\£?p(Y)er) Doing Something Useful By DOROTHY DIX This Is a time of peculiar upheaval In the feminine world. l T p to now the American girl has expected to stay at homo until ahe waa married and then co to a home of her own. And she could fairly safely count on getting married. In the last few years, however, tlila comfortable program of life has been altered. The high coat of living has made It Impossible for the man In or dlnary circumstances to support a fam >Jkll'y of girls In comfort. The girls them |AlV«B have heard so much about the parasitic woman that they have become ashamed of hanking like a millstone around a poor old father's neck. Also the chances of catching a husband are greatly diminished, and young women of presentable appearance are no lon ger certain, as they formerly were, of getting married. All of these conditions have turned the thoughts of girls toward self sup port. This is well. There Is no more reason why an Intelligent and able bodied young woman should be de fiendent on somebody else for her llv ug than there Is why a man should be. It develop's a woman s brain and brawn and character to do some regular work, whereby she earns honest money and acquires the strength to stand on her own feet instead of flopping, like a limp dish rag, on some stronger indi vidual. But It takes a long time to rid our selves of the superstitions of the past, and one of the most persistent of these hoodoos Is that when a woman works she must always do some lady-like kind of work—that is. something ar tistic or literary and that Is genteel— just as It was considered in the past more refined and elegant for a woman to do embroidery than It was to do plain useful sewing. For this reason at least 90 per cent, of the girls who want to work want to go on the stage, or to recite, or do parlor entertaining, or write, or paint. Also they want to do these things in n dilettante manner and receive large rewards for their labor. They over look the fact that to succeed in the fine arts as well as in common occu pations you have to slave like a dray horse, and that there are absolutely no short cuts or quick roads to suc cess. Behind i«ver>- star on the stage and every well known writer there lies an apprenticeship that has been served In toll and sweat and blood. Work la the Key-atone ' Now, of course, if a girl has the divine Are and lias given unmistakable signs of a genius for acting or paint ing, or writing, she does well to choose the calling to which her talent dedi cates herfl. But there is no such thing as a girl making herself into a Maude Adams because she would like to be on the stage, or Into an Kllen Glasgow because she would be pleased to see her name in print. Nature settled that question for her once and for all before she was born, and all the work of the CI c ?foe4dGg c?a 6 }&7n&n Those of Middle Age Especially. When you have found no remedy for the horrors that oppress you during change of life, when through the long Q tiours of the day it seems as though your back would break, when your head aches constantly, you are nervous, de pressed and suffer from those dreadful bearing down pains, don't forget that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the safest and surest remedy, and has carried hundreds of women safely through this critical period. Read what these three women say: From Mrs. Hornung, Buffalo, N. Y. BUFFALO, N. Y.— "l am writing to let you know how much your medicine has done for me. I failed terribly during the last winter and summer and every one remarked about'my appearance. I suf fered from a female trouble and always had pains in my back, no appetite and at times was very weak. "I was visiting at a friend's house one dav and she thought I needed Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. ' I took it and have gained eight pounds, have a good appetite and am feeling better every day Everybody is asking me what I am doing and I recommend Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. You may publish this letter it you wish and I hope others who have the same complaint will see it anc* get health from your medicine as I did."—Mrs. A. HOKNUNG, 91 fctanton St., Buffalo, N. Y. Was A Blessing To This Woman. So- RICHMOND, VA.—" I was troubled with a bearing down pain and a female weakness and could not stand long on my feet. O? all the medicines I took nothing helped me like Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. I am now regular and am getting along fine. I cannot praise the Compound too much. It has been a blessing to me and 'I hope it will be to other women." —Mrs. D. Tvleh. 23 West Clopton St- South Richmond, Va. i Pains in Side, Could Hardly Stand. LODI, Wis.—" I was in a bad condition, suffering from a female trounle, and I had such pains in my sides I could hardly move Be for i had taken tho who'o of one bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound I kit better, and now I am well and can do a good day's work. I tell everybody what your medicine has done for me." ■—Airs. JOHN THOMPSON, Lodi, Wisconsin. For SO Teari Lydia E. Plakham'i Vegetable Compound has been th« standard remotly for fe- \\ male ills. No one sick with woman's ailments W[ w JNih A doQ§ justice to herself if she does not try this fa- 1 Ws* inous medicine made from roots and herbs, it 11 ]T \ 7/ haft restored so many suffering-women to health. II J V I K Write to LYD*A E.PIN'KHAM MEDICINE CO. \<\V //>) (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, M ASS., for adrice. ttwr will be opened, read and answered b) « woman and held in strict confidence. "S SPENT THOUSANDS ON STOMACH; FIRST DOSE BRINGS HIM RELIEF Pennsylvania Man Gets Quick R«'in eflj For His Long Suffering Stomach L Henry F. Curry of the Hotel Bart- at Cambridge Springs. Pa., suf fered most desperately from ailments of the stomach and digestive tract for years. He spent a fortune in the pur suit of health. At last he happened to discover Mayr's Wonderful Stomacn Remedy. He found happy relief quickly. Mr. Curry wrote: "I have spent thousands of dollars for doctors and medicine and hardly got temporary relief, and before I took your medicine I was about discour aged. But after taking your medicine I grot great relief. My mental and physical suffering had been so bad that X had to resort »o morphine, and even with that I did not get much relief. Your remedy helped me won derfully. 1 have a good appetite, sleep wall, and think I have gained weight." "TUESDAY EVENING* world will never take the place of talent. . , It's as foolish for an unglfted girl to think that she can make herself a writer or an actress as it would be for a short, stubby woman to think she could make herself Into a tall, wil lowy Koddess. It simply can't be done. It Is my unhappy lot In life to see hundreds of these would-be artist and actor and writer girls who come to the city seeking their fortunes and who And no market for their poor wares, and are stranded in its hard streets. There's hardly a week in the year that half a doaen of these forlorn creatures are not knocking at my door, begging me to help them launch some sort of concert or entertainment or benefit to help them out. and In which good na tured patronesses hold up their friends and make them buy tickets. Now these girls have plenty of Intel ligence. They could make good liv ings if they would only come down oft their high horse.-, and plough a little, and do something practical, give some useful service that the world needs. You don't see every man trying to be an actor, or writer, or doctor, or lawyer. If- you did you would see among men as wholesale starvation and failure as you do among women. Men realize that they have got to be grocers and butchers, makers and candlestick makers, and that while we can do with out the fine arts on a pinch we have got to have the common necessities, and that the purveyors of them are the ones that make the money. Chooae Something Useful So I entreat the young women who are contemplating going to work to support themselves to choose something useful to do. something practical to do. Do the work that lie? closest to you so well that somebody will not only be willing but anxious to pay you for doing it. There's never any dearth of a market for a super-excellent quality of goods, ar.d this applies to labor more than to anything else. The world is flooded with amateurs, but there are never enough experts in any line to go around. Many a srirl who f.iile as an actress could make a fortune raising chickens if she put half as much study on the temperament of a hen as she does on the psychology of Lady Macbeth. Many a girl who paints dauby pictures that she can't sell for {2 apiece, would have women breaking their necks to pay her 575 for hats. Many a girl who is starv ing along trying to write pot boilers could be riding In her own automobile If she had worked as hard at the art of keeping boarders as she does at tryine to learn how to write. Do something practical and useful, Kirls. The world has always got to be fed and clothed, and washed and clean ed, and have its sox darned, and its bills kept, and as long as you minister to the world's comfort you can always Ret paid for it. Don't be misled by the glamour about any kind of work. The only fancy brand of work is the dollar mark. And the way to get that is to do something that people really need. Stories of health restored like that come from thousands of happy users in all parts of the nation. This remedy is known everywhere. The first dose will convince—no long treatment. Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy clears the digestive tract of mucoid accretions and poisonous matter. It brings swift relief to sufferers from ailments of the stomach, liver and bowels. Many declare It has saved them from dangerous operations; many are sure it has saved their lives. We want all people who have chronic stomach trouble or constipa tion, no matter of how long standing, to try one dose of Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy—one dose will con vince you. This is the medicine so many of our people have been taking with surprising results. The most thorough system cleanser ever sold. Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy is now sold here by Gorgas' Drug store, and druggists everywhere.—Advertise ment. i In Tunc With the Wild Norfllwd from the Sells Moving Picture Play of the Sane Name Featuring Kathlyn Williams. By KATHLYN WILLIAMS Illustrated With Photoa From the Picture Film*. [Oontiuued.] "How Bplchu ~ be, Edith Perhaps ha may us some tiding* that may clear the mystery of —of th« last resting place of your father." CHAPTER X. Ifi Tune With the Wild. Just within the entrance to the Caves of the Hundred Liens, where water from out the rock wall trickled down and formed a natural sunken bath, a man of masßlro frame, with a tawny beard and hair like a mane, clad only in a lion's skin, was eating his breakfast—wild honey, wild cherries and other Jungle fruit. His features were those of a white man, but the color of his skin was as dark as that of some of the Kafirs who saw him frequently in the Jungle and who always left him unmolested. For the black men held in awe this wild looking man with the hypnot.o eyqs who consorted with wild beasts aa with human companions. The bronzed hue of fcls skin was the result of 15 years cf eipoeure to th® rays of the sun that pierced the Jun gle fastness. For 15 years he had In habited tho Caves of the Hundred Lions, with all Mntla of wild beasts for hie friends. If thr-re was that in his manner and looks that Buggooted madness, it sure ly was madncs3 most mild. For with benign mien he talked to his four-foot ed companions as one who loved all living things. Hie companions now, as he ate his breakfast, were four leopards, two monkeys and two parrots. To these he talked as to human table compan ions. "Matthew," he said, addressing one of the leopards, "thou dost lie there for all the world like a sick child. Here, Matthew, is weed like unto cat nip—a morsel of medicinal herb which I brought thee from the brook that Is half a day's walk from this spot. Eat of it, Matthew. It will cure thee, thou poor, sick cat!" Dr. Robert Wayne thrust the weed into the leopard's mouth. Yes, this was Dr. Robert Wayne— though he knew not his name nor any thing about himself prior to the day when he had awakened from a long sleep to find himself in this very oave. Having administered to Matthew, Doctor Wayne now turned his atten tion to the other leopards. "Mark; Luke! John!" he cried. "Thou art three laasv ones this morn ing. Thou art late in securing thy breakfast. Away with thee! • Qo forth and seek that which thy palatea crave." He seized Ma;*k by the neck and tall and threw him out of the cave. Like children who feared similar treat ment, Luke and John followed Mark of their own accord. "And as for thee, Ruth, and thee, Naomi," Wayne continued, speaking to the parrots, "see, here are worms." He placed little writhing things on the cross where the parrots perched. The cross! It was made rudely of two tree boughs. It was the symbol In the wilderness of this man's former calling and of the gospel that he had sought to teach to the Kafirs. He knelt by the cross now and prayed. CHAPTER XI. The Apparition In the WlldemeM. Doctor Wayne now sauntered out of the Caves of the Hundred Lions. Out side, Just by the entrance, stood a huge elephant "Toddles, faithful Toddles!" cried the man in tune with the wild. "Ever art thou on guard, as if thou didst in deed love me. Thou seemest to know that the blaok men of the forest fear thee and thy kind, and will not ap proach so long as thou stnndest semi* rel at my mansion door. Qood old Toddles!" Then came two towering creatures with heads far skyward, that lowered their heads to be caressed by theli human friend la the lion's skin. Two giraffes! On through the jungle, then, the "wild man" strolled—for "wild man" the natives called him. He marched without weapon and without fear. Tet he knew that in many a thicket a* he passed, and In the branches of many a tree, lurked four-footed beasts of prey—lion, leopard, cheetah —watching him with gleaming eyes and perhaps covetous teeth and yearning claws. Yet not one of these beasts so much as growled at the passerby. But now as Wayne approached a great thicket of thorj bushes he heard a low growl. The bushes had been trampled down by the passing, evi dently, of a herd cf elephants. Thorns dotted the trampled place like so many little upstanding bayonets or spikes, each particular thorn being as sharp as a needle, as hard as steel and sev eral Inches long. The growl that came from beyond this trampled thorn thicket was not, however, a growl of animal anger. It was rather a groan of pain. Through the thicket the "wild man" tore his way, at the risk of stepping on one of the upstanding thorns. He emerged into a small clearing and espied a lion limping in distress from a wound in one forefoot. "Why, 'tis my kingly friend, Solo mon!" ejaculated Wayne. "Stop, Solo mon! Wait, I will tend thee!" The lion stopped and waited for the man to approach. "Dcfrn, Solomon, down!" Wayne commanded. "I will examine thy wound and alleviate thy pain." The lion crouched. Wayne knelt be side it and lifted the wounded paw for inspection. The very touch of the man's hand, gentle though it was. HARRJSBURG TELEGRAPH seemed to give the ilau rasrc-me paiu It moaned and withdrew the paw Again the man lifted the beast's fore foot. And again the beast pulled away the paw, this time with a growl. "Ah, Solomon!" the wild man said, "so thou dost scold! Thou art a coward. Where is thy kingly pride" He now looked the lion pointblank in the eyes and again lifted the wounded paw. "A thorn!" he muttered. "A thorn probably many Inches in length— sharp as the point of Kaflr assegai— hard as a spearhead. And Imbedded in thy claw, Solomon, up to the hilt. No wonder thou art suffeVing! My poor Solomon! Walt! With the extrac tion of this thorn thy pain will vanish. So — BO!" He got hold of the thorn with his fingers, and he pulled. Rut be found the thorn so deeply impaled in the flesh of the paw that not even his strong fingers could draw it out "But despair not, noble Solomon!" Wayne murmured. "Feeble my fin gers may be, but strong are my teeth and more fitting, too, for the task." He applied his teeth to the thorn, took a good hold —and pulled. Four Inches or thorn came forth from the lion's paw. The beast actu ally heaved a sigh of relief. With the m Lifted the Wounded Paw. removal of that hard, sharp wooden eplke pain Immediately vanished. As Jf in token of its gratitude, the lion licked the hand of the man whose doc toring had made the beast able again to compete physically with other beasts of the Jungle. "Farewell, Solomon!" called the wild man, as the lioa bounded away. "Give my love to Sheba, who 1 know is even now awaiting your homecom ing at your lair." Again onward through the Jungle Btrode the man who knew no fear — till suddenly he halted, gazing ahead spellbound at the apparition that con fronted him. The apparition was a man of a race which Wayne could not remember hav ing ever seen before—a Caucasian. The white man, who stood not 50 feet from Doctor Wayne, had a ilfle. He was aiming the gun at an object. Wayne looked to see at what the white man was so carefully aiming that deadly weapon. He saw a leopard crouched on a fallen tree, watching evidently for a bird of which to make a dainty meal. This crouching leopard was none other than one of Doctor Wayne's own house guests, Mark. "Don't!" shouted Wayne, his voice rending the Jungle silence like a clap of thunder. "Don't!" he repeated. For the first time the white man himself beheld an apparition—seem ing a wild man, whom he instantly recognized, however, as of the white race, yet one become bo strangely wild that he seemed like a prehistoric cave man come to life in the forest primeval. "Art thou so afraid of yonder beast that thou wouldat kill it?" Wayne paid, advancing toward the stranger.* "I will show thee that yonder beast 1b Dot to be feared. Behold, man of fear, how the beast of the forest will yield itself to man when man has proved to be a friend!" Wayno went to the leopard, lifted It bodll) over bis head, wound the lithe and elastic form around his neck and shoulders like a mighty collar. Thus with Mark, the leopard, wrapped around him, tho wild man vanished into the thick of the Jungle. "Well, I'll be dimmed!" exclaimed Capt Duncan Jones of Troop F, the crack cavalry organization of the state of CaV/rrV; [To Be Continued.] How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward (or any ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY * CO., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, Hare known P. I. Cheney (or the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable In all bualneaa transactions end financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. NAT. BANK 07 COMMERCE, Toledo Ohio. Han's Catarrh Cure la taken Internally. lettn* Itrectly upon tb blood and mucoua surfaces or he system. Te-.lmonlala sent free. Pries n •enta per bottle. Sold by all Drugglats. Take Hall's Family Fills tor constlDetloa. UNDERTAKERS RUDOLPH K. SPICER Funeral Director and Embalmer SIS Walnut St. Bell Phoaa i4re You P Read! Pure food authorities ot hignest degree testify to the merits of oleomargarine. The following quotations are typical: ' "V "Perfectly pure, wholesome and "Essentially identical with best palatable."—Prof. J. W. L. Arnold, fresh butter and superior to much of professor of Physiology, University the butter made from cream alone."— of New York. Prof. Henry Morton, Stephens Insti Walaat xtreet to IIOOM 20 teeth I*ll 1 * 11 I nppp x a F x filMnm SI.OO fttEili X »\\l X FlUlo(sb atlrer X X alloy cement 60c. X »\\T ~X Gold Crowna and Registered >r X Bridge Work, 93, $4, >5. X » *X.T X t2-K Gold Crown ....95.00 Graduate X X Office open dolly S.BU a. X V' X nv to •p. m.j Moa, Wed. A HnJttinta y X and Sat. Till op. m.; Bnad*n X 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. 800 Phono 3392R S £ • EABT~TEKMB OF~ X/VV X PAYMKNTS IMMII X«0 Market Street 1 (Oree the Hub) Harriaburg, Pa, n nua*t Hart ant PAIITinW I When Coming to My Office Be i uHU I lUll ■ Sure You Are In the Right Plaoe. | Dodge Coal Trouble This Year i C Don't start off the first thing this Fall with a repetition of your , m coal troubles of former Keep your peace of mind and Insure C body comfort by using judgment 1 your coal buying. Montgomery ] c >al costs no more than Inferior grades, and insures maximum heat, J even consumption, and lower coal bills. Dust and dirt la removed b«- 1 # fore you get your coal from ? J. B. MONTGOMERY Phones Third and Chestnut StreeU 1 Special Notice Do not delay placing your order for CALEN DARS. Big Selection. Orders promptly filled. Call at our office, or phone Bell 1577 R. MYERS MANUFACTURING CO. SECOND FLOOR, 3RD & CUMBERLAND STS. VETERAN FALLS DEAD Sunbury, Pa., Nov. 10.—William Elmes, 72 years old, who was twice wounded during the Civil War, died suddenly at Berwick. He complained of pains in his head, arose to go to a couch, and fell to the floor, lifeless.