Wotvien &£ Each Should Do His Little Part By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX I k There Is a won glseklom quoted In the llpulpit, but has been I j much used of late UNTO THEY WERE A BENT WHE Commit that sentence to memory and understand its full import, and then repeat it many times a day. If you fully comprehend the meaning l of the message you will be careful what words you send out "to accomplish that whereunto they were sent." EVERY WORD YOU UTTER IS A PEBBLE THROWN INTO THE GREAT WATERS OK LIFE, AND IT IS MAKING ITS VI BRATIONS WHICH WILL REACH 1 DISTANT SHORES IN TIME. In these strenuous and troubled days of j world-shaking events it is becoming j the habit of many people to talk of i poverty and failure and trials and j; hardships, as they forecast the future j ; of individuals as well as of countries. ,: Such talk is worse than useless; it I is criminal, because it Is creating fear 11 and destroying confidence and dissi- j : pating energy. The world needs hope, courage and faith at this juncture, and the man I ; ■Wagner^! iHH T N this catsup flavor has been ffigif |||l§ X brought to a point where it can- WM not be surpassed or even fittingly de |||||| When you feel that your appetite E|jp fm-A needs a little coaxing, here's the WzXk Hgj| catsup that will add zest to the meal. |ml After 32 years of public test, it is ||||| scarcely necessary to mention that j|^| lj| " Wagner's " and " Quality " mean ||Sh H|||| the same thing in food products. ||^| Buy at your groccr's. Look for the blue-band label. iff MARTIN WAGNER CO. ■ Baltimore, Md. Absointcly No Pain f* Bk, My latest Improved appll iifSßg&S ances. Including; an oxygen- VST'' 1 ' zod a ' r apjiaratus, makes jSP k extracting and all den- vO , £3" painless and Is per- _^r v f fthfc fecUy harmless. S > _.(7\ | (Ago no objeo- EXAMINATION S /Ju? "S.S FREE /•■O^/ ■»££* ii.™ - 1 A alloy cement 50c. a % Gold Crowns and Registered jT w S Bridge Work, $3, $4, $5. « a %T X 22-K Gold Crown .... 95.00 Graduate At«kt»jit« S/ l m. to Bp. m.; Mton., Wed. Assistants >r A / V" and gat. Till 9p. m.; Sundays. X X lO a, m. to Ip. m. S 3322R_ it EASY TEKMB OF patments falffm Market St r(d WsS§»/ (Over the Hub) Harrisburg, Fa. it i>u»t Burt •nt PASITIHN I When Coming to My Office fie UnU I lull ■ Sure You Are In the Right Plaoe. Try Telegraph Want Ads.Try Telegraph Want Ads. FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH NOVEMBER 6, 1914. who projects these optimistic qualities into the ether by his thoughts and his words will be helped and sustained by the invisible helpers who are oversee ing our planet and assisting it to evolve a higher type of humanity. In the turmoil of life make a little center of peace In your own heart. Sit alone a few moments or an hour every day with only thoughts of peace and love and faith in your mind. Say over these words silently: PEACE. LOVE, FAITH. PROSPER ITY, HEALTH, USEFULNESS, HAP PINESS. When you are riding in public con veyances or walking on the street say these words: after you have read the distressing news of wars, say them. Remember this: IF EVERY HUMAN "BEING ON EARTH SAID THESE WORDS WITH REVERENCE AND LONGED TO HAVE THEM DEMON STRATED IN LIFE ALL WAR WOULD CEASE. Therefore do your little part. Make a small world of your own, and All that world with optimistic thoughts and hopeful and happy and helpful words. If you are not well, if ease has taken a troublesome prefix of "dis," cut off the prefix and think of EASE; recollect that health is your DIVINE RIGHT. The Great Source contains only health and ease and opulence and love and happiness. Send forth your words and assert what is your in heritance. No matter if Pandora's box seems opened anew about you, assert your rightful claim. And your words shall not be void, but shall return to you and accom plish that whereunto they were sent. Ii Tme With tie 'Wild Kordlnd from (be Sells Moving Picture Play of the Same Name Featuring Kathljn William*. By KATHLYN WILLIAMS Illustrated With Photoa From the Picture Fllma. [Continued.] But Bantu- a had never felt so sad before in all his short life Tears welled from his eyes and he walled: "Don't go. Missy Edith —please stay here with me. I'll buy you for a wife with awful lots of cattle —Just like my father bought my mother before I wa3 born." But juat then they heard Mrs. Wayne calling. Edith sprang from Bibl'a back and grabbed Bantu's hand. "Don't forget me, Bantu. And keep Blbl for me." . And then, hand In hand, they ran to the wagon. "All ready! Here we go!" called Doctor Wayne, as Edith was helped Into the wagon. And the doctor turned to say farowell to Wambo. A great number of Kafirs were com ing from their huts now, armed with assegais and shields. "Where are those men going, equlpi>ed as for war?" Wayne asked Wambo. "With you, Bwana (white chief), to guard you." "11l have no escort, Wambo," Wayne ■aid decisively. "An armed guard comprised of your people would only Invite attack by Amazu, should we meet him on the trail. On the other hand, I carry the cross, Wambo. It Is a better safeguard for me and mine than a hundred of your warriors." He passed up to Mrs. Wayne In the wagon a rude cross made of two boughs from a rubber tree. Then ho called to Hart: "All right. Pull out!" The wagon rolled out of the village, creaking as it careened over tha rough ground, with Mrs. Wayne wav ing good-byes to the Kafirs, while Edith shouted a last shrill farewell to Bantu. Doctor Wayne and Uncle Steve followed the wagon on their horses. The warriors started also to follow" the wagon. But Wambo stopped them With a gesture. "The white medicine man wishes no escort to the river," the chief told his men. "He carries the cross, thinking It will protect him. He forgets that Amazu closed his ears to the teachings of the Good Book. And Amazu is still a heathffn." In his hut Wambo said to Swazl, his wife: "Where is Bantu, our son?" "Yes, where Is Bantu?" Swazl re plied, In sudden wonderment. They went out and peered up and down the village street. Bat nowhere was Bantu to be seen. "Bantu! Oh, Bantu!" Swazl called. "Bantu! where art thou?" thundered the chief. But there came no answer—no j Bantu. CHAPTER V. A Deep, Dark Plot. Bantu had stolen out of the village and into the jungle while bis father was addressing the warriors. Bantu feared to let the warriors see his tears. So he had crept away to weep unobserved. In a paroxysm of grief he threw himself on the ground in the forest glade, and he wept bitter tears over the going away of the little white girl with whom he had played day after day for three long years. But now, suddenly springing up, Bantu wiped away h!s tears and made a great resolve. Ho would follow the wagon of the white medicine man and have just one more playtime with Edith. So Bantu sped on down the trail, fol lowing the wagon tracks till ho felt as if his woolly hair was straighten ing on his head and standing on end. Fear paralyzed him. His legs felt wobbly. Yonder, through the forest depths, he beheld a long, thin line of Zulu-Kaflr warriors, moving across the trail in sinister silence. And Bantu knew by their dress that these men were on the war path. Worse than that, he perceived that the line moved not toward the kraal of Wambo, his father, but over the short cut through the forest to meet the wagon trail where It passed through a little valley amid the outlying hills. Yes, these warriors wero advancing to intercept the wagon carrying Bantu's beloved playmate. The lad turned and sped like a deer back toward his own village. He would car'-" "• • *-'S«r and SICK CHILDREN LOVE CMEIS FOR THE BOWELS Give "Candy Cathartic" for a bad cold, sour stomach, constipation. Get a 10-cent box now. Most of the Ills of childhood are caused by a sour, disordered stomach, sluggish liver and constipated bowels. They catch cold easily, become cross, listless, irritable, feverish, restless, tongue coated, don't eat or sleep well and need a gentle cleansing of the bowels—but don't try to force a nau seating dose of oil into the little one's already sick stomach —it is cruel, needless and old-fashioned. Any child will gladly take Cascareta Candy Cathartic which gently—never gripe or produce the slightest uneasl- j ness—though cleanse the little one's system, sweeten the stomach and put the liver and bowels in a pure, healthy condition. Full directions for children and grown-ups in each pilckage. Mothers can rest easy after giving this gentle, thorough laxative which costs only 10 cents a box