'SXlomen r^Unrei^g Slaves to Freak Fashions I ICE FAIRFAX The girl who does not slavishly follow the fashions of to day seems like one white sheep In a flock of black ones! Never have fash ions in clothes been more extreme than now. Never has there been greater need for common sense and judgment in choosing one's gar m ents. And never have women more slavishly aped one another in the desire to be smart. There is no more contagious disease than a fashion. New styles are intro duced by dressmakers' manikins or women of the demi-monde as a gen eral rule. The rest of the feminine world sees, and first laughs In scorn at the novelty and then follows a series of feelings—"thoy lirst endure, then pity and then embrace." And then the wild contagion of the style spreads from woman to woman. There is a great lack of independ ence and of personal influence in dressing. Like a true flock of sheep women follow the standard set up by a new fashion. And since most styles are neither modest nor graceful in line, the flock becames a freak flock of black sheep. And there no girls who dare be white sheep in a black flock? Are there no girls who dare refuse to wear unbecoming clothes and to exert their personality on the styles in stead of weakly allowing the styles to rule their personalities? A real poet once gave his attention to the panorama of fashion and put the proper way to meet it simply and well. Said he: "Be not the first by whom the new Is tried, nor yet the last to cast the old aside." That is indeed an excellent attitude to take toward the new styles, but it must be aided by judgment as to what of the new to adopt. Tall women, short women, thin f" N rHONE 104511 Chamherlin Metal Weather Strip P. B. EDELEN, Sales Agent 405 TELEGRAPH BUILDING HARRISBURG, PA. Perfect Ventilation Even Temperature Fuel Saving 25 to 40 % PREVENTS RATTLING OP SASH. STICKING OF SASH. DUST AND SOOT COLD DRAUGHTS. GUARANTEE To keep In repair for 10 years without extra charge. REQUEST A call of representative for esti mate and farther Information with out obligation. MOST USED PERFECT ECONOMICAL OF ALL WEATHER STRIPS. EDUCATIONAL Enroll Next Monday DAY AND 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 nipht. 29th year. Harrisburg, Pa. #CHAS. H. MAUK (11 UNDERTAKER Sixth and Kellcer Streets Largest establishment. Best facilities. Near to rou as your phone. Will go anywhere at your call. Motor service. No funeral too small. None too expensive. Chapels, rooms, vault, etc., uaed with out charfio IWHli'iHllliM Non-greasy Toilet Cream keeps the ekln soft and velvety. An ex quisite toilet preparation, 26c. GORGAS DRUG STORES 16 N. Third St, and P. R. R. Station » , , il i in mmmmmmmmj WEDNESDAY EVENING women and plump have all joined the cult of the tunic. How can It be that every woman, regardless of length, breadth of thickness, will look equally well in an overskirt that flares out somewhere between knees and ankles above an underskirt that is tight enough about the feet to suggest the pantalettes of a bygone day? Can this one style soften an angular figure, givo hoight to a dumpy one, and add the softly boyish lines so much in favor to a fat woman? Not every woman looks well with her hair over her ears in a series of scallops across her cheeks. Very few women are at all attractive with their locks pasted up away from their ears. But all the world once adopted the one extremo and all the world of femininity seems about to cultivate the equally startling other fashion of arranging its hair. Extremes of fashion do fairly well for the woman of such ample means that she can discard one freak for another before it loses its one charm —its bizarre newness. But for the girl who must go on wearing a pair of white-topped boots after the world has tired of boots and decided on French heeled pumps for walking (!) those boots are so injudicious an ex travagance as to be almost a crime. Don't, I beg of you, my dear girls, adopt the wildest freaks of fashion in tho hope that you will thereby look smart and attractive. Instead, you will look like a little freak yourself, and every bit of your own youthfully charming personality will be buried under the weight of your inappropri ate clothes. Pick and cull and choose from the styles. Select what you can wear to advantage, what is not immodest nor startling. Don't have your clothes the one emphatic note In your personality. Don't let your garments bo the means of attracting attention to you—and snickers and unfavorable comments therewith. Cultivate your personality and show it in your garments. Be the white sheep in the (lock of devotees to freak fashions. Be individual, and so you will be chic and smart enough to attract attention to your clothes. EEL CIX)GS WATER PIPE Waynesboro, Pa., Sept. 23.—A water spigot in one of the departments of the Frick Company shops was found to give out a very low supply of water. An Investigation followed and the pipe was found to be clogged with an eel measuring three feet in length. The eel had been dead for several weeks. At the sight of this several of the employes of the shop who had been drinking the water that came through the pipe a few minutes be fore grew quite sick. Another eel eighteen inches long also came out of the pipe, but it was alive. MARRIED AT HAGERSTOWN Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., Sept. 23. —Harold Rumberger, a well-known young foot' ball player of Waynesboro, and Miss Helen Kauffinan, Bell telephone op erator at Cham her sburg, went to Ha gerstown yesterday and were married by the Rev. A. B. Statton, pastor of St. Paul's United Brethren Church. Mr. Rumberger is a son of A. E. Rumberger and at one time was on the reportorial staff of the Evening Herald. Uneeda Biscuit Tempt the appetite, please the taste and nourish the body. Crisp, clean and fresh. 5 cents. Baronet Biscuit Round, thin, tender— with a delightful flavor —appropriate for lunch eon, tea and dinner, io cents. GRAHAM CRACKERS Made of the finest ingredients. Baked to perfection. The national strength food, io cents. Buy biscuit baked by NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Always look for that Name. L__ J THE LAST SHOT By FREDERICK PALMER Copyright. 1014, bj Charles* Scrlbner'n Sons. [Continued] - Once across a road and up three se ries of steps of the other garden ter race, behind a breastwork of sand bags, the company rested. Most of them had fallen asleep on the ground after finishing their rations, logs of men In animal exhaustion. Some of those awake were too weary to give to each other more than a nod and smile. They had witnessed too much horror that day to talk about It. But Stransky foraged. Marta, coming out on the veranda, saw him. "You are tired! You are hungry!" she said with urgent gentleness. "Come In I" He followed her Into the house and dropped on a leather chair before a shining table In a room paneled with oak, wondering at her and at himself. No woman of Marta's world had ever spoken in that way to him. But it was good to sit down. Then a maid with a sad, winsome face and tender eyes brought him wine and bread and cold meat and jam. He gulped down a glassful of wine; he ate with great mouthfuls In the ravenous call of healthy, exhausted tissues, while the maid stood by to cut more bread. "When It comes to eating after fight ing—" He looked up when the first panga of hunger were assuaged. Enormous, broad-shouldered, physical, his cheeks flushed with wine, his eyes opened wide and brilliant with the fire that was in his nature—eyes that spoke the red business of anarchy and war. "Say, but you're pretty!" Springing up, he caught her hand and made to kiss her in the brashness of impulse. Minna struck him a sting lng blow In the face. He received It as a maetiff would receive a bite from a pup, and she stood her ground, her eyes challenging his fearlessly. "So you are like that!" he said thoughtfully. "It was a good one, and you meant It, too." "Decidedly!" she answered. "There's more where that came from!" Then little Clarissa Eileen entered and pressed against her mother's skirte, subjecting Stransky to child hood's scrutiny. He waved a finger at-her and grinned and drew his eyes together in a squint at the bridge of his nose, making a funny face that brought a laugh. "Your child?" Stransky asked Minna. "Yes." 'Where's her father? Away flght lng?" "I don't know where he is!" "Oh!" he mused. "Was that blow for him at the same time as for me?" he pursued thoughtfully. "Yes, for all of your kind." "M-m-m!" came from between hie lips as he rose. "Would you mind hold ing out your hand?" he asked with a gentleness singularly out of keeping with his rough aspect. "Why?" she demanded. "I've never studied any books of eti quette of polite society, and I am a poor sort at making speeches, anyhow. But I want to kiss a good woman's hand by way of apology. I never kiesed one In my life, but I'm getting a lot of new experiences today. Will you?" She held out her hand at arm's length and flushed slightly as he pressed his lips to it. "You certainly do cut thick slices," he said smiling. "And you certainly are pretty," he added, passing out of the door as Jauntily as If he were ready for another fight and just In time to eee the colonel of the rogtment coma around the houee. He stood at the ealute, half proudly, half defiantly, but In nowise humbly. "Well, Major Dellarme!" was the colonel's greeting of the company com mander. "Major?" exclaimed Dellarme. "Yes. Partow has the power. Four of the aviators have iron crosses al ready and promotion, too; and you are a major. Company G got into a mess and the whole regiment would have been In one unless you held on. So I let you stay. It all came out right, as Lanstron planned—right so far. But your losses have been heavy and here you are In tl)e thick of it again. Your company may change places with Company E, which has had a relatively easy time." "No, sir; we would prefer to stay," Dellarme answered quietly. "Good! Then you will take this battalion and I'll transfer Groller to AJvery's. Bad loss, Alveryr—shrapnel. The artillery has been ctoing ugly work, but that is all in favor of the defensive. If we can hold them on this line till tomorrow noon, it's all wo want for the present," he con cluded. "We'll hold them! Don't worry!" put in Btraneky. If a private had apoken to a oolonel In this fashion at drill, without being spoken to, It would have been a glar ing breach of military etiquette. Now that they were at war it was differ ent, Real comradeship between officer and man begins with war. "We shall, eh?" chuckled the colonel. "You look big enough to hold any thing, young man! Here! Isn't thia the fellow that got off?" "Yes, sir," answered Dellarme. "Well, was Lanstron right?" "Yes, sir." "Wonderful man, Lanstron!" "He knows Just a little too much!" Btransky growled. • •«•••• As Fracasse's men rose from their trench for the final charge and found that the enemy had gone, an officer of the brigade staff brought inatrua tions to the colonel. "The batteries are going to emplaci here for your support In the morning You will move as soon as your mei have eaten and occupy positions B-3I !° g-ggj. JMLrtygg jag para?? HXRRISBURG TELEGRAPH front for one battalion, with two bat talions in reserve to drive honje you) p'tack. The chief of etaft himself de ■ires that we take the Galiand houst before noon. The enemy must no! have the encouragement of any suo cesses." "So easy for Westerllng to say," thought the colonel; while aloud h» acknowledged the message with propel spirit. Before the order to move was giver the news of It passed from Up to lij among the men in tired whispers Bince dawn they had liv«*l through the impressions of a whole war, and they had won. With victory they had not thought of the future, only of theii hunger. After the nightmare of th« charge, after hearing death whisper lag for hours intimately In their e&ra, they were too weary and too far thrown out of the adjustments of any l natural habits of thought and feeling to realize the horror of eating theirj dinners in the company of the dead, they were to go through another hell, but many of thsm in their ex haustion w«re chiefly concerned as to whether or not they should get any sleep that night. The satire of war mokes the valet's son a hero; the chance of war kills the manufacturer's sou and lets the day-laborer's son live; the sport ot war gives the latent force* of a Strang sky full play; the glory of war brings Dellarrae quick promotion; the glam our and the spectacular folly of war turn the bolts of the lightnings which man has mastered against man. Per haps the savage who learned that ha could etart a flame by rubbing two dry sticks together may have set fire to the virgin forest and wild grass in order to destroy an enemy—and natu rally with disastrous results to him self if he mistook t!>e direction of the wind. Marta Galland's thoughts at dusk when she returned up the stepe to the house were of the wreckage the hot whirlwind of war left. She was see ing fathers staring and mothers weep ing. Her experience with the wound ed drawing deep on the wells of sym pathy, heightened her loathing of war and of all who planned and ordered it and led its legions. She had been en gaged since dark in completing the work »f moving valuable articles from the front to the rear rooms of the house, which had been begun early in the day by Minna and the coachman. She was at the door of her mother's' room, which was like an antique shop. Old plates lay on top of old tables, with vases on the floor under the tables. Surrounded by her treasures, Mrs. Galland awaited the attack; not as a soldier awaits it, but as that ven erable Roman senator of the story faced the barbarous Gauls—neither disputing the power of their spears nor yleldlpg the self-respect of his own mind and soul. She had lain down in her wrapper for the night, and the light from a single candle—she still favored candles —revealed her features calm and philosophical among the pil lows. Yet the magic of war, reaching deep Into hidden emotions, had her also under Its spell. Her voice was at once more tender and vital. "ilarta, I see that you are all on wires!" "Yes; Jangling wires, every one, jangling every second out of tune," Marta acquiesced. "Marta, my father"—her father had been a premier of the Browns —'"al- ways said that you may enjoy the lux ury of fueslng over little things, for they don't count much one way or an other; but about big things you must never fuss or you will not be worthy of big things. Marta, you oanqot stop a railroad train with your hands. This is not the first war on earth and we are not the first women who ever though!; that war was wrong. Each of us has his work to do and you will have yours. It does no good to tire yourself out and fly to pieces, even if you do know eo much and have been around the world." She smiled as a woman of sixty, who has a secret heart-break that she had never given her husband a son, may smile at a daughter who is both ■on and daughter to her, and her plump hand, all curves like her plump face apd her plump body, spread op&i in appeal. Marta, who, In the breeding of her generation, felt sentiment as more or less of a lure from logic, dropped be side the bed In a sudden buret of sen timent and gathered the plump hand In hers and kissed It "Mother, you are wonderful 1" she •aid. "Mother, yon are great!" [To Be Continued] [Miss Fairfax Answers Queries T>OXT~T,I:T~I > RFT>I: KEEP YOU SILENT DEAR MISS FAIRFAX; About two months ago I met a young man for whom I grew to care very much, and his affection likewise seemed centered on me. Somehow, through a complicated matter, he got a bad impression of me and ceased to call on me. It pains me bitterly to know that his opinion of me is none too high. I should not like to ap proach him in regard to the matter, and still I am very anxious to make up with him. Will you please advise me how I am to convince him of the truth and at the same time keep my dignity? PERPLEXED. Write him a note telling him that you value his friendship aad your own pride too mu h to allow him to remain under a false impression of you. Ex plain the matter that has given him cause to think as he did. And rest content in the knowledge that you owed it to your dignity and set your self right in the eyes of any friend who had come to think badly, of you. \ H Never Questioned 1 ?P Royal Baking Powder is absolutely pure tfp and wholesome. It is madf from highly re- fined, pure, cream of tartar, an ingredient of p§| grapes. Not an atom of unwholesomeness goes into it; not an unwholesome influence comes from it. It perfectly leavens the food, §§g makes it finer in appearance, more delicious §&£ to the taste, more healthful. the perfect baking powder is never questioned. I ROYAL | BAKING POWDER I Absolutely Pure No Alum -M 11 WEDDING BELLS AT MIFFUKBUR9 HOME Miss Helen Elizabeth Ryder Be comes Bride of William Saul Smith Special to The Telegraph Miffllnburg, Pa., Sept. 23.—Last e\-enlng at 8 o'clock a fashionable wedding: was solemnized at the resi dence of Mr. and Mrs. George Edwin Ryder, in East Chestnut street, when their only daughter. Miss Helen Eliza beth, was married to William Saul Smith, of Rochester, N. Y. The home was tastefully and artistically decorat ed with choice flowers, ferns, and oth er decorations. The bride wore a gown of white eharmeuse and Orien tal lace, with a tulle veil adorned with lilies of the valley. She was attend ed by Miss Elizabeth E. Gast, of Mif llinburg, who wore a blue chiffon gown over blue Dresden eharmeuse, with pink trimmings, carrying a large bouquet of roses. The flower girl, little Margaret Sterling, gowned in "Beauty No Longer Regarded as Merely Skin Deep," Says Madame Ise'bell It /< Important in Diagnosing General Health Falling Hair May Indicate Facial Neuralgia, Dandruff and Uric Acid Often Co Together HEALTH AND BEAUTY—Part I. Thn clone relation of health and beauty Is every day being emphasized by soma new thought, some new discovery In the science of medicine. Prof. Jaquet, a cele r.v.? connection ■I -'•'*• between fall- Ing hair and aevere facial or head nerve disturbances. Prof. Jaquet goes on to state that he believes only a small proportion of cases of sudden and premature baldness are due to a parasite. That dandruff or some other form of paraslta was responsible for falling hair hag long been an accepted theory. In support of his theory Prof. Jaquet gives many examples of falling hair following severe neuralgia pains In the head. One example was of a woman Buffering from severe pain in one spot In the head from which the hair rapidly fell. On Investigation It was found that the trouble Ifcy In a diseased tooth and when the tooth was treated and the pain re moved, the hair commenced to grow again from the affected spot. Nervous People Have Thin Hair. Nervous people, that Is people who suf fer from nerve exhaustion, as a rule, have thin, fine hair and are prone to prema ture baldness. Every ' careful dermato logist has noted this fact, but It has gen erally been ascribed to anaemia or thin, lifeless condition of the blnod from which nervous people generally suffer. The hair, fed by the capillaries naturally loses strength when the blood Is exhausted. Th»t diseased nerves may directly cause atrophy of the hair roots Is a new Idea and may explain many cases of bald ness In which the scalp seenos free from bacteria and the general health good. In such a case falling Imlr has more than a superficial Interest to the beauty doc tor; it is a symptom of a grave nerve disturbance and as such has a marked ▼alue In making a diagnosis of the phys ical health. The tendency of medical science to<Jay Is to observe slight symptoms that to the layman would bo regarded as unim portant. The hair, the skin, ths eyea and •ven the condition of the feet all hei-e their Importance In determining a condi tion of 111 health and the presence of •ome serious disease. Presence of Uric Acid. TTrlo add. the parent of rheumatism, ahows Its presence In several ways af fecting the physical beauty. Dentists have found that uric acid Is responsible for a great deal of enamel decay. In flamed eyelids are often traced to the same source end dermatologists hava discovered that a certain kind of blotchl ness of the skin of the face is a frequent complaint of a oatlent suffering from In flammatory rheumatism, ItU.ilat Wlwrti Mll 3 !*«)* tto tiis- SEPTEMBER 23, 1914. white, strewed roses in the bride's pathway. Master Harry Sterling act ed as ring hearer. The groom was attended by H. Russell Smith, Belle fonte. The ushers were Carl Goerdel and Randa'l Stover, of Mifflinburg. Lohengrin's wedding march was played by Miss Myrtle Hursh, of Mif flinburg, and the marriage ceremony was performed the Rev. Dr. K. Otis Spessard, pastor of the Mifflin burg Reformed Church. The bride is one of Mifflinburg's leading and talented young ladies. She is a graduate of the Mifllinburg high school, class of 1012, and a graduate of the Buffalo Normal College Kinder garten. She is also an accomplished musician. The groom, a former resi dent of Little Rock, Ark., is a grad uate of Columbia College, Missouri, and at present manager of the East man Kodak Company, of Rochester, N. Y. Guests were present from Phila delphia, Harrisburg, Williainsport, Milton, New York, Bellefonte, Roches ter, N. Y.i Elkhart, Wis., Chicago, III.; Little Rock, Ark.; Lewisburg, Sun bury, Hartleton, Laurelton and other points. 0n Friday evening last a novelty shower was tendered the bride. The affair was arranged as a surprise by Mrs. Boyd M. Miller. About seventy five of her young friends were pres ent. ory rests on a logical foundation, that uric acid in its endeavor to escape from the system is responsible for a very un pleasant and harmful form of dandruff. A careful watch of patients has shown that many sufferers from uric acid rheu matism are troubled with the moist, greasy, flake form of dandruff which, If neglected, is fatal to the health and well being of the hair. In very bad cases this is yellow In hue, sticks to the hair like fish scales and leaves a red, angry surface when dislodged. Frequent Cause of Dandruff. To reduce uric acid a regime Is neces sary, depending on the individual case and prescribed by the fajnlly physician. For local treatment get rid of the scales, but do this In such a way as not to In jure the dellcato hair roots. Commence by rubbing tho entire scalp gently with sweet oil or vaseline, leaving a little of this on the entire scalp, or over the patches, If the dandruff forma In that way, over night. In the morning give the head a vigorous shampoo with a pure soap and rinse very carefully, using the bath spray and first warm and then cold water. This will Invigorate the scalp and bring a new supply of blood to the sur face. After the hair Is dry you will find that a considerable proportion If not all of the dandruff has disappeared. Don't Let Dandruff Form. The Idea now is not to let the dandruff return. Give the scalp a vigorous dally shampoo, using the tips of the lingers and taking care not to s-ratoh the scalp with the nails, for this massage keep the fingers lubricated with sweet oil or vaseline and. If tlie head feels hot, wet the fingers with cold water. As often as the dandruff gathers repeat the oil treatment, followed by a shampoo. Why Deep Breathing Exercises Are Necessary. A correspondent who from her letter Is evidently a school teacher, writes ask ing If I believe there Is ajiy great benefit from deep breathing. According to her Idea the lungs work automatically, tak ing in the amount of breath required nat urally and without especial effort. Dqpp breathing is not tha panacea It was supposed to be a decade ago when physical culture was a new thought and was. I responsible for a de cided change In women's clothing. With the old styled corset which came up to the chest, compressing the lungs, and the tight-fitting, boned bodice natural, auto matic breathing for women was an im possibility. Today, from the waist .up, a woman Is practically as free In regard to breathing as If she wore no clothing at all. With no restrictions about tha lungs or dlaphram breathing becomes au tomatic; we breath as deeply and as oft en as we need to provide the blood with the necessary oxygen and get rid of the waste gases. R«garde<d an Exerclaa. As * physical exercise deep breathing Is of value, and as a means of waist re duction and cheat expansion to be warmlv recommended. Exercising the trunk and iQWt* rftulFJUtAix MHiniM T-"T" JO> Worthless Dogs Run Buck to Death Near Quincy Waynesboro. Pn., Sept. 23. A splendid eight-pronged buck deer was chased out of the mountains above Quincy yesterday morning by a dog belonging to a resident of that place. The animal was in an exhausted con dition before its pursuer was called off and died in the eosnfield of George Walk, near Fox liili. B. F. Heefner saw tho deer running toward the open country near his home with the dog following. He called off the canine and prevented it from following fur ther. The buck was apparently fagged out, but was so frightened that it con tinued running, although it fell sev eral times. The animal continued its flight for a mile or more until it reached the Walk place, where it dropped dead from exhaustion. Mr. Walk and his son-in-law, Roy Hess, found the carcass. The deer hnd bled from the nose and mouth and had many scratches about its body. PASTOR ACCEPTS CALL Marietta, Pa., Sept. 23.—The Rev. M. Huntzinger, of Camden, N. J., pas tor of the Lutheran Church, that city, who was given a call to the pastorate of the Zion Lutheran Church here, has accepted and will assume his new charge about October 7. He succeeds the Rev. Ira W. Kllek. cess fat and will make the waist lIM lower and smaller. Peep breathing exercises alao act a* a quick stimulant, overcoming fatigue, drnwwlness, or a chill. By driving the blood for the moment out of the lung* Into the capillaries It quickens circula tion. It la also a wonderful steadier to the nerves, partly by equalising the cir culation and largely by changing tha di rection of the mind. Deep breathing also Increases the oxy genatlon of the blood, ridding the body of the poisonous carbonic acid. Like any exercise of the body muscle* It improve* the circulation and aids digestion and elimination. On the whole an excellent case, even under the most conservative estimate, can be made out for deep breathing. It Is an easy exercise, always convenient to fol low, but I believe the best effect* ar« obtained by practicing on arising before an open window and with no restricting clothing at all. New Ideas In Ventilation. To let fresh air Into a room without creating what is termed a draft has been the accepted system In ventilation, but recent Investigations on this subject show that still air Introduced Into a room will not renew the air and that In spite of an open window we may be breathing tha same air over and over again. Automatic baeathlng Is so gently don* that It does net disturb the air, and in evitably, no matter where you are, from one to one-tenth per cent, of the air you breath you have breathed at least one* before. While lying In bed. especially If the bed clothes are about the head, th* proportion of re-breathed air Is very great and this Is true even while sleeping out of doors, If there Is no breeze playing about the face. This fact emphasizes two needs; Im proved ventilation and a certain amount of open air exercise. Exercise In the Open. A room Is not properly ventilated unles* the air Is In motion. The fear of a draft Is largnly an. Inherited one, coming down from ancestors who believed night air unhealthy and that colds come from breathing oold air. Night air. In as much as It may be damp air, Is not as benefl clal ns the air under the sunlight, but It Is much better than the shut-In air of a room, and modern medical science be lieves that colds are contracted by means of a microbe which flourishes 1* Impure damp air and receives It* death blow la cold, pure air. Any violent exerclSe In the open air means deep Inhalation and a certain ex* plosive exhalation which displaces the air Immediately about tho nostrils so that r»- breathlng Is an Impassibility. This sam* good effect Is hpd from walking If deep breathing Is practiced. It Is pot necessary and possibly unwise for the average person to sleep or sit In a draft, b\it night or day two window*, one on each side of the room should b* open, thus effeotlng a change of air. la school rooms or large hall* a system of fans providing for continually moving air Is the means of solving the problem of ventilation and providing the necessary amount of "live" air. ffa 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers