph Want Ads, THURSDAY EVENING, WHEN STEAM SHOVEL AND EXCAVATING GANG BEGINS TO CHANGE A MAP OF Ti:Z CITY CUBE CITY IP ID SOUTHERN END Fast Disappearing Ruins Mark Site of Once Populous Section of Town If the Harrisburger of Just a few! years ago should drop into the old j town just now and stroll southward to i the vicinity of Mulberry and Second ! streets he would be surprised. If he j postponed his visit for another year, j or even six months, he would be j amazed. For the whole city mar In that section bounded by Cherry, Third street, Washington. Meadow lane and j Front streets is being changed more | completely than is expected for the map of Europe after the great war. Second street's subway beneath the Mulberry street tracks of the Cum berland Valley is rapidly assuming businesslike proportions and the great steam shovel is daily gouging out tons of earth. The cut is being made northward fmm Washington street and one side of the roadway is nearly finished. What appeals so strikingly just now, however, is the bareness of that section—the proposed site of Harris burg's great freight stations of the future. From Court street to River only the fast disappearing ruins of a dwelling here and there mark the site of one of the city's most densely popu lated and bullt-tn sections. Mulberry street is bare of houses: the grade of the tracks has been raised; some of the oldest homes In Harrisburg have been razed. Furthermore, the, city's only wireless zone is finite evident in that section, and the stroller can get .'in excellent idea of how all Harris burg would seem without Its overhead network of wires. These had to he taken out to make way for the i-hnneres. Thus far the work presents only a vague idea of what is to come; on Front street the finished product Is pretty nearly evident. At any rate, a visit these days to that section is very well worth while. This Frees Your Skin From Hair or Fuzz (Toilet Tips) The method here suggested for the removal of superfluous hair is quick and certain and unless the growth is extremely stubborn a single appli cation does the work. Make a stiff paste with some powdered delatone, and water; apply this to the hairy surface and after about 2 minutes ruh it off, wash the skin and the hairs are gone. To avoid disappointment, be sure your druggist sells you dela tone.—Advertisement. AGENTS WANTED FOR' ~ CLOUSER'S QUININE PRICE 25CEMS Quick Rtutr o' Colds «"D IsGsippe M.C A C COUSC R OUNC ANNOM.P*. $lO to sls Per Day Paid Live Agents KDCCATIirNAX Enroll Next Monday DAY ANT> NIGHT SCHOOL Positions for all 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. • \ J. Harry Stroup General Insurance Agent 1617 N. Second Street Business Locals 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 lor 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 <b Both JDeirjr atcaot, , THE LAST SHOT By FREDERICK PALMER Copyright, 1014, by Charles Serlbmer's Son*. [Continued] With the >. they see 20 or SO Grays p!ar,tcred on the slope at the point where the charge was checked. Every one of those prostrate forms Is within fata! range. Not one moves a finger; even the living are feigning death in the hope of surviv ing. Among them is little Peterkin, so faithful In forcing his refractory legs to keep pace with his comrades. If he Is always up with them they will never know what Is In his heart and call him a coward. As he has been knocked unconscious, he has not been In the pell-mell retreat. His first stabbing thought on coming to was that he must be dead; but, no; he was opening his eyes sticky with dust. At least, he must be wounded! He had not power yet to move his hands In order to feel where, and when they grew alive enough to move, what he saw In front of him held them frigidly still. His ncrvea went search ing from his head to his feet and— miracle of heaven!—found no point of pain or spot soppy with blood. If he were really hit there was bound to be one or the other, he knew from read ing. Between him and the faces of the Browns—yes, the actual, living, terri ble Browns—above the glint of their rifle barrels, was no obstacle that could stop a bullet, though not more than three feet away was a crater made by a shell burst. The black cir cle of every muzzle on the crest seemed to be pointing at him. When were they going to shoot? When was he to be executed? Would he be shot In many places and die thus? Or would the very first bullet go through his head? Why didn't they fire? What were they waiting for? The suspense waa t unbearable. The desperation of overwhelming fear driving him in Irre sponsible impulse, he doubled up hit legs and with a cat's leap sprang for the crater. A blood curdling burst of whistles •vaased over his n- a dozen rifles DANDRUFF SURELY DESTROYS THE HAIR Makes It Dull, Brittle, Lifeless, and Causes It to Fall Out Girls—lf you want plenty of thick, beautiful, glossy. silky hair, do by all means get rid of dandruff, for it will starve your hair and ruin it if you don't. It doesn't do much good to try to brush or wash it out. The only sure way to Ret rid of dandruff is to dis solve It, then you destroy It entirely. To do this. Ret about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply It at night when retiring: use enough to moisten the scalp and rub It In gently with the finger tips. Ry morning, most if not all, of your dandruff will he gone, and three or four more applications will complete ly dissolve, and entirely destroy, every single sign and trace of it. You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop, and your hair will be silky, fluffy, lus trous, soft, and look and feel a hun dred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It Is Inex pensive and four ounces is all you will need, no matter how much dandruff you have. This simple remedy never fails. —Advertisement. An Easy Way to Get Fat and Be Strong The trouble with most thin folks who wish to gain weight Is thpt thev Insist on drugging their stomach or stuffing it with greasy foods; rubbing on titleless "flesh creams," or following some fool ish physical culture stunt, while the real cause of thinness goes untouched. You cannot get fat until your digestive tract assimilates the food you eat. Thanks to a remarkable new scien tific discovery. It is now possible to combine Into simple form the very ele ments needed By the digestive organs to hel" them convert food Into rich, fat- blood. This master-stroke of modern chemistry is called Sargol and has been termed the e-reatest of flesh bullders. Sargol aims through Its re generative, reconstructive powers to coax the stomach and Intestines to lit erally soak up the fattening elements of your food and pass them into the blood, where they are carried to every starved, broken-down cell and tissue of votir body. You can readily picture the result when this amazing transforma tion has taken fclace and you notice how your cheeks fill out. hollows about vour neck, shoulders and bust disap pear and you take on from 10 to 20 pounds of solid, healthy flesh. Sargol Is absolutely harmless, Inexpensive, ef ficient. George A. Gorgas and other leading druggists of Harrlsburg and vicinity have it and will refund your money If you are not satisfied, as per the guarantee found In every nackage. Caution t—While Sartrol lias given excellent results In overcoming nerv ous dyspepsia and general stomach troubles It should not be taken by those who do not wish to tain ten pounds or 11mora, —Advertisement. OXRRISBURG StSKfe TEI EGHAPfi cracked. This time he was surely killed! He was in some other world! Which was it, the good or the bad? The gooa, ioi uc „ glimpse of blue flky. No. that, could not be, for he b*.d been alive when he leaped tor the crater, and there he was pressed against the soft earth of its bottom. He burrowed deeper blissfully. He was the nearest to the enemy of any man of the liSth, and he certainly had passed through a gamut of emo tions in the half-hour since Eugen® Aronson liad leaped over a white po»t. • •••••* "Confound it! If we'd kept on we'd have got them! Now we have to do It all over again!" growled Fracasso distractedly as he looked around at the faces hugging the cover of the shoulder —faces asking, What next? each in its own way; faces blank and white; faces with lips working and eyes blinking; faces with the blood rushing back to cheeks in baffled an ger. One, however, was half smiling— Hugo Mallin's. "You did your share of the running, I'll warrant, Mallin!" said Fracasse excitedly, venting his disgust on • particular object. "Yes, sir," answered Hugo. "It was very hard to maintain a semblance of dignity. Yes. sir. ! kept near you all the time. Wasn't that what you wanted me to do. sir?" Three or four men burst into a hys terical laugh as if something had bro ken in their throats. Everybody felt better for this touch of drollery except the captain. Yet, possibly, it may have helped him In recovering his poise. Sometimes even a pin-prick will have this effect. "Silence!" he said in his old man ner. "I will give you something to joke about other than a little setback like this! Get up there with your rifles!" He formed the nucleus of a firings line under cover of the shoulder, and then set the remainder of his com pany to work with their spades mak ing a trench. The second battalion of the 128 th, which faced the knoll, was also digging at the base of the slope, and another regiment in reserve was deploying on the piain. After the fail ure to rush the knoll the Gray com mander had settled down to the busi ness of a systematic approach. And what of those of Fracasse's men who had not. run but bad dropped In their tracks wli«n the charge halt ed? They were between two lines of fire. There was no escape. Some of the wounded had a mercifully quick end, others suffered the consciousness of being hit again and again; the dead were bored through with bullet holes. In torture, the survivors prayed for death: for all had to die except Peter kin, the pasty-faced little valet's son. , Peterkin was quite safe, hugging th« bottom of the shell crater under a swarm of hornets. In a surprisingly short time be became accustomed to the situation and found himself raven ously hungry, for the strain of the last 12 hours had burned up tissue. He took a biscuit out of his knapsack and began nibbling it, as became a true rodent. CHAPTER X. Marta's First Glimpse of War. As Marta and the children came to the door of the chapel after the reci tation of the oath, she saw the civil population moving along the street in the direction of the range. There was nothing for Marta to do but start homeward. The thought that her mother was alone made her hasten at a pace much more rapid than the pro cession of people, whose talk and ex clamations formed a monotone audi ble in its nearness, deaplte the continu ous rlfle-flre, now broken by the pound ing of the guns. "It's all done to beat the Grays, Isn't It, Miss Galland? They are trying to take our land," said Jacky Werther as Marta parted from him. "Yes. It Is done to beat the Grays," she answered. "Good luck, Jacky!" Yes, yes, to beat the Grays! The same idea—the fighting nature, the brute nature of man —animated both sides. Had the Browns really tried for peace? Had they, in the spirit of her oath, appealed to Justice and reason? Why hadn't their premier before all the world said to the premier of the Grays, as one honest, friendly neigh bor to another over a matter of dis pute: ITo Be OonUnuedJ Should Be in Every American Home! This Truly Magnificent Work! LARNED'S HISTORY OF THE WORLD OFFERED TO READERS BY Harrisburg Telegraph History Divided Into Epochs: I Ike a Great Drama. 1-defined Acts, or :he scenes. Before :t, you behold the ants whose deeds Is ring down the ir lives in fascina biographies in the tellect who weaves liest Civilization and Over 150 Vivid Illustrations 1 1j 16 Full-Page Reproductions ; = j fljhm in colors, of great historical paint- Im/tM /#'■ ings. This unique feature alone- is | { jwL ViKMy worth the small cost we ask for the ; i JOSEPHUS NELSON LARNED, author of the ||jl B 1 world-famous "History for Ready Reference," wrote jf! llf M iff these wonderful books as his crowning life's work. j wtfofMr From the Cave-Men to the present day. m GET THE LARNED HABIT |j|j|]||Jr This Handsome Set is bound in a beautiful de luxe binding; gold lettering, fleur-de-lis and tracery design, rich half-calf effect. Marbled sides with gold and colors. Full 6ize of volumes 5%x8 inches. Don't Fail to Clip the Coupon in Today's Paper A $12.00 SET FOR OUR COUPONS AND ONLY $1.98 " ' ' Y*t VI have just received a consignment of the larg- I■ I I est, clearest and most accurate European M M War Maps ever published; size, 3 feet by 4 feet. I I Printed in four vivid colors, showing all cities, I JL A vLJLJImmJm towns and villages. Wonderfully illustrated. Giving all vital statistics of populations, areas, navies, armies, railroads, telegraphs, etc., so you can keep fully posted on the most gigantic war ever waged in all history. Well worth $1.50. As long as they last we will give one of these maps absolutely free with every set of Larned's History that goes out. This $12.00 Set of History and the $1.50 Map con stitute the most unparalleled educational bargain ever offered. CANAI. BEI) FOR I'ABK Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., Sept. 17. Danville Civic Club Is planning to turn a por tion of the old Pennsylvania canal bed, which runs through the borough Into a public park next summer, and will work towards that end during the winter. The property Is owned by the Dela ware, Lackawanna and Western Rail road Company, and It has agreed to do nate It for that purpose, as long as It 4a not u»eU«d lor a roadbed. , SEPTEMBER 17, 1914. POULTRY SHOW AT SVKBtHY Sunbury, Pa.. Sept. 17. Danville Poultry Association, composed of Mon tour county fanciers, has decided to hold Its annual poultry show there this year on December 29-January 1. Al ready many inquiries have been receiv ed ami it promises to be a big event for lovers of high-bred fowls. ENGAGEMENT ANXOIN C ED Sunbury, Pa.. Sept. 17. Mr. and Mrs. Willis D. Mohr. of near Turbott ville, to-day announced the engagement of their daughter. Miss Myrtle E. Mohr to Ira W. Drelschbach. Two years ago s a sister of the young man, was married on the stage at Turbotville, after sha i had been graduated from the high, i school. GOBS TO LAW SCHOOL 1 Sunbury, Pa., Sept. 17. Malcolm C. Farrow, Jr., of Shamokln, who hHS been, doing newspaper work in Reading, has, resigned, and will enter Dickinson lawi I School, where lie will take a threat - years' course. He is a son of Malcolm! LjC. Farrow. Sr.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers