3ft2b<yien T^lnreßesT^ When a Man's In Love By Beatrice Fairfax. A great many girls have asked me the question, at once the most im portant and the most difficult to answer that confronts a woman, and that is: how can a girl tell whether a man is in love with her or not? You can't always tell, daughter, be cause men are deceivers ever, as the old song says. Also women are so eager to be loved, and so anxious to believe that they fascinate every man they meet, that they easily fool them selves in the matter. Still, there are certain signs and symptons that the man in love manifests which are pretty reliable guides. The first thing that I would impress upon you, -daughter, is to pay no at tention to what a man says, but to keep a searchlight turned upon the •way he acts. Likewise bear in mind that poetic and fluent love-making is no indication of the state of a man's affections. The ability to make love like a matinee hero shows that the man is full of words, and that he's had much experience. When the man Is doing the kind of love-making that winds up in a pro posal to assume a girl's hoard bill for life, he doesn't quote poetry. He gur gles, and sputters, and threatens to choke, for it's the most momentous moment in his life, and he knows it. The most reliable sympton that a man gives that he is hard hit for keeps Is when he becomes Johnnie-on-the- Spot, and whereever the girl goes he is sure as fate to bob up. Men who are not in love and who have to work for a living are rushed for time. They have engagements they can't break, and they are too tired to go to places, but while a man's in love he juggles with time and finds leisure to chase the odored one. After he is married he will again get busy and not be able to slip away to meet his wife for after noon teas, or a lingering lunch; but while he's courting her he's Mary's little lamb. THK SECOND SYiIPTOX. The second sympton of acute heart trouble that a man exhibits is when he shows an eagerness to adopt all of your opinions instead of trying to force his down your throat. Also he listens with rapt attention while you expound your views, and becomes instantly con verted to suffrage, or the higher thoughts, or whatever else you believe. The only time a man ever has any re spect for a woman's opinion is when he's in love, so that is an acid test to apply to hj£ affection. The third indication of love is to be seen in the man's attitude toward your family. If he looks bored when I'apa discourses to him about the part he took in the Battle of Gettysburg and mother bemoans the triflingness of several girls nowadays, and if he looks Sister: Read My Free Offer! A I am a woman. ' knovrawoman'itriah. I know her need of sympathy And help* If you, my sister, are unhappy because of ftl-neal th, if you feel unfit for household duties, social pleasure*, or daily employment, write and tell me just how you suffer, J and ask for lay free ten days' trial of a home treatment | suited to your needs. Mqn cannot understand women's jfl sufferings. What we women know from experience, we E9f euro yourself at home at a cost of about 12 cents a week. K , If you suffer from women's peculiar ailments caus* HH«r* ingr pain in the>head,back, or boweU, feeling of .weight W& JMEL. aa f dragging down sensation, falling or displacement of ' Mr / Pelvic organ®, causing kidney and bladder weakneu cr .:>m* :• . iconstipation and piles, painfu! or irregular periods, catarrhal conditions and discharges, extreme nervous \ 0 C oeas, depressed spirits, melancholj. desire to cry, fear of x. something evil about to happen, creeping feeling along \ / the spine, palpitation, hot flashes, weariness, sallow com* plexion with dark circlet under the eyes,pain in the left breast or a general feeling that life is not wortb living, I INVITE YOU TO SEND TODAY FOR MY FREE TEN DAYS' TREATMENT and learn bow these ailments can be easily and surelyconquered at home without the dangers and expense of an operation. When you are cured, and able to enjoy life again, you can pass the good •word along to some other sufferer. My home treatment is for younc or old. To Mothers of Daugh ters, I willexplain how to overcome preen sickness (chlorosis), irregularities, headaches, and lassi tude in young women and restore them to plumpness and health. Tell me if you are worried about your daughter. Remember it cost, you nothing to give lay home treatment a ten days' trial, and does not interfere with daily work. If health is worth asking for, then accept my generous offer and write for the free treatment, including my illustrated booklet. Women's Own Medical Adviser. I will send all in plain wrappers postpaid. To save time, you can cut out this offer, mark your feel ings. and return to me. Send today, as you may not see this offer again. • Address, MRS. M. SUMMERS, Box H, SOUTH BEWO, IND. ECZEMA O; CAN BE CURED Ffc f I Will Prove It to You Free Ten who are suffering the tortures of Eczema. Itch, Salt Rheum or other : 3?Oj •kin diseases—you whose days are miserable, whose nights are raado sleep less by the terrible itching, burning pains, let me send you a trial of a sooth- >*• c< *■«»•«, n. r. lug. healing treatment which has cured hundreds, which I believe will cure OIIUOCIST. Jou. I will send it free, postage paid, without any obligation on your part, ust fill the coupon below and mail it to me, or write me, giving your name, age and address. I will send the treatment free of cost to you. J. C. HUTZELL, Druggist, 486 West Mein St., Fort Wayne, Ind. Please Gend without ooit or obligation to me your Free Proof Treatment. Name Age Post Offloe ■tote Street and No Wart Map i^LCoupon Latest European War Map Given by THE TELEGRAPH m every reader presenting this COUPON sad 10 cants to cover promotion expenses. ■T MAIL—In city or outside, for 12c. Stamps, oash or money order. This is the BIGGEST VALUE EVER OFFERED. Latest 1914 European Oficial Map (S colors)— Portraits of 10 European Rulers; all statistics and war data—Army, Nav J and Aerial btreeath. Populations. Area. Capitals, Distances fetween Clues. Histories of Nations Involved. Prev:ou< Decisive Battle,, His tory Hague Peace Conference. National Debts, Coin Values. EXTRA i-color CHARTS of Five Involved European Capitals sod Strtlegia Naval 1 ' —n Raided. wtfs handsome cover to fit the pocket. Try Telegraph Want Ads SATURDAY EVENING, as if ho could murder little brother and sister when they hang around, there's nothing; doing. He's merely amusing himself, but when he hangs on mother's and father's words, and bestows money on little brother and sister, it is clear indication that he is trying to make friends at court. A fourth indiction that a man is really in love is to be found In his memory, if he recalls every carelessly spoken wish of yours and tries to gratify and if he remembers that you wear violets instead of roses, and that you prefer salted almonds to chocolate creams, then you may begin planning your wedding dress. Only men in love remember a woman's desires. Hus bands and all other men suffer from aphasia on this point. Tin: FIFTH INDICATION. The fifth indication of love in a man is when he begins to try to tuke care of a girl. As long as he isn't in love with her, all that he cares about is for her to be a good looker and dress stunningly enough to make people rubber at her. and if she wants to kill herself by pneumonia or dyspepsia, it's none of his affairs. Observe, therefore, when you go out with a man whether ho inquires if you have on heavy shoes and enough around your throat, and heed well when he orders the meal at a restaurant, whether he presses a good, thick steak and pota toes on you, or lest you eat lobster and ice cream. If he insists on rational food, it's a sure sign that he's thinking about your future doctor's bill. The sixth indication of love that a man gives, is when he begins to tell you how he hates bearding and to call your attention to how happy the Lovey-Doveys are In a little Harlem flat, and to ascertain your views about whether two can't live as cheaply as one. Until a man really begins to think about getting married himself he looks upon domesticity about as kindly as he does upon the smallpox, and with the same ardent hope that he'll never catch it, but when he fails in love he becomes a rooter for the fireside virtues. Therefore put no dependence in a man's love talk until it begins veer ing around toward open plumbing and gas ranges, and quiet evenings at home. Of course, there are times when all signs fail, but, generally speaking, a close observation of the sympton here inbefore of the symptoms a young woman to diagnose a man's case, and tell whether his attack of the tender passion is chronic and likely to lead to serious results, or only sporadic and flirtatious. But never, never, NEVER judge whether a man's in love or not by his talk alone. In Time With tie Wild Novelized from the SCIIR Moving Picture Plif of the Same Xante Featuring Kathlyn William*. By KATHLYN WILLIAMS Illustrated With Photox From the Picture Films. Before Edith could answer, 80018 and a lot more of his wives appeared Also many Kafir warriors came from their conical huts up and down the, village "street." By this time Edith was, of coursa, terribly alarmed. "Let me go!" she cried hysterically, as Boola seized her by the hand and dragged her toward the hut where dwelt the main body of his harem. "You mine!" Boola said. "You I like! You I keep! You fine wife!" "No, no!" Edith protested. "No, let me go, you brute!" "No!" sternly interposed Sandlli, the Jealous wlfo "No, no! You no keep her, Boola. You have plenty wife now. Me no like white wife." "Yes," Boola repeated. And the Jealous Sandili gritted her Ivory teeth in reso. "You beast, let go of me!" Edith now cried, as Boola tried to thrust her Into his hut. An<2 she fought so hard that presently Boola was exceeding wroth. "See!" he said, turning to his war riors and showing his arms and hands, bleeding from little wounds. "Her claws are as the leopard's and her teeth take hold like the hyena's when It is compelled to fight. 'I want not such a wife. Get the white man and then take this white woman and throw them both together into the pit with the leopards. We shall have what the white people call great sport." And thus it came about that Edith at last met the wild man, for Doctor Wayne was now brought Into view. "Father!" Edith screamed as they dragged the wild man forward. "Fath er! It is I —your Edith!" But the wild man, the man without fear, was still without reason. He was still a man with clouded memory of the past—a man whose recollection of his former self was zero. So he did not recognize his daughter. He spoke to her as to a strar.ger, thus: "Maiden, fear not. They will cast us both into the pit with the leopards. But be not afraid. Thou shalt not per ish, no more than I. The leopards will hurt thee not, maiden, for they and their kinds are my friend 3." Edith clutched him nevertheless In hysterical fear. "Father!" she cried. "Oh, father — to think, even after I have found you— to think that you do not know me. Oh, father, this is terrible!" CHAPTER XVII. The Dawn of Reason. Now Sandili, the Jealous wife and good-hearted black woman, had lis tened to all this wrangling between her liege lord and the white girl, and her Jealousy had faded away. And she had heard the white girl's appeal for her father's recognition. And San dili's heart was touched. Wherefore Sandili made a great resolve. She formed a plan very distinctly rebel lious, considering that it had for its object the thwarting of Boola's own plans. Sandili stole out of the village unob served and hurried along the jungle trail —the trail over which the Euro pean traders would come that very day and hour, provided they were to arrive at the time named by the run ners who had reached the village as their advance heralds. Sandili would meet the traders and urge them to hasten to the village and save the white girl from a horrible death in the pit. For the heart of San dili was really a white heart in a black body. Meantime, to the edge of the deep pit the Kafirs dragged the wild man and the maiden —the father and the daughter. One look down into the pit puzzled Edith. She could see no leopards. She wondered where the blacks kept the beasts which she was to confront. She screamed with fright as they gave her father a push that forced him to leap down into the pit. And terror took possession of her a 6 she found herself suddenly seized by men with a rope. This rope they tied about her and then— "Father, save me!" she cried, as they lowered her Into tho pit. When she felt tho ground under her feet she freed herself from the rope. And then for the first time saw th leopards. The beasts .vere In an Inner recess—just within n .ron-barred door that would presently be lifted by Kafirs hauling on a chain at the top of the pit. Edith turned to tho wild man with a desperate resolve. She had r. fresh plan to bring back her father 1 " memory and cause him to recognize her. She went very close to him and put her arms on his shoulders and said: "Father, look at me. Ix>ok into my eyes. I am the cxaot image of my mother as you last saw her. Look! Look closely!" The wild man stared seemingly Into her very soul. Then memory swept through his brain —an overwhelming flood of thoughts. "Mollie!" he cried. "You are my wife, Mollie!" "No," she corrected, joy ringing in her young voice. "I am Edith—your daughter Edith." All this time the Kafirs at the top of the pit were waiting for coming of Boola. Boola, at the moment, 'was hunting high and low for his favorite wife, Sandill. In the pit the wild man, who had so suddenly regained memory of his past, was still dazed by the flood of recollec tions. "I am Edith, your daughter, the girl insisted. "Heaven la certainly good to us—my Edith," Doctor Ware now said. "But stand back. See! Boola has arrived — up there. They ar" now opening the door to let out the leopards." HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH 81owly th© Iron-barred door roBe — and out from the Inner recess and into the main pit came six lebpards. Edith flattened herself against ths wall of the pit in mortal fear, watch ing her father, who stood between her and the with his arms uplift ed in a commanding gesture. CHAPTER XVIII. What Sandlli Did. Doctor Wayne spoke to the leopards In an authoritative tone. The beasts halted. The doctor then knelt and called to them in a caressing tone. "Come, my friends. Come, we will play together." Marvel of marvels! The man lay on his back on the floor of the pit and the leopards came to him and purred loudly and licked his hands, his armß. his face. And they lay down beside him and all around him. But what was Edith's horror now. when suddenly she heard Boola at the top of the pit order his men to build a fire and heat the iron points of their assegais wherewith to torment the leopards and stir them to a fury in which they would rend to death the white captives. "Father!" Edith called. "Did you heaf? They are going to stab the leopards with hot spears." "I heard," her father answered. "But God will still protect us. I dare not betray the least fear, or these beasts will attack us. Stand perfectly still, Edith —still as a statue. Move not so much as a finger, lest you attract the attention of these leopards when they begin to tire of this play with me." So the man in tune with the wild held the leopards in play for two min utes —three, four minutes. And then They Were Safe From the Leopard*. the points of the Kafir spears were pulled from the lire, red hot. "God help us, father!" Edith mur mured "The fiends are about to hurl their hot spears down at the leopards.' But just then a great shouting was heard beyond the edpe of the pit, and Boola and all the K,.3rs fled. At the top of the pit Captain Duncan Jones appeared. With him was Uncle Steve. "Duncan!" Edith cried, in great joy. "Careful, Edith," her father called. "Don't move." "We are saved," Edith answered. "Not yet, Euitli, my child," her father retorted. "I must first induce these animals to return to their lair in the inner pit." "Our Kafirs are chasing Boola and his warriors all over the place," Cap tain Jones called down. "You need have no more fear of Boola. Our boys and the Kafirs employed by the Euro pean traders whom we met on the trail will see that Boola gets his. Boola's wife, Sandili, met us on the trail and made us hurry hero to the rescue." "Keep quiet, please," Doctor Wayne called. "You'll distract the attention of these beasts if you keep on talking." "We'll shoot the beasts one by one," Captain Jones replied. "No, no!" answered Doctor Wayne, slowly rising, without taking his eyes from the leopards. "At the first smell of blood—if you kill one of these brutes—the rest will set upon us. Wait!" Doctor Wayne now moved slowly to the apertu:e leading into the inner re cess He Epoke In a coaxing tone to the Jeopards. "Come, my friends. Come now! Home!" And one by one the leopards came to him. With a firm, but caressing hand, lie induced them to enter the In ner recess. "Now —quick:" he called up to those •t the tof> of the pit. "Lower the door!" Next minute the iron-barred door was lowered. Doctqr W,ayne and Edith were safe from the leopards. Captain Jones and Uncle Steve now jumped down into the pit. While Duncan em braced Edith Uncle Steve and Doctor Wayne hugged each other like two bears • • • • • • Two months later, in the Los An geles bungalow of the Wayne family, Mrs. Wayne, no longer needing an In valid chair, laid her head on her hus band's breast, saying: "Robert, do you know what spared you to be brought back to me?" "What was it, Mollle, dear?" Doctor Wayne asked: "It was because, Robert, dear—be cause you were in tune with the wild." At that very moment a young, bronze-faced man of military bearing and a young woman with golden hair were seated in the diner of a train speeding on its way from Los Angeles to San Francisco. The black man who served them addressed the bronzed man as 'Cap'n!" And he called the golden-haired woman "Mrs. Jones." , THE END. |t[ IT IS THE TASTE. THE FLAVOR OF I BAKER'S COCOA | That Makes It Deservedly Popular J An absolutely pure, delicious and wholesome S food beverage, produced by a scientific blend- ing of high-grade cocoa beans, subjected to a 0 perfect mechanical process of manufacture. A Registered Get the genuine, made only by A u. 8. r»t. once u WALTER BAKER & CO. LIMITED J Established 1780 DORCHESTER, MASSACHUSETTS f pouLTßysnevgs FEED MORE GRDUND ID lIMHL FOOD Necessary to Reduce Cost of Feed ing; Give Greens in Winter Rations for farm poultry flocks can generally be criticised, first, because they contain little ground food, and, second, food is usually lacking. These two faults can easily be corrected. By feeding ground grains in addition to the whole grains and by supplying animal food in the form of sour skim milk or butter'milk, the feed cost for a dozen eggs can be materially reduced. A good grain ration for winter use is made by mixing sixty pounds of corn with thirty pounds of wheat. For summer, mix sixty pounds of wheat with thirty pounds of corn. In addition to the corn and wheat, the following mixture of ground food is excellent: bran, two pounds; corn meal, two pounds; middlings, two pounds; beef scrap, one pound. This mixture can be fed dry in hoppers which should be kept open during the afternoon only. Ground oats are good to use as a dry mash, alone or mixed with other ground feeds. If available give butter milk or sour milk as a drink. The fowls should eat about one-half as much mash as grain food. About twice as much grain should be fed at night as in the morning. At night feed all that the birds will eat. During the day keep the liens scratching in straw litter a froot deep. This little should be free from moulds. Supplement the above ration with green food, such as beets, cabbage, sprouted oats, fine silage, 'etc. Grit, oyster shell or crushed limestone should be available at all times. Feed only clean feed and supply plenty of clean, fresh water. TI'RKEYS REPORTED SCARCE Advices in regard to the turkey crop, printed in trade papers, point to a somewhat lighter crop than usual, but also to more moderate prices than have prevailed of late years. In trade centers it is said that approximately one hundred carloads of turkeys have been carried over in cold storage since last winter and that these must be marketed and will tend to depress prices. To people in this section, where comparatively few turkeys are grown, and many consumed, the pros pect of lower prices would be attrac tive, for of late years the cost of real ly good turkeys has been so high that those who had to consider price have not been buying turkey as often as they once did. Recent Deaths in Central Pennsylvania Girrumonnt. Mrs. Jesse Bixler, 80 years old, died from old age. Her hus band and one son survive. Helta in. Ell A. Amspacher, 56 years old, died yesterday. He was a carpenter by trade. His widow, ten children, two brothers and two sisters survive. Murletta. Mrs. Barbara Leader, 80 years old, wife of George Leader, the second oldest woman In this section, died this morning. She was married sixty years to Mr. Leader. Besides her husband, a son, residing in Steelton, survives. You want yotfr hens laying now of all times of the VM T-1 year, whether you sell eggs or just have a few hens \T~j | \y r Asm to supply your own family. Come in and get V \ | I X and you will soon be getting all the eggs you Look oat for Roup •( this time —the most dangerous of all Poultry d lie tics. I'rattt Roup Remedy it£us.rantcr<i to cure. We sell It. 5 WALTER S. SCHELL ELK VIEW POULTRY SUPPLY HOUSE HOLMES SEED CO. MOCK & HARTMAN * - ■ 1 -t "NOBODY HOMBI" '? wp ' *jb r Ph osts o COMESEEME f NOVEMBER 14, 1914. BREEDER MUSI MISE ENOUGH CHICKENS Only Way to Make It Pay Is to Have Supply For the En tire Year The breeder who is going to make a living: from poultry in the future is going to And it necessary to produce on a larger scale and to plan to have something to sell nearly the year round. One of the most unsatisfac i tory features of poultry keeping as an occupation has been the shortness of I the selling seasons. If one is going to produce birds for exhibition, the most of the demand for those birds is going to come in about two-months of the early winter, and buyers will want the birds either shipped to them just before the show at which they are to be exhibited, or sent direct to the show. The bulk of the sales of stock j for breeding will come in nearly the same season, for while a few buyers, realize the advantage of buying early to have the birds acclimated before the breeding season, most think that they run less risk of losing birds if they buy about the time they want to begin breeding operations. The trade in eggs to hatch exhibi tion and high-classed breeding stock is also limited to a rather short sea son, because all buyers want eggs at about the same time. The impossi bility of supplying all at the same time is all that prevents the season for this class of eggs for hatching from being even shorter than it is. Many breed ers prolong the season for selling hatching eggs by offering them at low prices when trade naturally falls off. Then bargain sales of old stock are made in effort to keep something com ing through the summer. For the average breeder the trade year has al together about four months when trade is brisk, four when it moves lan guidly and four when there is nothing doing. The season of satisfactory volume of trade is lengthened considerably when a breeder undertakes to supply popular demands. The day-old-chlclc season is much longer than the eggs for-hatching season, because people will buy chicks both earlier and latet than they will buy .eggs. WEATHER FINE THIS PAUL No Damp Weather Is Good For Ilcnlth of Poultry The weather so far this fall has been Ideal for keeping poultry free from colds and roup. A damp condi tion of the poultry house has a telling effect on the health of poultr • no mat ter whether such a condition results from prolonged wet spells or poor ventilation. There has been practical ly no rain fall for weeks and the tem perature has been nearly seasonable. Therefore, with the weather condi tions the best for maintaining their vitality, good pullets should come into laying on schedule time. The critical season has passed, too, for with the i first rain fall of any consequence will I come colder weather, and cold, crisp I weather invariably insures good j health in fowls. AUTO STARTS FOREST FIRE llnckHrni On Mountain Road and FliimrN Extend Into Woods Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., Nov. 14. A large seven-passenger automobile of former State Senator Donald P. McPherson, of Gettysburg, back-fired yesterday after noon while coming: down tlie mountain near the Buenn Viata Springs Hotel, and before assistance couli be secured the automobile was destroyed—the engine and truck being the only things that were not consumed by the flames. In the car ,at the time of the accident were Mr. McPherson, his wife and their daughter, but they escaped Injury. The machine, when stopped, was at the extreme left side of the road, and the flumes quickly spread to the bank. Here there was an abundance of dry leaves and theso were soon ablaze. The fire spread to the underbrush and speedily a very large area was In flames. Residents of that section turn ed out and extinguished the blaze. -HEADACHE- Sick or nervous headaches always result from a torpid liver or a dis ordered stomach— cure the liver, or sweeten the stomach, and the head it cured. The surest way in to take SCHINCKS MANDRAKE PILLS They invariably relieve all ail ments resulting from liver or stomach trouble—quickly and per manently remove f iddiness, palpitation, biliousness.indigestion, constipation, etc. Partly TegtUble. Plain or Sugar Coatad. eo KMM' OONTINUOUS SALC PROVES THEM MERIT. Dr. I. H. Schenck k Son, Philadelphia Lumber For Damp Places Yes, you can get lumber from us that will last a long time in damp places. But you want to buy the kind that is adapted to | that purpose. One kind of lumber :annot be used every place with good results. United Ice & Coal Co. MAIN OFFICE I Forater and Cowdts Sta. 1 V i , / 1 Lard and Hams FIRE COUNTRY LARD 10 lb. can, $1.45 —full weight. 50 lb. can, 13V4c per lb. SUGAR-CURED HAMS Cured and smoked the old way. Weight 10 to 16 lbs. at 22e per lb. These are Lancaster county goods and must be satisfactory, or money refunded. Order by post card from W. C. THOMPSON 247 HUMMEL STREET or Bell Phone 850 R. Delivered to all parts of city. >■ EDUCATIONAL. Stenography, Stenotypy DAY AND NIGHT SESSIONS ENRODIi ANY MONDAY SCHOOL OF COMMERCE 15 S. MARKET SQUARE HARRISBURG, PA. Harrisburg Business College 329 Market St Fall term, September first Day and night ?9th year. Harrisburg, Pa. Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect May >4. 1114. TRAINS leave Harrisburg— For Winchester and Martlnaburg at 6-08, *7:50 a. m., *3:40 p. m. For Hagrerstown, Chambersburg. Car- Hale, Mechanlcsburg and Intermediate stations at 6:08. *7:50, *11:53 a. m.. •8:40, 5:82, *7:40, *11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanlcsburg at 9:48 a. m., 2:18, 8:17, 6:30, 9:80 a. m. For Dillsburg at 6:08, *7:50 and • 11:53 a. m.. 2:18. *8:40. 6:82 and «:30 p. m. • Dally. All other trains daily except Sunday. H. A. RIDDLE, J. H. TQNGB. Q. P. A. 2
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers