12 XEfoMen Does It Pay to Be Good? It; BKATRICK FAIRFAX., j "I am nineteen and am told I am ] pretty. I have had admirers of the Opposite sex. but have been unfor- ; tunate as to meet only the type of ] man who is called fast. These young i men often say to me: 'Why are you : Bo quiet?* And my girl friends keep ! telling me 1 am too slow and that I i should act as if 1 was 'game'—and 1 t have tried sometimes, but I become i •o disgusted 1 could cry. Now, tell me, please—does it pay to be good? i In my case it does not seem to," i writes a disconsolate girl. Yes—it actually PAYS to be goodlji The girl who is quiet and modest and well-behaved may miss some of the excitement her gayer and giddier sis- j ters take to brighten their days—but . she is not a prey to the fever for ex citement nor is she ashamed to stop . and think of herself and what she has done. The girl who is not »ood urges her- j self on and on from one diversion and ; dissipation to another because she i does not dare to stop to think. Her health, her nerves and her happiness ; die together and her future if c u -ed i to her past. I am not condemning < the girl who has strayed. Often she i is strong enough to reforfti; often so- i ciety is kind enough to help her. But nothing can make her forget, nothing i can restore her pence of mind or ban- : DROWNED IX PANADA Special te The Telegraph Marietta. Pa., Dec. IS. Word has been received here announcing: the drowning of Amos Beamesderfer, in Lake Uv, Canada, while on a hunting trip. He was a son of Henry M. Beum | Economical Eating Hominy is good eating —but it needs richness. When cooked and ready to serve, drop a large piece of */frmours Silverchum Oleomargarine in the center of the platter. That will provide the necessary richness. It costs less and tastes better than most butter. Marie under I 43MOUR^COMPANY (•overnment SuprrvinloD y ■ f ~ The Sweetest Way to Tell the Story 1, 2 and 5-lb. Packages OORGAS' REXALL 16 N. Third Street, and Penna. Station v* = — —J Christmas Business Iff promises to be large this year, and you l - : . Lj wln need the services of a good bank ST'*' " it'i ): to facilltate your affairs, and make the Wjg payment of your bills easy by having a •'Jp''iHi' 7 'WT:lMkSS fog checking account in a good bank. If we would suggest that you open an ac- Jr'S*] count wlth us bfetore your Xrnas business s Ist National Bank 224 Market St. f'' ' f a • * FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH DECEMBER 18, 1914. ish her remorseful musings on what j her womanhood might have meant to , her. It pays to be good. It pays to be I at peace with yourself, to be able to j look the world proudly in the face j and know it does not dare think of j you disrespectfully. There is infinite satisfaction in thinking you were wise enough and clever enough to pick out a clean path in a world full of boggy, swampy ones. It is joyous to have no dread of the debt of your own contracting and no fear of ghosts from your past. The quiet, clear-eyed, clean-think ing. pure-living girl will in all likeli hood some day be a happy wife and bleassed mother. She will have the gift of her good character as well as of her love to bring to the man for whom she cares. And for her chij dren she will have the proud heri tage of her own simple strength and purity. Let undesirable men call you "slow" and thank Heaven you have this quality to repel their dangerous in terest. Let silly, weak sisters crit it !s> you for your lack of "ganieness" and then surprise them by being game ' enough in a good way to endure their sneers and strong enough to resist their influence for evil. It pays to be good. And if you are not good, you will never cease paying for your weakness or wickedness. esderfer, of Manheim, and was about II years of age. He left Uancaster county several years ago to engage in the au tomobile business at Lebanon, and later entered the hotel business. He Is sur vived by a widow and two children, one sister and two brothers. The body will be brought home for burial. A DAINTY CORSET COVER A New Model with Comfortable Shield Sleeves. By MAY~MANTON } \ 8484 Corset Cover, 34 to 4a bust. 467 Embroidery Design. There are many women to whom this corset cover is sure to appeal for it pro vides enough support for the necessary shields. It is simple, too, with only under arm scams, the upper edges being caught together at the shoulders. In the illustra tion, it is embroidered and hand work is always dainty and attractive. Lace or embroidered trimming can be substituted or scalloped edges combined with lace insertion could be used. If the slits are not worked, beading should be applied over the neck edge to regulate the size. Fine cotton crepe is a good material and one much liked while batiste and lawn and fabrics of the sort are always used. The peplutn which is joined to tiie lower edge holds the corset cover perfectly in place while it does away with all bulk under the skirt. For the medium size, the corset cover will require i 3 s yds. of material 36, yds. 44 in. wide. The pattern of the corset cover 8484 is cut in sizes from 34 to 42 inches bust measure. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper, on receipt of ten cents. Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. PKRRY FARMER' INSTITUTE Frogrnm I'repnreil Eor Next Week'" ScaaionH Special to The Telegraph Blain, Pa., Dec. 18. Following is the program of the Farmers' Institute to be held in the town hall next Monday and Tuesday: Opening session on Monday after noon Prayer by the Rev. J. W. Keener* address of welcome by Profes sor S. IS. Harkins: "Work of Farmers' Institute by J. T. Campbell, of Harts town, Pa.; "Selecting and liaising the Calf to Improve the Dairy Herd" by Dr. M. E. Conrad, of Westgrove, Pa.; "Potato Culture" by Sheldon W. Funk, of Boyertown, Pa.; question box; ad journment. Monday evening "The Open Book," by Professor Newton Kerstetter, of Blain; recitation by Miss Edith Bist line; "Some Wonders of. Nature" by S. W. Funk; recitation by Miss Josephine Sheaffer: "The Farm of Life" by J. T. Campbell. Tuesday morning Prayer by the Rev. T. R. Gibson; "Economic Mainte nance of Productive Power of Soil" by J T. Campbell: "Hogs the Most Profit able Breed of How t" liaise Them" by W. C. Smith; "Profitable Apple Culture by S. W. Funk: "Cow Stable Construc tion, Sanitary and Comfortable" by Dr. M. E. Conrad. ... Tuesday afternoon Prayer by the Rev. J. C. lteighard; "Selecting and Breaking Horses For Farm and Mar ket" by Dr. M. E. Conrad; "Commercial Fertilizer and the Value of Home Mix ing" by S. W. Funk; "Poultry Lice, Gapes and Diseases" by J. T. Campbell: question box; adjournment. Tuesday evening "Concrete Con struction For the Farm" by Dr. M. E. Conrad: recitation by Miss Ruth Pryor; "Countrv Home Improvements" by J. T Campbell; recitation by Miss Anna L Fetro: "An Appeal to Our Farmers' Boys" by S. W. Funk. C M Bower, of Blain, chairman of countv institutes, will preside. Mem bers of the committee are: George M. Stroup. George F. Stine, A. D. Neidigh, David Stambaugh. Samuel Wentz and A. J. Shumaker. Asthmador Guaranteed to Relieve Asthma [ "I have arranged with George A. iGorgas, lfi North Third street, that | every sufferer from Asthma, Hay ! Fever or Bronchial Asthma in Harris- I burg can try my treatment entirely at iny risk," Dr. Rudolph Schiffmann j announces. He says: "Buy a 50-cent , package of my Asthmador or Asthma i dor Cigarettes, try it, and if it does j not afford you immediate relief, or if you do not find it the best remedy you have ever used, take it back to George A. Gorgas and he wllf return your money, cheerfully and without any question whatever. After seeing the grateful relief it has afforded in hun dreds of cases, which had been consid ered incurable, and which had been given up in despair, I know what it ! will do. I'am so sure that it will do | the siiiiie with others that 1 am not 1 afraid to guarantee it will relieve In stantaneously. The druggists handling Asthmador will return your money if you say so. You are to be the sole | judge and under this positive guaran tee, absolutely no risk is run in buying ! Asthmador." • Persons living elsewhere will be sup ! plied under the same guarantee by their local druggist or direct by Dr. R. Schiffmanti, St. Paul, Minn. Adver i tisement. BELL PAINLESS DENTISTS 10 North Market Square Harrisburg We do the best dental work that can possibly be done and we do it at charges that are most moderate. Painless extraction free when plates are ordered. Largest and most complete ottices in the city; sanitary throughout. I.ady attend ant. Hours: 8 a. m. to 9 p. m. Sundays. 10 a. m. to 1 p. in. UMBRELLAS "Hull's Famous" Gold and Silver Mounted Handles, for Ladles and Gentlemen from SI.OO up. , JOS. D. BRENNER Diamond Mrrrhanl nnri Jeweler Ko. 1 North Third St. THE MASTER KEY BY JOHN FLEMING WILSON By special arrangement for th paper a nhoto-drama correspond ing to the instalments of "T Master Key" may now be seen the leading moving picture the, ters. By arrangement made w the Universal Film Manufacture Company it is not only possible read "The Master Key" in tt paper, but also afterward to - moving pictures of our story. COPYRIGHT. IDI I. Ill" JOHN I'l l: ING WILSON But h"'\v to prevent blm'f Wllkc. son poniUv.'d this problem till his dart face was suffused with angry blood There was no way hut the way of vlo lenee. Among his sensuous appetite was none for blood, hut he nerved him self to his task and shortly after mid Any called for his horse and rode out stating that he was going across thi divide to see about a fresh supply of wood. In the saddle scabbard he ear ried a short saw. • •••••• Spanning ail arroyo hetwen two hllb halfway to Silent Valley was s shor bridge of considerable height It was luidafternoou when llarry Wilkersou threw the bridle rein over his pony's head and climbed down the hill slope till he was directly under the bridge. Then he pulled the little saw out of his shirt bosom and began work. Fifteen minutes luter he* climbed up to the road, broke the saw in two, flung the pieces Into the brush and rode away, lie did not go far. From his place of vantage halfway ;tp the hill he waited. The hour that elapsed before he heard the coughing nf the motor seemed an endless sticces sion of deadly seconds, each marked by a stabbing breath. Then he saw the truck emerge from the cut and com mence to rumble heavily down the I slope. John Dorr was driving. With him was one of the hands. The heavy truck bumped upon the bridge, and in the desert silence the man on the hill saw It quietly sway to j one side and then plunge downward to the rocks below. Before the souud of that crash could reach his listening ears he saw a sudden burst of flame Bhoot up a dense swirl of smoke. Then, like the faraway crackling of a fire, j came the noise of the yielding timbers, j followed by a dull boom. "My God!" whispered Wilkerson to ! himself. "The gasoline tank exploded 1 and the car is 011 fire!" He crouched \ ill the brush, waiting to see whether j any one emerged from the gulch. No j one did. The bridge burned fiercely. \ At least Ao one would ever know the j cause of this catastrophe, and John | Dorr would not go to San 'Francisco. . Instinct told him to flee the scene. But n stronger passion overcame hiin; he must see for himself what had hap pened. He mounted his horse and rode iwiftly down the slope. The truck had turned completely over and lay broken and smoldering across the waterworn bowlders. Wil kersou could not see two forms; all he discerned through the eddying smoke was the body of John Dorr, flung some distance from the tri'ek. his pallid face turned to the blazing nky. "Dead!" muttered YVHkerson, chilled with the horror of the thing he had done. It bit Into his very soul, that scene, until he could not stand it longer and rode furiously away toward the other side of the divide. lie must go on his supposed errand about the wood and know nothing of this. On the crest of the mountain he halt ed and looked back. Far below him a thin curl of gray smoke marked the site of the murder. Knowing tliat he j was safe, Wilkerson experienced a tre mendous reaction. lie raised himself exultantly in his stirrups. He was now master of the "Master Key" mine. 1 CHAPTER X. In the Heart of Chinatown, W* - """"""" !TII quick decision Wilkerson turned his horse toward Valle Vista. lie felt in his pockets to see how much money he had. He discovered that through an oversight he had put into his pocket before leaving the office the last San Francisco mint check for something like 53,000. There was besides this a j couple of hundred dollars. lie pulled this out. stared at it, laugh ed and went on. "Frisco for mine," said he. The evening sun was pouring a pale blue light through a high Pacific fog when John Dorr came to his senses. Twenty feet away the machine was (smoldering and the smell of oil and varnish lay like a miasma in the gulch, j He could hardly breathe. He strug j gled painfully up the slope toward the | road and then lost consciousness again, j It was only for a moment, for Tom | Kane, desert wise, traveling In the cool : of the evening, stopped his burros at ; the top of the declivity, wondering what the fire was. He saw that the bridge was gone. This might be due to tramps camped in the dry bed of the creek, not attending to their blaze. He led the burros off the road and down the slope, only to stop with an exclamation such as he hud not used in years. John Dorr lay there with his fingers clutched into the gray marl. He stooped over and saw that the body, bulking heavily in the misty light, still held Its vital spark. "Where is Hickman, the driver?' The cook peered around and then onc< more bent over the motionless form |of the young engineer. With great ex ertlon he managed to lift him up am' place him across one of the pack sad i dies, John's arm automatically clast j ing the little animal's neck. Seein , him secure, and coming to his sense ; Kane went down to the smoldering r< ' mains of the machine to search fo j his companion. One glance was suff! j cient. He quietly went back and atari ed his Journey towurd the mine. HI old hands, seared by years of cooking patted the almost inanimate form ol Dorr. [T;> Be Continued Monday.] Try Telegraph Want Ads. sX lIIOOKG I « p »si? JOREALSHOEMAKERSO £2 TinXmas 217—Market Street—2l7 TiiiXmas Li?i rk sv'oo' rS A " AyS Women's Hand Turned Fancy Fur \ allies at Jl.tb Rntl Felt Juliets. "ex I a''''a™ sUes. gjg '^lm 11 toien. A big lot of men's tan and black leath- " "women's' Black,' Grav and Brown er house slippers. Opera or Everett. TO- Felt House Slippers. All JQ- All sizes. Actual $1.25 values at....'«» sizes. 75c values, at WINTER SHOES FOR IV.EN ] Women's Gaiter Boots ] J cv IIKAI, M VALIKS—Come In I DPP S fill J*! WP" "T / tan, patent and dull leather ■Jllvv' (111(1 <v*W »7iv 1® I / kZ-,:H $0 45 Button Style L I \ r L button mod m els. All ™~™ Fashion's Latest Whins—the H i £ 1 l sizes new Ualter pattern with short R I 1 _ . ... n>_j ap patent leather vamp and foxing M \ Rough Weather J1.95 S & to *?i \ Shoes. a Shofs— 4sjj' \- Ideal shoes for rough many .styles, .In- 8 Ja. weather. Tan and eluding Over Gal- JfiS blut ' k . storm calf up- ter Patterns with *** . |gjy \ Per« with two (vt«- black cloth uppers. J M n " 1 colized) soles. Blu- $2.50 aj n > kfl) Rulihers, s»e J cher models; $2.50 values !fcl HI I Mrn'» Arctlrit, #Sc. values. at <j)M.. Otr Kfcapfyy Rubber Specials Girls' Slippers Buster Brqwa Leggings I Heavy Fur- Children's tan and black ______ ■ I'. Mini.lt BOOTS for'bova Trimmed Jul- leather Blister Rrnwn vfc£ :ST*£s&l!l I n and *irls. Silk lepr and let«. in different ,ealher «uatei Brown B fleece lined. Sizes 11 to colors. Leggings, patent cuffs; ffl _ I 2at $1 50, kfC It x. Sizes also astrakhan and bear -11 / up to 10Vfe Jl /J} \L to 2, nt skin leggings In p . / at V lltlc t sizes colors. Sizes up to nlf rY •iy"^ I WOMEN'S RUBBERS— /M'M'A " P t0 BAat 8 A at * 125 values at I||sKs9 / Storm or low cut, tßszH jBL ftMP JERSEY LEGGINGS r^^'^lVA I values 56 at 6 °? »«JC ( Misses' and Children's y'"W I I GIRLS' Kill 11 ICltS—Good good warm leggings that VV'-^»3f A grade rubbers. Sizes (in, button to knee. 1A Vir'Mlra V (I up to 2. 50c. vaiues U at t0 2 * 6 °° l"C |l| BOY'S ARCTICS— G lrl»' and Children'. BOYS' SUPPERS f Boys' heavy $1.50 Arc- Mary Jane Bedroom Slip- Regular 75c Alligator J/KJm'fSk W— I "\ tics. Sizes up At) „ pers. Different colors. <IA„ Slippers. Sizes up qn /v'HS&M , fcpe ; "oC z iue, u at to, . : .! Sc ft"C .. , l-... 5pe ?'. a1 ;..39c ewjjp** Money Saving Tips in Our Bargain Department Girls'and Bo.vs'Shoes—Kxtra good rk , ■ gafgßt JOCKEY ™»"»- "SW.ia.fS gsc B®ys High UVVUUI dress. $1.50 values at uuw " f / Bg DftfiTC Women's Sample Shoes —A big lot 10DS I /-»/ / \ r mill I ot samples and odd and end n ft_ wr \ /£*' / \ »• I Uw VI >J pairs of women's shoes. But- MqC \ ill / 1 | ton or lace. Special Waterproof Hlnh \lf I / 1 I For Girls and Clill- Tops of best tan \| I f I 1m I Extra high tops Girls' Ilress Shoe*—Kegular or ex- and black storm ALX I r. 1 with or without cuffs tra high tops. Gunmetal An. calf uppers and 1 }tr \ Tan, patent and dull leather. Sizes up to 2. Hfll. waterproof soles. \ / Vr \ leathers. Sizes jj 75 values, special *»ww Bellows, tongues. ML / \ to 2, at *1.».1i to Sizes 1 to at 4K7 I /V VA1 1 at and sto Children's Shoes—Child's dongola »1.05| up to 13Vs at V I I special at s kin shoes In button or ifln \£ L # lace. Sizes up to 6. 75c 421/ v'^ SI 25 $1.50 cSLj S|, j 41 I iLU men's and women's felt jHQ x pers. 50c values at SHOES—2I7 MARKET ST, 217—BOOK'S SHOES HANCOCK HOTEL DAMAGED Special to The Telegraph Hagerstown. Md.. Dec. 18.—The three-story brick residence of Dr. P. E. Stigers was destroyed and the Monterey Hotel badly damaged by fires yesterday in Hancock, causing a loss of between SIO,OOO and $12,000,. "3 0.. O 9 O V o © v o V O O V* © V U 5 <>Q Q O O O © O I O, © i 0 o a o ° c ° Candy Excellence ° ° —the finest cane sugar, ° <y —the richest cream, o 1 —the purest fruit flavors, I I —the highest grade of nuts c * PLUS ' • ° —expert blending, 0 0 —careful packing, ® 1 —prompt delivery c I make all candies sold by * Pure—fresh—delicious, 9 —the candies par excellence. <y c <r Our Sales Agents iu f J. H. Boher W. P. Cuuuiugliuiu f o Harrisburg are \ F. J. Althouse c o 0 HUYLER'S COCOA, LIKE HUYLEIIS CANDY, IS SUPREME 0 O e o a o o r> <*> f> 00 e> r> r> o <■> o 000 oonnncioooooo'oO partly covered by insurance. Dr. | Stigers' loss is about $S 000 or $9,000 | white the damage to thi- hotel, which > ! was owned by Mrs. Priscilla Bridges, amounts to over $2,000. Two dozen ; guests in the hotel left the building i .| in a hurry AKMY OFFICER OX FURLOUGH I Captain Franklin S. Leiseuring and ! his wife, who were with General ! Kunston, are now enjoying a 60 day furlough and are paying a visit to I Captain Leisuring's mother, Mrs. E. ! H. Leisuring. After the furlough j Captain Leisuring will go on duty od ithe Mexican border in Texas.
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