10 XfcfcMen The Girl Not Worth Knowing BY BEATRICK FAIRFAX lam going to quote to-day at length the letter of a girl who voices the troubles which 1 firmly believe many girls have found taking all the hap piness from their lives. This is what Marion writes: "Since I was sixteen I have gone to different places of amusement with young men. They said they enjoyed my company, as 1 was always sociable and made it pleasant for every one with whom I came in contact. A young man would call frequently for three or four months and then he would remain away. They all seemed to be fas cinated for a time, but I could not keep their lasting friendship. There ha* been a steadv series of admirers, «nd I have been told that I am most attractive. But before 1 knew it each one would (to off and be engaged to ■onie other girl. "Now 1 have an admirer who is J different from the sort I have always i cared for. He is three years younger than I am and is only earning slS' a week, fie has cared for me fori over a year, and I love him as I never ! thought I could care. J /eel that I j will be humilated when I bring him ; among my friends and that they will i scoff at me. He has asked me to be his wife, and I do not know which way to turn." The girl who has charm and mag- Jieiism. but who does not wear well— dees not bear knowing—has a very Kerry time when her youth goes and the cherished belleship of her young er days vanishes with it. She is like ly to make a marriage that is based on only two things—the desire to be loved (without particularly loving her sweetheart*, and the longing to prove to the people who are watching old maidhood steal upon her that she can hold a man's affections after all. Neither of these is a legitimate rea- ! son for marrying or can lead to anyj lasting happiness. To dispose of Marion's present prob-j lent briefly, let me say that it is ri ll EPTASOPHS TO VISIT LODGE All the conclaves of Harrisburg and vicinity of the Improved Order of Hep tasophs have appointed booster com mittees and will go in a body with their fellow-lodgenien to pay a visit to West I'airview Conclave. Tuesday, December 1. The committee with fellow-Hepta sophs. will meet at Market Square Tues day night. December 1. at 7:45. and go In a body to Heptascph Hall, West Fairvlew. M It Be IrorMair / \ i —• —i A itSYourcnoice Cioiraso® Shampoos and light dressings of Cuticura Ointment clear the scalp of dandruff, allay itching and irritation, and promote hair-growing con ditions in most cases of pre mature loss of hair. Samples Free by Mail Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout th« world. l iberal sample of eacli m*lle<l Tree, with 3J-p. fcook. Addreaa "Cuticura." Dept. *4H, Boauw. Coal For the Turkey Dinner The day of all days when the range should be on its best behavior—when the fire must burn evenly to brown the turkey just right for the Thanksgiving dinner. Kelley's range coal will produce a happy result in the kitchen on this and all other days. All pea, nut, pea and nut or any mixture desired. Kelley's for a good cooked dinner! H. M. KELLEY&CO. 1 N. Third Street Tenth and State Streets if CHAS.HTMAUK THE 3 UNDERTAKER Sixth and Kelker Stmeta larger, establishment Beat facilities. Near to you at your Will fo anywhere at your call. Motor aervice. No funeral too amall. None too etpentive. Chapelt, room, vault. ate., nacd wit* •tit chard* Business Local. KKIJjBKRG DOESN'T CARE If the sun never shines. He can take pictures of the finest kind with the aid' of the new powerful light that is as efficient as sunshine in producing the best results. Sittings every day up to ft o'clock. Ample facilities for Cnristmts deliveries, but "procrasti nation is the thief of time," so do rot delay but arrange for appoint ments now to be assured of Phrlst inas deliveries. Kellberg Studio, 302 .Market street. SATURDAY EVENING, diculous to measure whether or no you marry a man In terms of what your friends will say. If a girl of twenty-five loves a man three years her junior and he knows her age and does not feel that it is a harrier to their love, she is safe to marry him, provided she feels reasonably sure that he is mature enough to know what he is doing when he marries her. Eighteen dollars a week is not a large sum on which to set up house keeping, but a clever, frugal woman can manage on that and encourage her husband to greater and greater effort and to success. i The point of Marion's letter that In ! terests all girls is that quality of charm by which a girl attracts mascu- I line admiration but cannot hold it. ! There are various reasons for it-—and itlie girl in like case will probably ; find that some of them applies to her. i The girl who fails to hold admira | tion is often self-centered and given to talking and thinking overmuch of ' herself. She may be peevish and j prone to demand as her rights the ! things that she should graciously ac j cept as favors. She may be forwarded and force at i tentions, or try to interest them as ! meaning more than the man intends. Or perhaps she tries to force the af fair to progress faster than the man likes, and so frightens him away. Or by cold selfishness she may come to impress him as the sort of girl who accepts everything and gives nothing of warm, human interest, or kindly sympathy, or real liking in return. Some girls give a most unfortunate impression of merely liking attention and admiration, or of wanting some one to worship at their shrine. The way to have a friend is to be one, and the girl who attracts men and cannot hold their interest prob ably fails to feel a real honest inter est in them as individuals. The ono great fault in the nature of a girl "who does not wear well" is the lack of unselfish sympathy for others. TO DIVIDE inn INTO FOUR PRECINCTS Too Many Voters to Be Handled in Two Precincts; Propose New Arrangements Owing: to the large registration .n the Eleventh Ward It has been found necessary to add two precincts to that territory, making four in all. For the recent election the total registration was 991 voters—sl7 in the First Pre cinct and 474 in the Second Precinct. At the November election. 475 votes were polled In the First Precinct and 443 in the Second Precinct. The present division is: First Pre cinct. Kelker street to Delaware avenue and Front to Sixth street; Second Pre cinct. Delaware avenue to Maclay street and Front to Sixth street. It is now proposed to create four precincts, as follows: First: Front street to Logan avenue and Kelker street to Delaware avenue. Second: Logan aVenue to Sixth street and Kelker street to Delaware avenue. Third: Front street to Logan or Or ange street, and Delaware to Maclay street. Fourth: or Orange street to Sixth street and Delaware to Maclay street. This arrangement would embrace the following figures: First Precinct: "00 dwelling houses. 262 registered voters. Second Precinct: 300 dwelling houses, 255 registered voters. Third Precinct: 307 dwelling houses, 240 registered voters. Fourth Precinct: 277 dwelling houses. 233 registered voters. STOUGH-AVI.TIIOI'SE WEDIHNU 1 Miss Irene May Aulthouse Is Bride of William A. Stousli Mechaniesburg. Pa.. Xov. 28. —' The marriage of Miss Irene May j Aulthouse. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. j Andrew P. Aulthouse to William A. | Stough was solemnized at the bride's! home by the Rev. E. C. B. Castle, pas- j tor of the First United Brethren j Church Thursday. The wedding inarch was played by John Connelly, of Har- j risburg. cousin of the bride. Miss • Anna Firestone, of Camp Hill, a cou- ■ sin, was maid of honor and Miss .Mil dred Connelly, of Harrisburg. was (lower girl. The best man was Frank Simmons, of Lemoyne. A wedding din ner was served to about seventy-five guests from Harrisburg. Carlisle, Mart insburg, Va.: Shiremanstown. I.e- j moyne, Camp Hill. Dillsburg. Beaver-! town and Mechaniesburg. Mr. and Mrs. Stough will reside in Mechanics-! burg. The wedding took place on the, twenty-eighth anniversary of the mar riage of Mr. and Mrs. Aulthouse and i was a double celebration. WINS MECHAXICSBIRG BRIDE IJolui Iv. Ix-nker anil Miss Bculali Jj. Motility. Married Special to The Telegraph Mechaniesburg, Pa.. Xov. 28.—A j quiet wedding was solemnized on Wednesday evening at C o'clock at the I home of Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Mountz, j when th?ir daughter. Miss Beulali 1... ( Mountz and John K. Lenker, of Har- I risburg. were united in marriage. The Ttev. E. Victor Holland, pastor of j Emanuel Lutheran Church, Harris burg, officiated. A wedding supper . was served, the guests including only j (the immediate families of the young couple. The bride is an employe of the Moorhead Knitting Mill at Harris burg. Mr. Zenker is connected with the Morton Automobile Works in Ha risburg. They will reside in that city. BUILDING HILL WATER MAINS Superintendent 11. !•'. Bowman Hur ries Work to Beat Old Winter Construction of the six-inch water pipe in Zarker street from Nineteenth (o Twentietli streets was begun yes terday by a big gang o workmen un der the supervision of Superintendent Harry F. Bowman. Monday the six-inch main in Chest nut. from Eighteenth to Nineteenth, will be put down. Other sections scheduled for dlaying this winter, but which hay have to go over until early Spring, are the six-inch mains in the j Jonestown road. Twentieth, Market to I Holly, and Chestnut, Nineteenth to iTwentieth, and an eight-inch pipe in j Holly. Yale to Twentieth-and-a-half I streets. WANT XrctTTRAMTY KESPECTEII Buenos Aires, Argentina. Nov. 28. The Prensa In an aditorlal article pub lished to-day declares that the attitude of France and Great Britain on the subject of the preservation of the neu trality of Colombia and Ecuador does not contemplate any attempt on the sovereinnty of these countries. France and Great Britain, the paper says, will ask the good offices of the United States to make neutrality respect ed. They will in on sense Intervene, Best Feeds and Method For Increased Egg Production Important Consideration For Care ful Poultrymen During Winter Months Rations Recommended by New Jersey Experiment Station a Good Guide By Dr. Harry Reynolds IJOMIS Head of the Department of Poultry Husbandry of the New Jersey Agrl ' cultural Experiment Station Copyright, 1914 During the winter months poultry in tlio colder climates get practically no green fowls and arc wholly de pendent on what is fed tlieni. It therefore 1 , is highly important that they bo fed scientifically the things tliey most need at the season and to make them egg producers. Certain general rules can be laid down for the treatment of the flock, and with careful observation they should produce satisfactory results. The following article contains sug gestions based on ocientlflc experi ments and is. therefore, more tliau ordinarily valuable. The proper feeds and the methods of feeding the laying flock is one of the vital problems for the poultry man. During the winter months, in the coldler climates, the birds get no natural food whatsoever. It is, therefore, necessary to supply it in the ration in an efficient but econom ical form. The food supply of the laying flock is the raw material from which they manufacture eggs and meat for human food consumption. Without the proper food it is im possible for them to produce the proper quality and amount of eggs. When feeding for egg production, the following factors should be consid ered when mixing the feeds and sup plying them. First —Nothing but clean, whole some food to lie used. Second—Considerable variety in the ration should be allowed so that each bird can balance her own ration. Third—A liberal feeding of meat scrap is largely responsible for great production. Fourth —Plenty of exercise should be compelled, by the feeding of grain scattered in deep litter. This keeps the birds active and in good health. Fifth—Plenty of water should be [supplied. Fresh, clean water should i be kept before them all the time, and ' some form of succulent should be regularly given. ! Sixth —The birds should be watched j carefully and constant attention given |to their health and appetite. Any ab ' normal conditions should be imme diately corrected. Hat ions KeoonimeiKletl The following rations are recom mended by the New Jersey Agricul tural Experiment Station, after years lof experimental work and careful • testing. They have given exception ally good results throughout the State. The rations as recommended apply especially to the light active breeds like the Leghorns. Such modifica tions as are necessary for seasonable feeding and for heavier breeds are described. Dry mash as mixed for winter feed ! ing. Amount Approximate Kind of Food, by weight, cost. j Wheat bran .... 200 lbs $3.20 Wheat middlings. 200 lbs 3.50 Ground oats .... 100 1b5....... 1.65 Cornmeal 100 lbs 1.65 | Gluten feed 100 lbs.. .. ... 1.70 i Alfalfa (short cut) 100 lbs 1.60 ! Meat scrap thigh grade 200 lbs. 5.50 j Total 1000 lbs SIB.BO This ration when mixed at home will cost the poultryman about SI.BO per 100 pounds. i This dry mash is mixed in bulk and kept before the birds at all times in i large self-feeding, homemade hoppers, i When the molt is going on in the | month of August and September it is a good practice to substitute oil meal )for the gluten meal in the same pro portion. This hastens the growth of feathers and causes them to finish off much better. As soon as the birds ! get on green range in the Spring the alfalfa and the meat scrap can be al most entirely eliminated. The extent to which this mash can l>e modified during the summer will depend upon the range which they have and the j Miss Fairfax Answers Queries | * ' XOT A SUITABLE MATCH. DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am u young man of twenty-one and in love with a widow of forty. 1 am a poor clerk, while she has a fortune, left her by her late hus band. She has promised to set me up in business, saying that we can be married before winter. My parents object because they do not believe I love her. but T do. Please advise me. TOMMY J. You are young enough to be the son of the woman you are consider- IT IS THE TASTE, THE FLAVOR OF t BAKER'S COCOA That Makes It Deservedly Popular An absolutely pure, delicious and wholesome food beverage, produced by a scientific blend ing of high-grade cocoa beans, subjected to a perfect mechanical process of manufacture. Get the genuine, made only by • WALTER BAKER & CO. LIMITED Established 1780 DORCHESTER, MASSACHUSETTS HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Copyright. 1914 BUFF PLYMOUTH ROCKS By Louis Paul Graham character of the food which it af fords. Feeding Heavier Breeds When the above dry mash is fed to the heavier breeds than Leghorns, such for example as Plymouth Rocks and Rhode Island Reds, especially with yearlings and two-year-old hens, the tendency is to take on an exces sive amount of body fat. Under these conditions the hopper should be closed during the morning aSid left open only during the afternoon. This compels the bird to work more in looking for the grain scattered in the litter in the morning. Dry mash as mixed for summer feeding: Amount Approximate Kind of Food, by weight, cost. Wheat bran .... 200 lbs $3.20 Wheat middlings. 100 lbs 1.75 Ground oats .... 100 lbs 1.65 Gluten feed 50 lbs 85 Meat scrap 25 lbs 75 Total 475 lbs $8.20 This ration when mixed at home by the poultryman will cost approxi mately $1.75 per one hundred pounds. The Morning Grain Ration.—ln ad dition to the dry mash grain rations are fed morning and night. A spe cial ration is fed every morning, both winter a#td summer between seven and nine o'clock. In the winter this grain ration is usually scattered in side the house. In the summer it can be scattered broadcast about the yard. The primary object of this morning ration is to induce exercise, thus keeping the birds busy and healthy. Good Morning Meal About five pounds of this scratch ing ration is fed to each one hundred birds. The morning scratch ration is made up as follows: Scratching ration: Amount Approximate Kind of Food, by weight, cost. Wheat . lOOIbe $2.20 Oats ....... 100 lbs 1.93 ! Total 200 lbs $4.13 This ration when mixed by the poultryman will cost about $2.06 per tone hundred, pounds. The Night Grain Ration.—Between four and rive o'clock in the afternoon, the time varying somewhat in sum mer and winter, the night ration is fed. It is composed of whole and cracked grains, and is fed at the rate of about ten pounds to one hundred birds, or all that they will eat up clean. Night Ration Amount Approximate Kind of Food, by weight, cost. Cracked corn .. 200 lbs $3.30 Wheat 100 lbs 2.20 Oats 100 lbs.. ... .. 1.93 Buckwheat 100 lbs 2.00 Total 500 lbs $9.43 This ration when mixed at home will cost the poultryman about SI.BO per one hundred pounds. The special feature of the above night ration is the fact that it has food material especially adapted to keep warmth in the birds' body at night, such for example as corn and buckwheat. When the above ration is fed to the heaviest breeds, which have a tendency to excessive body fat, it is good practice to eliminate one half the corn and substitute barley for the buckwheat. During the sum mer months all that Is necessary is a night ration of equal parts corn, wheat and oats. I The oldest of all the American breeds of poultry is the Plymouth ing making your wife. She would despise you before long for letting her money establish you in business. And you would hate her for having "bought you." This marriage could not bring lasting happiness to either of you. Work your own way in the world and marry a young girl you are able to take care of some day. TOO MUCH OF A RISK. DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: Several weeks ago I met a young lady I admired: since then my ad miration has turned to the most sin cere love. She is just the sort of girl I desire for my wife. Sly mother has met her and is of the same opin ion. She is about five years my sen ior. I have told her of my love, also that I would not be in a position to Rock. Its great popularity lias caused it to be bred in a variety of colors beginning with the original barred variety and followed by the white, buff, partridge, silver penciled, Co lumbian and golden barred. The white Plymouth Rock was bred from "'sports" and albinos from the barred. The buffs, which were origi nated in the early 90's and for a time were the most popular, were the result of various crosses between the white Plymouth Hock, buff cochin, buff leghorns and Rhode Island red. In their ■ early history they varied greatly in shades of color, but the fanciers of the breed by hard work soon succeeded in breeding them to a more even and better golden buff color than were their parents, the buff cochin and bufT leghorns. Buff rocks also improved greatly in shape, and for excellence in breed type the buff is second only to the white rocks. I This is a fine farmer's fowl, doing exceptionally well on free range and possessing utility qualities that are desirable. It is a good forager and a consistently good layer of large brownish eggs, many of which are produced In winter when the farmer can get most money for them. The chicks are hardy and of rugged growth, developing rapidly to broiler size and for such are much esteemed. When nearly full grown they make the best of roasting fowls, and their rich yellow skin and legs and full plump breasts appeal strongly to the American housewife. The rich golden buff of their plum age, bright red heads, combs and wattles and golden yellow legs make them striking fowls either in the ex hibition pen or on free range. They have many devoted breeders who are banded together in a national club for the purpose of improving and popularizing the breed. These fowls do well in small num bers which must be confined, and are therefore valuable for backyard or "home" flocks. Their color does not easily show the soil of confinement like white plumage will do. The hens are good layers. They will sit. hatch and rear chickens so that a flock of buff rocks will supply the home table with eggs, broilers, roasters and frica sees and prove profitable to their owners. When full grown, buff rock males weigh from 7'* to 9 pounds, females from 6 >•_. to 8 pounds, and the latter reach laying maturity in from 5H to 6 months. I'SE AM) VAI.Vi: or TRAP NESTS The trap nest was a clever in vention to weed out the lazy hen and discover which were the real workers in a flock. It has proved Its worth on thou sands of farms in getting rid of drones and enabling the poultry man to scientifically manage his flock. It has turned many a losing farm into a paying proposition and long since became a permanent fixture on every well regulated farm. Next week's article will be on this subject. I.ook for it next Saturday, appearing exclusively in the Telegraph. Next week Michael K. Boyer. poul try editor of Hie l arm Journal, will <t»nlrHiute an article on "I'se of Trap Nests." Tlie illustration by Tx>uis Paul Gruliam will show "Black IJAllC shans." marry Tor at least five years. She thinks that by the time I am ready to marry, as she will then be twenty nine. [ may change my mind, though I assure her that I will not E. M. The girl who waits five years for a man runs a sad risk of losing her love and her youth together. You can give no real assurance of how you will feel five years from now, and as sim ple mathematics shows you to be nineteen years old now. I do not think you are stable enough to lie at all sure of yourself. The affair seems to me to be most inadvisable. Some Women —Are as true as their straight hair and freckles, others no more genuine than their marcel waves and ruby lips—and you can fool most of the men most of the time. NOVEMBER 2s, 1014. PHARMACISTS 10 W1 SUITE'S PIPERS State Board I* Actively Enforcing the Law Relative to Sale of Adulterated Wax At the examinations conducted by the Pharmaceutical Examining Board in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia on No vember 6 and 7, seventy-one persons applied for registration as pharmacists, of which fifty were successful, and 144 as qualified assistants, of which ninety were successful. During the meeting of the board which followed, five bearings were given Pittsburgh dealers under the drugs act, for selling adulterated white wax. Two persons were prose cuted since the last meeting for con ducting drug stores without being registered as pharmacists, six unregis tered drup clerks for compounding phy sician's prescriptions; five proprietors for permitting unregistered clerks to compound prescriptions, and three col ored men for the unlawful sale and possession of cocaine. Three Italians were indicted in Philadelphia for con spiracy In securing the registration of one of them as a pharmacist, bv makliiK false statements to the board under oath as to the applicant's experience in the drug business. All plead guilty in court. One pharmacist applicant who swore to false statements in his appli cation was arrested on a charge of per jury, and held for appearance in court under JSOO bail. The next examinations will be held In the Technical High School, Harris burg, on March 6, 1915. Those who passed the examinations were as follows: PHARMACIST!) Karl S. Burkett, 15mlie F. Krapf, William If. Charles, Henry D. Priinas, Charles P. Powers, li. Arthur Herd. William J. Kirsi h, all of Pittsburgh. Samuel M. Ankrum, Walter W. Ar nold, William M. Boyd, George H. Broadbelt. Estella E. Brozeitis, Samuel C'ahan, Hyman Cohen. Abe Fllnkman, Elmer, T. Guest, John T. Harri son, George T. Morris. Sara Schachman. Norman A. Shellev, Morris Soifer, William Udell, all of Philadel phia. Ralph H. Hinman. Allentown: red ward Stavin<* Avalon: John R. Watson, Bristol; Sandomire, Braddock: Raymond A. Hayes, Butler; Paul D. Coble. Cliara bersburg; Harold W. Fellows, Charleroi; John H. Hoffman, Allentown; William H. Taylor, Chester; Homer H. Burv, Erie; Harry E. Crane, Edgewood Park. Harry E. McGinty. Franklin; Glenn H. Ivone, S. Potter Brown. Jr.. Greens burg; William R. Itovensky. Jeannette; Frances E. Brown. Karns City; Wilmer P. Davidson, Newville; Chester L. Mc- Larren, Philipsburg; Harrv N. Krick, Sinking Spring; V. Bruce Salsburv, Tv rone; Harry L Miller. Washington; Harry 13. Walker. Chambersburg; Ern est 1* Steever, Wteonisco; Isaiah W. Morse. Atlantic City, N. J.; Clark IT Flanagan, Binghamton, N. V.; J. Ray mond Glazier. Belpre. Ohio, and aenry B. Decker. Haddon Heights. N. ,1. «tt M.I Ft ED ASSISTANT PHARMA CISTS Vincent Calabrese, Martin C. Con nelly, Philip Ellovich, Julius Finkel pearl. James A. Hargreaves. Alex. B. Gantos, J. Frederick Kastner, Paul M Williams, Curtis* C. Crowtlier, all of Pittsburgh. Horace I!. Aarons, Rudolph W. Adler. Harry Bradhurd, Jacob Broxmeyter, John C. Cravens, Jr., William J. Con len, Moses Felnstein. Simon E. Finkel stein. Abe Folstein. Abraham Green, M. Richard Goodman, Albert J. Hallnian, Leopold E. Helfand. Jacob L. Medved kin. Charles R. Monteith. Philip Mint zer, Frank Mustaro, G. Wellington Neif fer. Fanny Nussbaum. Michael Pint zow. Leon Rovno, C. Gilbert Ruff, Jr., Herman 11. Shanbacher, Aaron Simkin, Henry L. Somers. Harrv C. Thornton and Edward L. Weiss, all of Philadel phia. Alfred W. Shoemaker, Allentown; Earl D. Davis, Ashland; John S. Tress. Beaver Falls; David l*. Prosser. Beth lehem; Robert R. lveely, Boyertown; Myron P. Uisliton. Bloomshurg: Walter R. McClarren. Conemaugii; Paul li Carroll, Consholiocken: Ernest K. Rapp Doylestown: Hobart P. White, Dußois; Samuel B. Alloway, Erie; Howard B. Davis. East Downinetown. Thomas F. Grieff, Emlenton; Elmer J. It Makes Hens Lay ifcCjf Pratts, Po " ltr y . " mmm 1 Regulator * JK Gets the laying hens into the egg-a-day class and <?W starts up the lazy ones. Puts life and vigor into the whole flock and gives a healthy relish to the feed. Costs but a trifle —the extra eggs pay for it many times over. Come in and let us prove to you that it will make hens lay. If it fails, we will give you your money back. 25-lb. pail only $2.50. In packages at 25c., 50c. and SI.OO. WALTER S. SCHELL ELK VIEW POULTRY SUPPLY HOUSE HOLMES SEED CO. MOCK & HARTMAN AND ALL FIRST CLASS DEALERS IN HARRISBURG AND VICINITY 6170 Latest Euorpean War Map Given by THE TELEGRAPH To every reader presenting thl» COUPON and 10 cent* to cover promotion expense*. BY MATI/—ln city or outside, for 12c. Stamps, rash or money order. This Is the BIGGEST VALUE EVER OFFERED. Latest 1914 European Official Map (5 colors) —Portraits of 16 European Rulers; all statistics and war data—Army .Navy and Aerial Strength. Populations, Area, Capitals. ■ Distances between Cities, Historic* of Nations Involved, Previous Decisive Battles. History Hague Peace Conference, National Debts, Coin Values. EXTRA 2-color CHARTS of Five Involved European Capitals and Strategic Naval locations. Folded, with handsome cover to flt the pocket. | Dodge Coal Trouble This Year 1 k Don't start off the first thing this Fall with a repetition of your , | coal troubles of former yeara. Keep your peace of mind and insure k body comfort by using Judgment 1 your coal buying. Montgomery P cial costs no more than Inferior grades, and Insures maximum heat, | even consumption, and lower coal bllla. Dust avid dirt Is removed b«- r fore you get your coal from J. B. MONTGOMERY Phones Third and Chestnut Streets I PROVISIONS FOR THE ARMY IN THE FIELD Importance of keeping body well nourished * In time of war, the greatest effort Is always made toward cutting off tho enemy's base of supplies. It Is the> well-nourished people who fight tim strongest and live the longest nnd con tribute most to human progress, la your stomach doing its duty—does it' convert food into good blood and t'.s sue? Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discov ery has been so successful in the treat ment of Indigestion, that thousands of former sufferers owe their Rood health of to-day to its wonderful pow er. and testimonials prove it. It arouses the little muscular fibres into activity and causes the gastric juices to thoroughly mix with the food you eat, simply because it supplies thr» stomach with pure, rich blood. It's weak, impure blood that causes stom ach weakness. Get good blood through the use of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and you will have no mors indigestion. It is the world's proved blood puri fier. It's not a secret remedy for it* ingredients are printed on the wrap per. Start to take it to-day and beforo. another day has passed, the impuri ties of the blood will begin to leave your body through the liver, kidneys. I bowels and skin, nnd in a few daya you will know by your steadier nerves, firmer step, keener mind, brighter eyes and clearer skin that the bad blood is passing out, and new, rich, pure blood is filling your veins and arter ies. The same good blood will cause pim ples, acne, eczema and all skin erup tions to dry up and disappear. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery isi the helpful remedy that nearly every one needs. It contains no alcohol or narcotics of any kind.: —Advertise- ment. Duster, Kails Creelt: Russell C. Paxton, ! Gettysburg; John U Moonly, Greens burg: Patrick P. Wade, Jenklntown; Clayton llill, Johnsonburg; Thomas G. Miller, Lebanon; Edwin C. Parvin. Miftlinburg; E. Paul Miller. Montgom ery: Robert L. Craven, Walter Manns, of McKeesport: James A. Maher. New Castle; llowanl E. Millard, MeKees Rocks: Seth P. Grundy. North Bast; John E. Doekery, Oil City. W. John Dawe, Pen Argyle; David R. Brown, Port Carbon: ICarle M. Hite, Roaring S|>rlng: Anderson I. Kerr, Ro chester; Amos Stouteagle, Royersford: Tliomas 11. Kddy, Shaniokln: Edward Huber. Scranton: Harry C. Webb, I Shrewsbury: Richard K. Datshaw, Swiss vale: John A. 1-eHar. Stroudsburg. Paul C. MeConnell, West Sunbury; William M. Edwards, Wllkes-Barre; Tliomas W. Emery. Grove City; Roy \V. Baldwin and W'lliam E. Bisel, Williins burg: C. J. Jaeoby, Wyncote; George IS. Fetrow, York; Harry Hounsbury, 'Salem, N. J.: Josciih W. Harrison, King- Ihamton, N'. Y.; Harry Wishnefskv. Cam (den. N. J.: Harry E. Simpson. Wheeling, IW. Va.: Weslev Cossar. Wlieeling, W. 1 Va.: Charles H. Troxell. Weston. W. |Yn.: Henry .\. Stype, East Liverpool. Ohio; L.eo Ritzi. Youngstown, Ohio; William F. Vosrel, Rehobotli. I>el.; , I Harry 1,. Smith. White Sulphur Springs, W. Va.: J. Elmer Raker. Hagerstown, Md. HOW CYRIL MAI'DK "MARKS I I The main thing in making up for an old man, says Mr. Cyril Maude in l the December Strand, is to find the j old-age Bhadows in the face and ac centuate them. Everyone has old-ago I shadows, even a baby; but. it natur jally is hard to find them in a young j person. With wrinkles it Is a different j matter. All babies have wrinkles-- ' sometimes even more pronounced than ! in very old persons. I had a hard time in finding tho I old-age shadows in tlie face of tho I little boy I made up in the part for |the juvenile performance of Grumpy, j But T found them all right. T belicvo if we could only read our facial shad ows we would be able to tell just what the future holds in store for u» ;
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