( I APPLES'! 1 iiji P a Ot- '4 26 a * lb. pSi ;f all over country, 0 ing that the high cost of living CAN be ||| reduced. What they did YOU can do. fell 1 I k| In the October Issue of SvC'S |Jra i The Ladies' Home Journal 8 SS m fiM A solution of the problem of the high cost of living |p ; that is so simple, so sensible, so easily done, that every woman who reads the article will say, "Why didn't fel tefef I think of that ?" I®} m pygi 15 Cents a Copy, Everywhere Wft |jP Our Sales Agent is - # R. BRINSER I Ly.%-; ;?8 102 South Second St., Harrisburg ft. IHE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY M && independence Square Philadelphia Pennsylvania $2? 111 M wmmmmrnmmmmmmmmmMmmmmmM vj PHONE 1045R Chamberlin Metal Weatherj Stri) Co. P. B. EDELEN, Sales Agent 40S TELEGRAPH BUILDING HAKRISBUHG, PA. Perfect Ventilation Even Temperature Fuel Saving 25 te 40 % « PREVENTS RATTLING OF SASH STICKING OP SASH. DUST AND SOOT COLD DRAUGHTS. GUARANTEE To keep la repair (or 10 years without extra charge. REQUEST A call of representative for n||. | mate and farther Information with out obligation. MOST USED PERFECT ECONOMICAL OF ALL WEATHER STRIPS. __ AGENTS WANTED FOR] CLOUSER'S Quinine PRICE 25CENTS »ot QUICK Rcucr or Cotos AND LA GUIPPE M C A.c UOUSC N OUNCANNON.P*. $lO to sls Per Day Paid Live Agents ■————— ■■ mimmmJ Try telegraph Want Ads ' MONDAY EVENING. Dr. Lyter to Conduct Big Masonic Service Religious services at the Masonic | Home. Elizahethtown, next Sunday ' afternoon, will he conducted by local I officers of Perseverance Lodge of | Masons. An invitation has been ex ' tended to the general public and It is I expected that a bis crowd will board | the 2.25 p. m. train leaving Union I Station. i The. Rev. Dr. J. A. Lyter. pastor | of the Derry Street United Brethren j Church, will direct the services. Music j will be furnished by the Haydn Quar- I tet, all members of the lodge, R. E. I Steever, Jerome Hamilton. Nevir. J Seltzer and H. H. Fraim. The return j from Elizahethtown will be made at .",.50 o'clock. For Agonizing Corns You Can't Beat It I Certainly not, "Putnam's" has 'em all beat a mile. It's a marvel on corns | and foot lumps, acts like magic. Why i for nearly fifty years Putnam's Ex ! tractor has been the standard remedy, i the dependable one, the sure kind that never disappoints. It's painless too. Think of it! Paint ! it on to-night, in the morning the pain is all gone. Small wonder the sale of Putnam's Corn Extractor Is so large, 25c at dealers everywhere and at C. M. For ney's.—Advertisement. Merchants A Miners Trana. Co. DELIGHTFUL TRIPS "BY SEA" I lIW.TIMOHE AND PHI I.ADEI.PHIA TO BOSTON, PROVIDENCE. SAVANNAH. JACKSONVILLE | Through tickets on sale from and to all principal points Including meals and • stateroom accommodations on steamers. ! Fine steamers. Best service. Low fares. Staterooms de Luxe. Baths. Marconi wireless. Automobiles carried. | Send for booklet. City Ticket Office. 105 South Ninth St., Phlla~ Pa. W. P. Turner, G. P. A.. Baltimore, Md. (f CHAS. H. MAUK THE (48 UNDERTAKER 'id H Sixth and Kelker Street* Largest establishment. Rest facilities. Near to you as your phone. Will go anywhere at vour call. Motor service. No funeral too small. None too expensive. Chapels, rooms, vault, etc.. used with out chart* ImlflUlSIIV'lv! I Non-greasy Toilet Cream keeps the skin soft and velvety. An ex ! quislte toilet preparation, 25c. * GORGAS DRUG STORES , 16 N. Third St., nnd P. R. H. Station | * SURPRISE FOR TEACHER Special to The Telegraph Halifax, Pa., Sept. 21.—0n Friday evening the Clover Bible class of the United Brethren Sunday school of this place, held a birthday surprise for their teacher, Mrs. William Bitteman. All of the class, excepting two. were present. After spending the evening very pleasantly they gathered around a table that was bountifully spread with all the delicacies of the season. BOY CAUSES MAN'S INJURY Special to The Telegraph Mountvllle, Pa., Sept. 21.—Joseph Copeland, clerk In the Marietta Grocery Store, was kicked in the face by a horse which he was driving Sat urday evening. A boy riding with him hit the horse with a stick Just as Copeland was about to lean for ward, causing the animal to kick. Copeland will lose a number of teeth, besides being badly lacerated. WOMEN FAINT AT FIRE Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., Sept. 21.—Fire of un determined origin destroyed a barn owned by Mrs. Catharine Snyder, to gether with some hay and straw and a set of harness, loss JSOO, with insur ance. Three women who live nearby fainted when they saw the blaze and a doctor had his hands full giving them all attention. IF BILIOUS, SICK OR CONSTIPATED TAKEJCASCARETS No headache, bad cold, sour stom ach or costive bowels by morning. Get a 10-cent box now. You're bilious! You have a throb bing sensation In your head, a bad taste in your mouth, your eyes burn, your skin is yellow, with dark rings under your eyes; your lips are parched. No wonder you feel ugly, mean and ill-tempered. Your system is full of bile not properly passed off, and what you need is a cleaning up inside. Don't continue being a bilious nuisance to yourself and those who love you. and don't resort to harsh physics that irritate and Injure. Re member that most disorders of the stomach, liver and bowels are cured by morning with gentle, thorough Cascarets—they work while you sleep. A 10-cent box from your druggist will keep your liver and bowels clean, stomach sweet, and your head clear for months Children love to take Cascarets because thev taste good and never gripe or sicken. Advertiae- I ment. fCtRRISBURG TELEGRAPH I The Last | \ Shot I r= 4 s f ! 4 4 4 4 4 2 f 4 »y j FREDERICK PALMER J (Oopr right. 1914. br ClMrles rtrribuert Banu Many of the -wounded looked at Marta even more than at the flowers. It was good to see the face of a wom an, her eyes limpid with sympathy, and it was not what ehe said but the way she spoke that brought smiles in response to hers. For she was DO solemn ministering angel, but high spirited, cheery, of the sort that the major surgeon would have chosen to distribute flowers to the men. Every remark of the victims of war made Its distinct and Indelible impression on' the gelatin of her mind. "I like my blue aster better than that yellow weed of yours, Tom!" "You didn't know Ed Schmidt got it T Tes, he was right next to me In the line." "Say, did you notice Dellarme's smile? It was wonderful." "And old Bert Stransky! I heard him whistling the wedding march as he flred." "Miss, I'll keep this flower forever 1" "They say Billy Lister will live—his .cheek was shot away!" "Once we got going I didn't mind. It seemed like as if I'd been fighting for years!" "Hole no bigger than a lead-pencil. 11l be back In a week!" "Tes; don't these little bullets make neat little holes?" "We certainly gave them a surprise when they came up the hill! I won der If we missed the fellow that jumped into the shell crater!" "Our company got It worst!" "Not any worse than ours, 111 wa ger!" "Oh—oh—can't you go easier? Oh-h-h—" the groan ending in a clench ing of the teeth. "Hello, Jake! You here, too, and going in my automobile? And we've both got lower berths!" "Sh-h! That poor chap's dying!" Worst of all to Marta was the case of a shrapnel fracture of the cranium, with the resulting delirium, in which the sufferer's incoherence included memories of childhood scenes, mo ments on the firing-line, tails for his mother, and prayers to be put out of misery. A prod of the hypodermic from the major surgeon, and "On the operating table In fifteen minutes" was the answer to Marta's question If the poor fellow would live. Until dark, in groups, at intervals, and again singly, the wounded were coming in from a brigade front in the region where the rifles were crackling and the shrapnel clouds were hanging prettily over the hills; and stretchers were being slipped into place in the ambulances, while Marta kept at her post "We shan't have much more to do at this station," said the major surgeon when a plodding section of Infantry in retreat arrived. CHAPTER XI. At the Galland House. Every unit engrossed in his own work! Every man taught how a weak link may break a chain and realizing himself ae a link and only a link! The captain of engineers forgot Marta'n ex istence as an error of his subordinates caught his eye, and he went to caution the axmen to cut closer to the ground, as stumps gave cover for riflemen. For the time being he had no more interest In the knoll than in the wreckage of the dirigibles which were down and out of the fight. After all, the knoll was only a single point on the vast staff map—only one of many points of a struggle whose progress was bulletined through the sittings of regimental, brigade, divi sion and corps headquarters In net re sults to the staff. Partow and Lan stron overlooked all. Their knowledge made the vast map live under their eyes. But our concern is with the story of two regiments, and particu larly of two companies, and that la story enough. If you would grasp the whole, multiply the conflict on the knoll by ten thousand. There had been the engrossment of transcendent emotion in repelling the charge. What followed was like some grim and passionless trance with triggers ticking off the slow passing minutes. Dellarme aimed to keep down the fusillade from Fracasse'a trench and yet not to neglect the fair targets of the reserves advancing by rushes to the support of the 128 th. Reinforced, the gray streak at the bot tom of the slope poured in a heavier fire. Above the steady crackle of bul lets sent and the whistle of bullets re ceived rose the cry of "Doctor! Doc tor !" which meant each time that an other Brown rifle had been silenced. Th® litter bearers, hard pressed to re move the wounded, left the dead. Al ready death was a familiar sight—an article of exchange in which Del larme's men dealt freely. The man at Stransky's side had been killed out right. He lay face down on his rifle rftock. His cap had fallen off. Stran sky put It back on the man's head, and the example was followed in other cases. It was a good idea to keep up a show of a full line of caps to the enemy. [To Be Continued] Try Telegraph Want Ads I LARNED'S LUCID STYLE I CAPTIVATES THE READER OF HIS GREAT History of the World NOW ON DISTRIBUTION BY THE HARRISBURC TELEGRAPH I |S||§!| F° r 70 Centuries fr-Mli I §'l\i s y(' This great history traces the Life of Mankind in its |p ' f 8 \ continuity. The momentous causes and effects are W lilr' M PI ' Vti plainly revealed. It depicts the forces, the move ? H I I ill'' ments, the influences in World Events by which the II | a|j j!l rj'j n * n '" n d today has come to be what it isl 16 Fall-Page Reproductions in Colors, of Great 111| •jjj 16 Full-Page Half Tones of Famous Scenes 41 iM I itr and Portraits. B I Jr 150 Vivid Illustrations. THIS GREAT HISTORICAL WORK is bound in a beautiful de luxe binding; gold lettering, fleur-de-lis and tracery desigp, rich half-calf effect. Marbled sides with gold and colors. Full size of volumes 5% x 8 inches. The Name of Joeephae Nelson Lamed, author of "Hiotorg far Ready Reference," on any work, make» it like Minted Gold, STANDARD all over the world. 11l A $12.00 Set, 5 Volumes, For Only $1.98 | CLIP COUPON ELSEWHERE IN THIS PAPER i|''im ■ wpa We have just received a consignment of the larg |l 1 H est, clearest and most accurate European mg M m War Maps ever published; size, 3 feet by 4 feet. I I Printed in four vivid colors, showing all cities, JL 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. WILT,IS SUM, LEADS TITTLE IX lUG CONTEST The Firemen's Union committee in charge of the popular fireman contest in llarrisburg announced Saturday night that J. T. Willis is in the load. Levi Tittle continues second in the race. The standing is as follows: J. T. Willis 17,050 Levi Tittle 15,818 John Hepford 531 Lester King 409 B. Douglas 380 B. Truss 319 W. Wolf 274 D. Huber 222 C. Meek 191 G. Ellis 139 L. Lickel 104 W. Fillineer B<i A. J. Patton 84 SEPTEMBER 21, 1914. SOCIAL. HELPERS' PICXIC Blain, Pa., Sept. 11.—On Saturday the Minister's Social Helpers of Zlon Reformed Church picnicked in Sher man's Park, aionK the banks of Sher man's creek. The weather was ideal for a picnie and air present had a delightful time. A bountiful dinner was served at the noon hour for about twenty-flve of the members in attendance. CLEAN-UP DAY SELECTED Columbus, Pa., Sept. 21. Chief Burgess Detwiler has issued a procla mation designating Thursday, Septem ber 24, as clean-up day, and han called upon all citizens to take a hand in the work of keeping the town clean. The authorities will provldo tcartrs for the removal of dirt and re fuse. State Police Arrest Four Men For Illegal Fishing Special to The Telegraph Columbia, Pa., Sept. 21. —State po , lice, sent here at the instigation of| Fish Commissioner Builer, arrested four men for illegal Ashing in the Susquehanna river. Their names are George W. Smith, George W. Smith, Sr., Harry Gerber and William John Jones. They are charged with op erating fyke nets and when taken into custody had a large quantity flsh. Their entire Ashing outfit and the flsh were confiscated and the latter given to the Columbia Hospital. All gav« bail before Justice Lutz for a hearing on Wednesday. 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers