Working Girls Who Earn $6 A Week "Let Us Try to Help the Working" (iirl Before It Is Too Late, by Giving Her a Living Wage on Which She Can Support Her Ideals and Her Body" KV DOROTHY J)I.V Some of the eminent students of political economy who have been jin;i l.vzing and digesting the figures i brought. out by the investigation into i he wages paid to working girls, have solemnly announced that they find i hat there is 110 connection whatever ; between the amount a girl earns and her morals, and that a girl can he as high principled oh s•> a week as she cjn he on siiO a day. No doubt. I:nt even these fat and prosperous, and well fed, and well clothed invest!- j j.'ators must admit that it is a good j deal easier to be virtuous with plenty i than it is with poverty, and that even temptation whispers with one voice i to tlio woman who has a comfortable 1 home, and a goyd dinner, and a warm . aloak, and with another voice to the j woman who is shivering with cold, who is half starved, and who counts i herself lucky to have even a hard cot j in a dingy hall bedroom to go to when her long day's work is over. i I F.very (iirl Who I- Willing to Work For u Living' Is llonest at Heart. The immoral Becky Sharp laid down j one of the cardinal principles of I human nature when she declared that! she could be as virtuous as anybody I on $5,000 a year. .So say we all. A j lot of virtue is the absence of tempta tion, and they who have lived soft all ' of their lives, who have never been' cold, nor hungry, nor lonely, nor friendless, have no right to sit in i judgment on their poor little sisters who stand starving and shivering on the doorstep of the Cafe of Pleasure, and know that they have but to push i open the door and enter for a little i while, at least, of feasting and merry [ making. It is one of the terrible things of being a woman that every pretty ■ young girl can sell herself. She can I barter her soul, her honor, her very i life for a good time for a little while, j and her ever-present danger is that j ehe will make this losing bargain j nome day when she is a little too cold, I 31 little too hungry, a little too friend- I less and lonely to light any longer for j nil abstract principle. When she does let us pity her in- } stead of condemning her. Above all. j let us try to help her before it is too ■ to te by giving her a living wage on I which she can support not only her I ideals of virtue, but her body. For j be assured of this, and that is that every girl who is willing to work, and \vho tries to make an honest living, I is at heart an honest girl. She wants to be good. She is try- ; ing to be decent and independent, and I to stand on her own feet. The girl | who toils in factory, or store, or office eight hours a day has deliberately' chosen the hard and narrow path, and ] not the easiest way, and she has a j right to our help and our support, and I to enough money for her labor to at i Miss Fairfax Answers Queries V j \ I».\\GEROI'S FRIENDSHIP. HEAR .MISS FAIRFAX: I am twenty-two and for the past two years have had the company of ii young man to and from business every day. This young man is mar ried, but says lie is in lovo with me. He is fond of his home, hut his wife makes no effort to keep it in order and neglects their one child. I am deeply in love with him. but owing to the fact that he is married I do not show him that T care for him. L.IU..IAK .M. The friendship of a married man Established 1867 In hermetically scaled sanitary cans. Finest for tabic use and baking. Ask your grocer for it. Send postal card for booklet of Prize Recipes to P. DUFF & SONS, 920 Duqucsne Way, Pittsburgh, Pa. We Wish You A Very I Christma I ____ ' \ Chas. M. Stieff Piano Co. L. F. BASS, Manager. 24 N. Second St• THURSDAY EVENING. • least enable her to be decently |clothed and dressed, and so far to re move temptation out of her road, j As long as we reward vice with chiffons and champagne and pay vir ! tue and industry with rags and star vation, what hypocrites we are to pro -1 tend that there is no relation between what a girl earns and her morality. She has .$2.70 a week for food, j She cooks her breakfast, a cup of ' weak coffee and, perhaps, if she is flush, an egg over the gas In her hall bedroom. She has a sandwich for | lunch and for dinner blows herself j for cheap food in a cheap restaurant Iwhere the dishes are dingy, and the itable clothes, and the unappetising : l'ood is slammed before her by a ! frowsy waitress. And as she eats her lonely meal she i sees the vision of a woman, young and j beautiful as she is, made more beauti ful by tine clothes, dining in a sump ! tuous restaurant where there is music, and shaded lights, and palms. I and dainty food, and gay company. ■ And the girl knows that she might J lie sitting at that other table —if only | she were willing to pay the price. Thirty cents a week, five cents a | day, she can afford to pay for carfare. This means that she must walk one j way to her work. And as she trudges, j footsore and weary, along the street, j she sees limousines roll by. in which j are other women —perhaps she glimp ses some girl who once worked be ( side her until she grew weary of un j rewarded goodness and bartered her , all for her mess of pottage. SI a Week For Clothes. $2 For I loom Kent All She Can Afford. For clothes she can afford the muni- I lient sum of one dollar a week—one j dollar a week with winds cutting at one like knives, with streets that are .an icy slop that numb the feet and soak through ragged shoes, and all . about her women clothed in velvet and I furs! One dollar a week for clothes, ! when a girl is young and beautiful, and she handles all day long the {triumphs of the milliner's and dress j makers' art that she wants as only I youth and beauty can crave such I things! Surely the Recording Angel j must turn his face away in pity from ; a temptation like that, j Two dollars a week she can spend | for room rent, a bare, bleak place > that is all she knows of home. A hole |in the wall to crawl into when she I comes back from a long day's work. No light, no warmth, no cheery companionship, nothing but a cell as hard and cheerless as that of any con i victed felon in a penitentiary. Look at these pictures and see how j much of life that is worth living a i working girl can buy on six dollars a ! week, and then ligure out on any human plane—on yottr own human ' plane of what you would do if you i were in her place—and see if you j ; think there is any relation between a i I living wage for working girls and | I morality. is always fraught with danger for a young girl. t'nless his unhappiness drives him to leaving his wife and se curing a divorce he has no right to approach you with tales of love. DON'T TELIi HIM. DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am nineteen and in love with the I manager of my place, who is six years my senior. He asked me to go to the theater with him. and as I have known | him for three years 1 went. He acts |as though he cares for me. but has never proposed. Should 1 tell him I love him? SYLVIA M. Don't tell the man that you love him. Men still do the wooing, and by confessing your unasked love you would probably lose what rgard this man now has for you. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH CHRIST'S PROGRAM OF PEACE IS NEAR His Birth Same to People of World as Springtime; Signifies New Beginning TIIK DYNAMITE OF PEACE. The International Sunday School Lesson for December 27 Is "Jesus the World's Saviour aud King."— II Cor. 5:11-21. (By William T. Ellis.) In these days of dynamite it Is well to recall that the word is straight out of the Greek of the New Testa ment, and that it means "power." The modern limitation of the mean ing should not prevent us facing ap parently Incongruous truth, that the new order of human life has to come about through the dynamite of peace, which Is the power of Clear jto all seeing eyes is the work of this /new force In and through the world |in our own time, and by its energy i heaving society ur> to a new and high- J er plane. Of greater significance than I any tidings from the battle front is :the good news, that the program lof Christ, which is a program of j peace, is hastening on Its way. | What else mean all these expres sions of compassion now abroad in the world? How other can we cx- ! plain the visions of the better day and | of the nobler way of living, which .are j lifting themselves above the horizon to the vision of all prophetic spirits? The crisis of history which we are j now witnessing contests not so much ,in the fact of tremendous wars and ! destruction, but of the emergence of new and conquering dynamics whichc ; make certain a nobler life for man jkind. Even by way of the battlefield the triumphal chariot of peace is | progressing. This is the conviction j that springs first to mind when we are called upon, as in the present lesson, to take a long look at the life | and teachings of .lesus which the Sun- I day schools have been studying for two years past. What the Baby Brought. As spring rejuvenates the tired old earth, and as each generation of'babies gives freshness and joy to the older |lives that tend to jadedness and soci ety. so the Christ-child brought to the world a new springtime. His advent was a fresh beginning for the race With the echoes of the Christmas bells still in our ears, we cannot for get the Christ, about whom we have been studying for these many months, coming to earth as a baby. He started his mission on the same level with the rest of us. so eager was the Heavenly Father to crowd close to humanity in sympathy and compre hension. "Baby," "Mother," "Home are great words shining with new radiance because Christ is now in them. First to hear the news straight from Heaven that Christ had come jand that a new way of life had be jgun were the shepherds, the audi ience of the angel choir. Tn the midst of the working men, in the room se. apart for the horses and donkeys— the common man's friends —these shepherds hastened and found a car penter and his wife and the newborn Child. Kings later came from afar, but to the toilers it was first given to acclaim the Messiah. Fittingly so, i for that Baby has broken the shaek i les of slavery and serfdom the world Laround, and is still bringing In a new [day for all who toil. I The life of the common people was the life lived by Jesus. He was not among those who were served by others, but was Himself a servant to the end. A plain Man to the last. His friends and followers having all been common people. He shared a cross—His only earthly throne— with culprits who had been driven beyond the pale of respectability. The New Order. Ilealer and helper to a host was the Master. He labored and He taught, nol as the haughty scribes, but with new words of gentleness and love. Quick to detect this fresh, vital note uttered in their own speech, the common people heard Jesus glad ly. He summoned them to a life ot' the spirit, declaring that not things but thoughts make life. To those whose hearts were set on pomp and grandeur and power and earthly state. lie cried "The Kingdom is within you." His program was for a new world brought in by new men and new women. He gave His life, His personality, His Spirit to help His friends achieve this Kingdom. By these friends and representatives, He would make the world over. Do You Know the Facts? To understand the genius of Jesus, we should know at least the major fact* of His life. That is surely a test, of real culture in this Christian civilization. Yet how many readers of Ihese lines can pass even such a simple examination as that suggested by Peloubet's Notes? In what town was Jesus born? What was His mother's name? How long ago was He born? To what race did lie belong? What was His native country? Describe how you would reach it from your home? Of what Empire was it a province? To what government is it now sub ject ? What two remarkable welcomes to His doming? Where did He spend I lis childhood BAD BREATH Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets Get at the Cause and Remove It. Dr. Kdwards' Olive Tablets, the sub stitute for calomel. act gently on the bowels and positively do the work. People afflicted with bad breath ttlld quick relief through Dr. Kdwards' Olive Tablets. The pleasant, sugar-coated tablets are taken for bad breath by all who know them. Dr. Kilwards' Olive Tablets act gent lv but firmly on the bowels and liver, stimulating them to natural action, clearing the blood and gently purlfying the entire system. They do that which dangerous calo mel does without any of the bad after effects. All the benefits of nasty, sickening, griping cathartics are derived from Dr. Kdwards' Olive Tablets without grip ing, pain or disagreeable effects or any kind. .... , ~ Dr. F. M. Edwards discovered the formula after seventeen years of prac tice among patients aftlietcil with bowel an«l liver complaint with tho at tendant bad breath. Dr. Kdwards' Olive Tablets are pure lv a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil. you Will know them by their olive color. Take one or two every night for a week and note the effect. 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. The Olive Tablet Company, Colum bus. O. "cube OUR »00*S A T 6 P ' and youth? What trade did he learn? Tell the story of His first visit to Jeru salem ? How old was lie when ile began to preach V 'Who prepared the way for llis work? Why was Jesus baptized? Over what three temptations did lie gain the victory? What were the themes of His preach ing? By what kind of deeds did He prove that llis mission was from God? Name some of the miracles lie wrought. What was the tirst one? What great sermon did he preach? How many spostles did He choose? How many of them can you name? •Name the three great divisions of Pale stine west of the Jordan? In which of these three did Me spend the most time? How many years long was His min istry? Xame the different kinds of mira cles lie wrought? Were they all for the good of the peoplo? Xame as many of His parables as you cam. Why did he speak in parables? What did Jesus do especially for children? Tell the story of the Good Samaritan. What did Jesus teach about riches? What was His teaching about the Sabbath? What did He teach about becoming His disciples? Tell the story of the host Sheep. Tell the story of the Triumphal En try into Jerusalem. What did Jesus teach about the Com mandments? Tell about Jesus and the Bethany home. The story of the East Supper. The story of Jesus in the Garden of Gcthsemanc. The story of the Betrayal of Jesrs. of what did the Jews accuse Jesus? Of what was He accused in the Trial I before Pilate? What did Pilate say about Him? Where was Jesus crusifled? Where was He buried? When did he rise from the dead? How many times did He appear to I His disciples? What irreat commission did He give. His disciples? From what place did He ascend to heaven? The Utile Become Larger. In print, from the platform, anil in conversation, one hear* strange words about the failure of the Christianity of Christ in these days of world up heaval. Some are saying tlist Christ ianity has abdicated its mission. Not so fast. Let ns consider. Jesus was born in a little world, an obscure Homan province. Even the known world it covered or touched was but a small part of the earth's surface. Whole continents and races were un known. Highways had to be laid and channels opened for the life of the Christ to follow. His truth could go 011 faster than the people whom it in spired. Yet through the centuries, which seem so long to our petty reck oning, but which are but a small fragment of the totality of human existence up to date, and smaller yet to Him with whom a thousand years are hut as a day, the truth and power of Christ have steadily 'advanced In ever extending conquest. In our own time the uttermost bounds of human ity have been reached by his claims to kinship. Does it not seem as If the hour had struck for great things. All the world Is now one world; that lesson It has learned in this school of war. The old material civilization, with Its elaborate culture and wordly wisdom and ar rognnt power has broken down ut terly. The goal of humanity cannot be attained by the sciences. Now the mind of Christ must have a l'resh, free change among men. Humanity as ready for a new program and for a new dynamic. The present pros pect is thrilling and to be alive in such a day as tills is the greatest privilege enjoyed by mortals. <">ne thing alone is needed: that life must, be yielded to Christ ere it can be wielded by Him. Our prayer might be "Dominus, dominate." "O Lord, be lord, Master mine, master me," Tn the words 01' the Scripture portion suggested for to-day: "And he dted for all. that they that live should no longer live unto themselves, but unto Him who for their sakes died and rose again. Wherefore if any man is in Christ, he Is a new creature: the old [things are passed away; behold, they are become new." STATE'S BUILDING PROGRESSING FIST I ' Commission's Executive Committee Selects Artist to Go to the Panama Structure Pennsylvania's building at the Pana ma-Pacific exposition which opens next vear in San Francisco will be ready on time and the splendid series of paintings ordered for the otnciai home of the State's people while in San Francisco is progressing'. Port raits of Governor Tener and Governor elect Brumbaugh will be placed in the building and there will be some very handsome views of the State Capitol. The executive committee of the com mission met yesterday at the' Gover- i nor's office with Architect Henry Horn bostle, of Pittsburgh, here to detail I the report of progress. Additional, contracts were let with Guiseppe Donato. of Philadelphia, for two ornamental flag pole bases, to cost S3OO, and with August Zeller, of Pitts burgh, for four plaques at a like cost. Edward Trumbull, a Pittsburgh ar tist, was selected to go to San Fran cisco to oversee the placing of the paintings and works of art, as well as to supervise the interior decorating of the building. Mr. Trumbull's agree ment with the commission Is that these paintings and other works of Fresh Every ° Hour 1 Really fresh from our manufao- * I ° turing establishments right to you. o o Huyler's Candies are made in 14< ° 9 different cities! e 0 —l°ng delays in shipments c 0 —No handling and rehandling. c I o The packing of all candies is done ■© I j f with special care to preserve fresh © <> ncss. « 0 Quality—purity—and freshness are * i 0 guaranteed by | 1 © 9 Our Sales Agents in fJ. H. Boher W. P. Cunningham © I a Harrisburg are I F. J. Althouse © Jll 4 HUYLER'S COCOA. LIKE- HUYLER'S CANDY, IS SUPREME f ® oO o <•> f>f>r>aooooor>oo oon © 0000 0 0000 OO O 1111 DECEMBER 24, 1914'. !art will be so installed as to permit their removal at the close of the ex position without injury to them or the I building. They will be brought to i Harrisburg. | SKRIOUSLV INJURED BY FALL Special to The Telegraph Mechanicsburg, Pa., Dec. :f —Mrs. Mary L. Sense man, widow of John E. ! Senesman. met with a serious acci dent on Tuesday evening when she fell down the cellar steps. She was found in a semiconscious condition. | and assisted upstairs. An examination i by the doctor showed that the socket jof the hip bone was crushed, making 'a complete recovery impossible, owing [to her advanced age, S3 years. She lis suffering from the pain and shock. I Mrs. Senseman resides with her sis ter, Mrs. Knisely, in South York I street. 1)1 KS IN HOSPITAL Special to The Telegraph Shippensburg. Pa., Dec. 24. —Mr. Swartz, who was recently injured at the Peerless Table Works, died last evening at the Carlisle hospital. He was injured by a board striking him in I the stomach while he was operating a circular saw. He is survived by his wife and one son, Lloyd. OFFICE WILDING BCRN'EI) Special to The Telegraph Duncannon, Pa., Dec. 24. Last evening the office of Justice of the Peace .Tohn G. Zigler, at Benvenue, across the river, was burned to the ground. A number of books and of fice fixtures were burned. The loss is about SSOO. TO PUSH RELIEF IRK AFTER HOLIDAY RUSH Money-raising Events Will Follow on Heels of Yuletide; Dan sant January 3 "I want to give something for tlm cause. Guess tliis's the right place?" A plainly dressed man asked tlm question of Miss Mary B. Robinson, who was on duty yesterday afternoon at the Red Cross division of the Home and War Relief Association, 7 South Front street. Receiving the assurance that he hud found the proper place, the man handed over a dollar and apologized for not giving more. "It's all I can stand, just now,' he finished, as Miss Robinson expressed her appreciation of the contribution. Contributions have come in slowly to all departments, according to reports. The finance committee is at work, but operations are not extensively planned until after the holidays. The only money-raising event that has been an nounced is The' Dansant at the Country Club, Saturday, January Others are due when the Christmas festivities are finished with. 3