Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, November 06, 1914, Page 13, Image 13

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    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 <it any drug
store.—Advertisement.
get him to send ilujy warriors to the
aid of the white medlclno man, and to
protect Edith.
As he ran, however, Bantu confront
ed a new danger. He stopped not a
minute too soon to escape observation
by two black men wfco were coming
toward him. One of these men, judg
ing by the gossip which Bantu had
heard in the kraal, the boy knew must
be none other than Amazu, the chief
who would not permit Edith's father to
eome among his men and teach them
not to steal and murdor. The second
black man, judging by his hideous
painted face and the teeth of many
animals which he woro around his
neck, vras Amaru's witch doctor.
Looking for a hiding place, Bantu
beheld, as If divinely placed, a slit ID
a hollow tree. He ran to it. The slit
was wide enough for the boy to slip
through to the insldo of the tree.
No sooner was Bantu safely en
sconced in this providential retreat
than the two blacks reached the tree,
halted and proceeded to hold council.
Bantu heard the deep base voice of the
powerfully built chief, Amazu, say
ing:
"The white witch doctor carries a
cross and a gun. Tho cross can do
no harm. But the gun is lightning!"
"And the white witch doctor Is a
sure shot," Bantu heard the black
witch doctor say. "So when the white
man camps today, Amazu, you must
go to the missionary and be very
friendly and very like a Christian say
ing prayers. You must pray the mis
sionary to follow you to heal a man
of sleeping sickness."
Amazu end his witch doctor now
strode silently away. Bantu under
stood that Amazu was going straight
to the wagon carrying his beloved
playmate and that the chief meant to
trick Edith's father into leaving his
family to be massacred by the war
riors. So Bantu knew there was no
time now to run to hla own village and
get the help of his father's warriors.
He, Bantu himself, must be a little
warrior. He must speed over the
short cut through the jungle till he hit
the wagon trail in the valley. Would
he reach the whites before Amazu?
That was what troubled little black
Bantu now as he raced through the
forest.
CHAPTER VI.
"Oh, the Pity of It!"
Through the jungle end down Into
the valley Bantu ran. At last, panting
from a race lasting an hour or more,
ha sighted the wagon standing in a
clearing a little way off the trail. There
was smoke from a fire. They were
cooking the noonday meal.
Edith was-the first to see the black
boy, and she shouted with delight:
"Bantu!" ,
The boy's eyes searched the camp
(anxiously. "Missy Edith!" he cried,
"where is your father?"
"Why Bantu, what are you doing
here?" Mrs. Wayne asked, as she
joined the children.
"Where is your father, Missy Edith?"
Bantu Insisted.
"Gone!" Edith answered. "But he
will come right back "
"Gone!" gasped Bantu. "Then he
went away with Chief Amazu?"
"Yes, Bantu. Look!" Edith proudly
held up a necklace of shells for Bantu
to inspect. He recognized the shells
as cowry. They had monetary value,
and were used, in some respects, as
currency in the jungle.
"Amazu, when ho was here a few
minutes ago, gave me this necklace,"
Edith now explained. "And, Bantu.
I'm now going to give it to you. You
will wear it, and every day while I am
gone it will remind you of me."
"Bantu!" Mrs. Wayne now said,
"why do you look so frightened? Tell
me, is anything wrong? Amazu came
here a little while ago and told us
that a member of his band was down
with the sleeping sickness —perhaps
dying. He asked my husband to get
his medicines and go with him to treat
the poor sick man."
"I'm too late," Bantu said, looking
In alarm toward tho forest.
"What do you mean, Bantu?" Mrs.
Wayne asked, in growing uneasiness.
"Amazu's men are going to attack
you," Bantu said. "Amazu knows the
white medicine man is a fine shot and
took him away so he couldn't shoot so
many Kafirs when they come to fight
you."
Mrs. Wayne called to Uncle Steve
and Hart, who were busy at the camp
fire. "Come here, quick! Listen to
Bantu!"
Uncle Steve and Ilart ran up. Bantu
told them of seeing the long line of
warriors and what he had heard Ama
zu and the medicine man say at the
hollow tree.
"By heavens!" exclaimed Uncle
Steve. Amazu's story of a sick man
was only a ruse to lure Robert away
from this camp. They've got him
alone now—at their mercy."
"Listen!" cried Itantu, looking to
ward the jungle. He was quicker than
the white men to catch an unusual
sound. "They are coming!" Bantu
warned, in an awed voice.
In confirmation of the warning a
shot pierced the stillness and one of
the horses fell dead in Its tracks. More
shots followed. The remaining three
horses bolted and disappeared in the
jungle.
"Quick! We must defend ourselves!"
shouted Uncle Steve. He hustled Mrs.
Wayne and Edith and Bantu into the
wagon. Then he and Hart piled rolls
of tent canvas one upon the other on
top of provision boxes, thus forming a
barricade. Behind this improvised for
tification the two men took their places
with guns ready.
[To Be Continued.]
20th Century Shoe Co.
MARKET SQUARE
"Shoes That Wear"
We fear no contradiction when we say, that we are giv
ing the greatest values in shoes that SHOEDOM produces.
Children's "Shoes
-50 c, 75c, 98c, $1.25, $1.50, $1.75
and $1.98
Women's and Men's Shoes
$1.98, $2.48, $2.98 and $3.48
Because we buy for Cash, for eight (8) large stores, from
Manufacturers and Jobbers producing the best values at the
best possible prices.
Our purchasing power and experience are yours to profit
ky-
Test Our Statement Saturday
A FASHIONABLE BLOUSE
WITHVEST EFFECT
Dainty Materials, Finely Tucked, Ara
Liked for Autumn Blouses.
I
By MAY MAN TON
8420 Tucked Blouse, 34 to 42 bust.
By far the smartest blouses are made In
simple styles. This one depends upon the
fine tucks and the contrasting materials
for its effect. The sleeves, which are dis
tinctly novel, are extended to form the
shoulder portions, and the tucks pretty
and becoming fullness. In the illustra
tion, chiffon is combined with _ silk
poplin, which latter material is a
favorite one for vestees, collars and
cuffs, taking the. place to a great
extent of the piqu£ that has been used
with washable materials. For a simpler
blouse a similar effect could be obtained
by using handkerchief linen with piqu6
or with linen embroidered in dots. What
ever the season, there is sure to be a.
demand for odd olouses. This model is
equally well adapted to the everyday
blouse of washable material and to the
fancy one of soft taffeta, crfpe de chine and
the like. Whether it shall be made with
three-quarters or long sleeves must de
pend entirely on individual preference.
In the picture, the front edges meet and
the closing is effected by means of links
that are passed through button-holes on
each side of the vest.
For the medium size will be needed
yards of material 27 inches wide, 3
yards 36, or 2 yards 44, with yd. 27
for collar, vestee and cuffs.
The May Manton pattern No. 8420 is
cut in sizes from 34 to 42 inches bust
measure. It will be mailed to any ad
dress by the Fashion Department of this
paper, on receipt of ten cunts.
Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns.
YOUR DOIJLAK
is worth what you make it worth.
The easiest way of making your dollar
bring you a premium is to read and
profit through the Telegraph Want
Ads.
Supper to Missionary
Society of Pine St. Church
All services will be conducted as
usual at Pine Street Presbyterian
Church to-morrow. In the morning
the topic of the sermon will be "A
Message to Moralists" (Romans, 8:3),
and in the evening "A Study of Mo
tives" (II Kings, 7:9). At the evening
service Mr. Sutton will sing "My Task"
and "Through Love to Light," by Ash
ford. On Monday at 4 o'clock in the ;
afternoon the Woman's Home and
Foreign Missionary Society will meet
in the social rooms of the church. At
5.30 Mrs. Henry McCftrmlck will serve
supper to all the members. At 7.30
Miss Blanche Bonine, of the Presby
terian missionaries In Mexico, will
speak concerning her work there.
GOOD MXLK SOLI) HERE
Of the fifty-five samples of milk and j
Ice cream taken by the city basteri
ologist and chemist under the super- i
vision of the bureau of health and ,
ig* gHi ffift What Borrowers Pay
; estate sometimes pay unreasonable
ilf Prospective borrowers will find our
! ' M'/7/-'j charges fixed and reasonable, and
dealing with us prompt and pleas
-Ist NATIONAL BANK
c " 224 Market Street
TRe HupmoMc
Cor- OF" THm
... mm A Comfortable Winter Car—
jigWßjy||B3Bß The 1915 Hupmobile nuts a new aspect
on all-the-year use of a motor car/
UT U ' IW^ I^BH| 3 according to E. C. Ensminger, local
Hupmobile representative.
d* 1 TiCE " A greater proportion of Hup ownera
*P A •}*)<} always have driven their cars In
winter, as compared with owners of
Touri.JVar WltYSan Top; others " says Mr " Ensminger.
"iS-F.'o. B^PcfroU 01 *' "Tills winter this proportion will be
Increased.
"With its splendid starting system and
equally splendid carburetlon the
new Hup will be equal to the sever
((JF'/kim/iSr\) 081 C ° ld '
V( )/ "furthermore, the detachable Hup-
J/ mobile sedan ind coupe tops, are
going to change people's mlnda
about winter driving.
"7he new top confers all the advan*
tages of the permanent closed car,
without the hl~h extra cost.
LNSMINGER "Buyers quickly realize that, and wa
MOTOR COMPANY attribute the big fall demand largely
to these moderate priced, detachable
Cor. 3r<l and Cumberland Sts. . .. . , ' '
lIAItHISBUHG, PA. f tops that make the Hupmobile a
Bell Phone 931J ' ' I two in one car."
sanitation during October, only five
tests show the presence of more than
a million bacteria per cubic centime
ter. Some of them show as low as
3,000 and one contained only 2,500.
Twenty-eight were entirely free of
colon; one had 44,000, three more
than 10,000, and twelve less than 10,-
000. The percentages of fat ranged
from 3.1 to 6.8.
JOE READY GOES TO STOXEPILE
Joe Ready yesterday afternoon was
sent to the stoneplle at the Alms
house. Instructions were given the
county authorities by Mayor John K.
Royal to see that Ready did not get
away until his thirty days had expired.
He faced a charge of vagrancy.
DIED HEADING NEWSPAPER
Special to The Telegraph
Florinel, Pa., Nov. 6.—Frank B.
Moore died suddenly to-day from heart
disease, after eating dinner and while
reading a newspaper, and only a week
ago "hit the sawdust trail," and was
to lii.ve been baptized to-day by the
Rev. Norman Lower. He was a re
tired grocer. ■ His widow, a brother,
and two sisters survive.
13