\V7oMen gJnreßfes I . ■ ~ !■ ■ . m ITTI inn-- II —— mm ■ ■■■■ ■ M H ■ ■ —— t—l All Artificial Aid to Beauty Today Considered Quite Legitimate According to Madame Ise'bell ARTIFICIAL AIDS TO BEAUTY. Artificial aids to beauty, borrowed from the stage and which up to a decade ago ■were hardly frankly considered aside from theatrical life, comprise the use of "make up" more or less, Is worn as a glove or veil is worn and in much the same casual and frank fash ion. Must Be Well Chosen. From the aesthetic point of view, how ever, there Is much to be said. The wrong choice of make-up, or even the right make-up wrongly applied, is anything but attractive. The question of lighting has to be considered, for artificial additions to the eyes and complexion that appear quite natural under softly shaded electric lights stand out In glaring relief when worn under the daylight. Make-up must also be considered in re lation to the costume worn, for some col ors take red from the face and others reflect and give warmth to the skin. Above all the skin must be properly pre pared for make-up. Skin Must Be Smooth and Clean. No amount of make-up will cover up a Vough. neglected skin. In fact I am not sure but what it will make it look worse. A rough skin or large pores will hold pow der like flakes; It is even more impossi ble to make rouge look natural on an ill cared for skin and artificial red on rough lips will surely betray Its origin. Powdor end paint, contrary to a widespread opin ion, will not add beauty unless there is some foundation to work on. Get the skin In good condition; If It Is rough, stop the use of sonp for a while and cleanse it with a good cleansing cream. If It Is over dry, leave a massage cream on over night so that the pores may ab sorb It and. If there are large pores, stimulate them with massage movements and very cold face bath or even the oc casional use of an astringent wash. The better condition the skin Is In the more fortunate we shall be In our use of arti ficial aids to beauty. Before make-up is applied be sure that the skin is absolutely clean. If It has been washed with soap and water, go over It with a cold cream or a cleansing cream for the purpose not only of rendering it perfectly clean but of adding a little lubri cation. The first Item to be considered In dis cussing artificial aids to the complexion is face powder. The prejudice against the use of face powder on the score of Its harming tie skin Is 111 founded, and the woman who prides herself on using only a little rice or "ordinary talcum powder" on her face Is harming rather than help ing her complexion by so doing. Moi*. Face Powder* Harmless. Powders Intended to be used on the body after the bath are simply to aid In UNEARTH OLD WELL WHERE SOI KILLED FATHER IN FIFTIES Story of Old Tragedy Brought to Mind; Many Wells Near New Subway The unearthing of an old well near Mulberry street in excavating for the subway brings back the memory of a murder that occurred there some fifty or sixty years ago. The murder happened about the Fall of 1856. Captain Swartz, the truant officer, and John T. Knsminger, two of the ol(J residents of the city, relate the story as follows: Early one Fall morning Conrad Knepley, a local butcher, who lived near Mulberry street, was returning from market and his son was laying In wait for him near this well. When his father passed he followed and shot him. The son was brought before court and tried. The court decided that he was insane and sent him to the asylum where he died. The well was an old one and was about 30 feet deep. It It is Wilbur Cocoa fjplgj that you want g ITF YOU have never tasted ra I Wilbur Cocoa, try it —then jfl you'll never again think that IS any cocoa is a good cocoa. I COCOA The Wilbur way of making M -f r j Wilbur Cocoa dates back over _ j ,1 • - _ _ Txr-1, Wilbur Cocoa saves thirty years. The Wilburs are butter bill., .nd n»k e . I I expert judges of cocoa beans and thi» .piendid cake E experts in supervising the grind- Wiftw <:•«•» Specui c.k. 1 ing and blending which are vital C oco. « to producing a cocoa which has , H t^, p p c ° 0 0 , n d *££? powd " || II the rich, natural, tempting flavor pinch.. it. |1 Hi and aroma. Put the Wilbur Cocoa and |S> ™ v* v [nto bow]i <dd th# |j Try the small package, if you will— . a d"»o7vV.epir«® \\ ij but before long you will have the Ln e ill §1 pound, or larger size, sent to you. bur Cocoa, ludtand HO water; sift the flour, baking [|| Ask the grocer—or write us—for powder and salt into mix- ||S I "Cook's Tour, Through Wilbur- ££ £t« Z -d"dd I B'j: land —abooklet which tellsmany lightly. Line Turks-head S ways to t'.se Wilbur Cocoa—as a withpaper.pourinmlxtur. W j| drink, in cahei, candies, desserts. "oderera'te oveii. 0 " " ° H Ms H. O. Wilbur &. Sons, Inc., Philadelphia, Pa. ff WEDNESDAY EVENING, drying and perfuming the body. The best of them are pure and soothing, but they are not Intended to adhere to the skin or to give It any uniformity of texture or color. There Is nothing harmful In a good face powder; tn fact the basis for a face powder and a body powder are the ume, but the face powder is generally made of the best Imported stock while a less ex pensive item does for the body powder. The expense of manufacturing the higher grades of face powder is considerable, and they must be sifted over and over again until of the proper lightness. The ordinary talcum powder will generally cake on the skin and will leave spota that appear greasy. In short, It Is not Intended for the face, and should not be used in that way. Choose the Rouge That Suits Your Skin. Pace rouge comes In three kinds, a salve, or stick, the basis of which is much like the basis of cold cream, a powder, gen erally in the form of a hard cake, and liquid rouge. The powdered rouge is used for the stage and many women use It for evening, the salve rouge has the ad vantage of being easy to put on and the liquid rouge of lasting longer than the powder or salve and less apt to be affect ed by perspiration. Personal peculiarities must determine which kind Is the best for a person to use. The color should alffo be carefully chosen. A deeper red can be used In the evening than under day light, but this does not always mean that two shades must be provided. If the shade of red is one that tones with the natural complexion, a very little of it can be worked into the skin for the day light and more put on in the evening. For the Eyes and Eyebrows. For the stage the eyes are made up very heavily; the lashes are coated with a heavy black grease paint and a line Is drawn around them with a dark pencil. Often blue Is used about the eyes to throw out the color of the iris. In private life such a method of mate lng-up is uncalled for; In fact the eyes can very well be left alone unless the color of the brows and lashes Is so light as to be out of tone with the hair and complexion. In which case they can be darkened by Mascara, a form of Indian Ink that comes in a hard cake and can be applied with a small, moistened brush. This comes both In brown and black, the former for the use of blondes who do not wish the artificial effect that black gives. Color for the lips Is of a deeper red than that used on the cheeks. It comes both in a liquid form and that of a stick. Often the same can be used for the Hps and the face, diluting or using very little of It In the latter case. Begin the process of make-up by ap plying a little cold cream evenly all over the face and wiping it oft afterwards. If you are using b salve or liquid rouge ap ply It now, beginning with the cheek bone nnd working backwards and upwards. If you get too much on in one place, wipe It off with a piece of soft linen and finish by touching the reddened fingers to the chin and lobes of the ears. The reason for tills is that a woman who has nat ural color In her cheeks will have It also In the rest of her face. Learn Hov to Blend Your Powder. There Is nothing more artificial than red cheeks and the rest of the face a glaring white. Choose the tint of your powder with care and as near as possi was probably dug in the beginning of the nineteenth century and was closed In 1860. When It was unearthed yesterday the well was twenty-three feet deep and had four feet of water in it. The well is thirty yards north of Mulberry street and is one of the many ones in use in the fifties. There were wells at the following places: The Seven Stars Hotel; Second and Walnut streets; in front of the present school board ofllce; Zullinger's, near Fourth and Chestnut streets; between Third and Fourth streets In Walnut; and near the old site of the Fink brewery. These were all closed soon after the water works were installed and the pipes laid over the city. SEW OPTICAL, STOKE The most recent addition to Harris burg's eommercln! enterprises is the optical store of J. S. Belsinger. 206 Lo cust street, opposite the Orpheum Theater. The business will be confined to the sale of high class optical sup piles, the grinding of lenses and filling of prescriptions. It Is the purpose of Mr. Belsinger to maintain a high stan dard of work, and to this end he has had Installed a complete plant, which embodies machinery of the most mod ern type. The interior of the store has been attractively arranged, one portion being set aside for the display of op tical accessories, another for the ad justment of glasses, while the rear is utilized for the machinery that is used in the grinding of lenses and prescrip tion work. FORM ATHI,ETIC BODY The Camp Hill school boys have or ganized an athletic association with these officers: Lester Sutton, president; Clarence Stephenson, vice-president; Wetherall Bell, secretary and treasurer. ble to the natural tone of the skin. No one in daylight, certainly, needs a white powder, although the present fad for artificiality leads women to choose a lighter powder than I personally like. I think most brown-haired people need what Is generally called a brunette pow der and blondes one that Is lighter and a little pinker in tone. Powder can be put on liberally If you have a soft baby's hair brush to take half of It off later. That Is what Is called blending the make-up. Brush It off over the cheeks and pass the brush lightly over the nose and forehead. Take a hand mirror and scrutinize your profile; does the color fade away naturally to wards the ears? Is the neck, particularly the spot below and behind the ears, well covered? Now look at the front face. If there Is any deposit of powder in the hollows at the base of the nose, brush It out and look carefully at the brows and lashes. For these you will probably need a stllf er brush, what Is called an eyebrow brush, or a baby's tooth brush. Moisten tills with water or perfume and brush the eyebrows carefully, so that no trace of powder rests In them and training each hair in place. Do the same to the lashes. If the lashes and brows are to be darkened this is the time to do It. Put a little Mascara on the brush that comes for this purpose and wink on It; In that way enough will be attracted to the lashes to add to their color and thick ness. Touch the brows gently with the same brush, following the direction la which the hairs grow. Leave the Lips for the Last. If color has been added to the rest of the face the lips will certainly look pale by contract, while they should be the brightest spot. For this reason the touch ing up of the mouth can be left to the last. If the mouth Is large, retlden the centers only, blending this away to a pale pink In the corners. If the lower lip is prominent, put more on the upper lip than on the lower. Speak and smile as yoti perform this operation, and don't make the Hps so red that the gums ap pear pale by contrast. One of the small points to observe Is the interior of the nostrils. Actresses al ways redden here and this Is sometimes practical In private life. Anyway, the nostril should not appear black. They should be cleaned daily, or twice a day In large cities, both with a cleansing cream and peroxide of hydrogen. The cream will offset the drying efTect of dust and dirt and the peroxide is a germ killer and will also bleach the hairs that act as a sieve In the Interior of the nose and which are sometimes conspicuous. The argument to this system of make up Is that it takes too much time. It Is quite possible that It will take a quarter of an hour to prepare and treat the face as I have suggested. Remember, how ever, If you are properly made-up you are ready for the day, .or for a good part of It anyway, and will not need constant recourse to powder cloth or stick rougo. Remember, too, that there Is nothing so unpleasant In effect and suggestion as make-up hastily and badly applied; un less It can be properly done It Is better to face the world with a clean face and no attempt at beautifying. Pfyna. SvLztftAh A PRACTICAL APRON A Useful Litt'e Garment that Mothers will Appreciate and Children will EnVy By MAY MANTON 8413 Child's Apron, 4 to 8 years. Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. ! Germans Have Crossed and Recrossed Yser River Seven Times By Associated Press I London, Oct. 28. 1.82 P. M. —The i "bloody massicre," as It Is described I by those on the spot, among the sand | dunes) and the canals of Flanders shows as yet but few signs of slacken ing. The valor of the German attack has been persistently countered by • equal valor from the steady ranks be , fore them. Apparently no quarter is being asked or given In this battle on i the western front, and the land over i which it is being waged resembles a i shambles. ! Seven times altogether the Germans have crossed and recrossed the Yser. 1 Kach time they succeeded in gaining : the left bank they found themselves 'in a death trap commanded by the • guns of the defenders. U. S. Ship Kroonland Seized by British Washington, 1). C\, Oct. 2 B.—The American ship Kroonland, from New ' York bound for Naples and Greece with a cargo of copper, has been de tained at Gibraltar by Brit!-jil authori ties, according to a report 'to the State Department to-day troiu American Consul Spragug. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH I TheßestOvercoat Values YouEverSawl\ | The Best Overcoat Values We Ever Saw!| I Are Right Here at This | I % StoreQutside High I I Rent, High Price District § H MLflNfe Men who do things are men who go through the tt H Mr ■ vv ; world with their eyes open and minds alert. Men of tt ♦t jaraauK // ( j thi s type constitute a large part of our customers. H 'f Ir \ j They are men who find out things and they find 2? ♦♦ ,s'// fM 1-1 llllffllfe " ]/ out that this is the City's foremost store for value-giv- tt 1 **• | zi Jr //. ■ ■iriiffi rA* *| s l <?//• They find out we don t have so many frills, not so ♦♦ 2 ; Jl. much red fire and expense all tucked on to the profits. hmi jp-Mj- But they find out when they want a Suit or Overcoat ♦♦ tt the y set the quality, the style, the snap and comfort ♦♦ il I« j.'.fe' and save $5 besides. ♦♦ « M | That Is Easy to Explain g H l«v' ißcl ta ill 11 i / Our location, our economical running expense, ♦t tt llsffi' ■ i connection with 78 large stores and 45 years' experience tt ♦t ll' 1 ' -» IwllESfc explains it all and tells you why we save our patrons tt %M,kf£dpW tti = l|t< MfhM Mi tiiiwMl ti and can allow credit accommodations without extra ♦♦ H (5 m charge. § 2Z *" The success of this Store is known throughout the tt tt V§¥m* * ' « • , ,2fi country. It is no secret. It is easily explained. tt i llm ' 'li Buy Your Fall Suit & Overcoat & 1 /IP j i! '' ui|f jlll il Buy It Now by Order of Jack Frost, jj i liimii >i! • Disobey His Order-- You Suffer, jf tt laHiii i ||i - IJiißil IdaHl ♦♦ !9lml*ll wmmirnmmm 1 Special Overcoats in Balmacaans, Chesterfields, tt ** 1 * Ir*lHrl Shawl Collars, Convertibles and Mackinaws, made in ♦♦ ♦♦ |?'H* ri >< ''l|f|| Ii s!j iffl. iiMmJ all high grade materials at a great saving in price. tt H balmacaans $<>.75t0524.00 8 tt f m<mf OVERCOATS $4.98 to $45.00 tt H U mgM iffl RAINCOATS $3.75 to $25.00 tt g . B Mif II BplW BOYS'OVERCOATS $1.98 to $15.00 tt g H WjK ffl WiSm BOYS' SUITS $1.98 to $12.00 tt 8 II IftmSi IMS MEN'S SUITS $4.98 to $40.00 tt 1 amm JmmBSBSB. Vour Own Terms S tt u Jmjmg Special Mackinaw Coats at $3.98 tt |f Special Balmacaans at SIO.OO, $12.00 and $15.00 tt ♦ ♦ Tftnflßg"**" Have Your Bill Charged if You Wish H tt ♦♦ —————^ ———— 44 ♦♦ ♦♦ H Home I Gately & Fitzgerald Supply Co. I Family H H Furnishers 29-31-33 &35 South Second Street Clothiers 11 H OUR LOCATION MEANS A GREAT SAVING TO YOU H Canal Waters Bloody After Terrible Fight By Associated Press London, Oct. 28, 3.53 a. m. The correspondent of the Daily Mall in Northern France, telegraphing under d:\te of Sunday night regarding the fighting on the river Yaer says: "There were 2,500 German bodies in the Yser canal this morning after the fighting in the night. Many of them were drowned and others were bayonetted. The very water itself was bloody while Dixmude's streets were strewn thick with the dead. "These ghoulish facts alone give home idea of the savageness of the lighting desperation of the German attacks and the stubbornesa of the allies' resistance. "The fight was a hell from dark to dawn. At almost every point of the line man was opposed by man, some times at a few hundred yards dis tance but more often in close grips. Face to face men even wrestled and died by drowning each other in the canal's waters. The Germans had had orders to get through that night, cost what it might." All Russia Has Gone on the Water Wagon Petrograd, Oct. 28. The interdic tion on alcohol, suddenly making Rus improvement. Formerly one saw many drunken persons in the streets. It was easy to get vodka from the government shops. The thirsty ones purchased the liquor in small sealed bottles resembl ing medicine bottles. These could be emptied in draught. I have been here nearly two months and I have not seen a single intoxicat ed person. Ky government decree the sale of wines and spirits is forbidden and the government has gone out of the liquor business. The reply of the Czar to the Russian Union of Abstin ence that the government will never again engage in the traffic illustrates the new policy. French Losses Reported to Be More Than 40,000 llerlin, Oct. 28, by Wireless to Say vine.—Swiss newspapers report that since the capturp by the Germans of Cafnp des Komalns the French losses in the battle line between Toul and Verdun have been more than 4 0,000 men. The French officers, according to statements in these newspapers, complain of the inferior quality of the new French troops. J. Frost Puts Crimp in Second Crop of Riverside Strawberries Riverside folks could scarcely be lieve their eyes yesterday when they discovered strawberry blossoms in their gardens, but they grew quite chesty about It nevertheless, and told their friends anions the mere city folks that they expected a late Fall crop of strawberries. And then Mr. J. Frost put a crimp in all calculations last night by ladling [ out temperature of the 32 degrees va riety. To-day was cold but not quite so frosty, and to-morrow promises to he warmer. But that stuff about the late strawberries is all off. Candidates on the Republican Ticket Following are the candidates on the Republican ticket to be voted for next Tuesday: . _ United States Senator —Boise Pen rose. (Jovernor —Martin O. BrumbauKh. Dieutenant-Governor —Frank B. Mc- Claln. Secretary of Internal Affairs—Tlenry Houck. Congress-at-I^arge—Thos. 8. Crago, Mahlon M. Garland, Daniel F. Ldifean, John R. K. Scott, i Congress—-Aaron S. Kreider. General Assembly—First District Joshua W. Swartz. Augustus Wildman; Second District—Walter S. Young:. John C. Nlssley. Supreme Organizer to Address Heptasophsj Members of the Improved Order of ! Heptasophs in tills section will meet In j joint wesslon In the Dauphin Conclave. 1 Market street, on Monday night. | November 2. | The supreme organizer of the order, Edwin Sheffield, of Brooklyn, will make an address. T. It. FOH PINCHOT ONLY Thousands of post cards bearing a | message In the handwriting of Theo dore Roosevelt were received by Dau phin county voters to-day. They are | of the same style card that wus used I in 1912 and make a for Pinchot J by name, not mentioning the name of i any other Bull Moose candidate. ... - * -I j CASTORIA! For infant* and Children In Use For Over 30 Years OCTOBER 28, 1914. often HPS In the brassiere. Hundred* of thousands of women KHESESK'' wear the Bien-Jolie Brassiere for the reason that they record I 111 J ff/MB ■' it ns necessary ns a corset. It supports the bust and back HH ■gMUfiH , *9- /MB and gives the figure the youthful outline fashion decrees. /3iIEM 'W are the daintiest, most serviceable |H MMaF £} * W(fjlf US' garments imaginable. Only the f best of materials are used —for In- DQ * Qo«rprj *r c' stance, Walohn'*, a flexible bon- I ■T S» DreAOJltltfio lug of (treat durability—absolutely I ■ S®»W -dr'B rustless— Permitting laundering without removal. I f ,rH They come in all styles, and your local Dry Goods dealer H will show them to you on request. If hedoes not carry them, I ■vc3/ he can easily get them for you by writing to us. Send for ■■ an illustrated booklet showing styles that are in higli favor. JWASHINGTONk THE NATIONAL CAPITAL J Special Lew Rate Excursion SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 1 The Capitol Building; Corcoran Art Gallery; Library of Congress; and New National Mu seum will be open to public on this date. SPECIAL TRAIN LEAVES tTarrlsbul-K 7.05 A.M. I Mount Wolf 7.42 A.M. New Cumberland T. 14 A.M. Bmlnvllle 7.48 AM. Goldsboro A.M. I \ork 8.00 A.M. York Haven '-So A.M. ■ Returning:, leaves Washington 5.45 P.M. $9.50 $9-50 I fiLd Round Trip Outing ™R oun d T r j p ' Tickets on »»lc beKlnnln* October 30. See flyer*. Consult ticket areata. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD Try Telegraph Want Ads. Try Telegraph Want Ads. 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers