\fr2oMen r^lnre^s Why My Husband Left Me By DOROTHY DIX. "1 lost my husband," said the eighth woman, "because I was over-sonsitlve. A "In poems and novels the woman "who is all quivering sensibilities, and who shrinks under a touch as does the mimosa, is an alluring and romantic ligure. but, believe me, she belongs In a book. She had no place in the give and-take of domestic lifej where the chief requisite for happiness is pos sessing an epidermis thick enough to turn off family jabs as the hide of a rhinoceros turns off spear thrusts. "Now I am the great original hu man sensitive plant. As a child I was a cry-baby. As a sirl I was a shy, morbid creature, distrustful of my self, always imagining that I was be ing passed over, and fancying flights in every careless word and look. "I married a man who was—-just a man. He was a fine fellow in every way, but it was a purely masculine way. Ho was wholesome, and practi cal, and commonscnsical, and the least subtle and psychic person that I have ever met. "Why he picked me out for a wife I <lo not know. Perhaps women of the shy and retiring violet type appeal to men of his kind. Perhaps it was my very difference to him that attracted him before marriage as it bored him afterwards. Many men, I fancy, marry women in a vain attempt to solve a feminine conundrum that piques their curiosity, and whose answer they never guess, and of which after a time, they weary trying to unriddle. BRISTLED WITH PEELINGS. "Well, we were married, and in stead of finding that I was the gentle little household pet that he had sup posed I would be, my husband discov ered that I bristled with "feelings" as a porcupine does with quills, and I was just about as soothing and pleas ant as a companion. He never could know how I was going, to take any thing, or when he was going to wound my precious sensibilities, or when at some perfectly innocently intended word or act on his part I would burst into tears and fly to my room. "I used to be sorry for myself. I now pity my poor husband. Living with me must have been as nerve wearing a proceeding as trying to walk on eggs, for my feelings were spread out all over the place, and to keep from treading on them required more than mortal skill and agility. "My husband was a busy man, RED PIMPLES ON LITTLE BOY'S FACE Dry and Left Face Scaly, Could not Sleep Till Tired Out. Used Two Cakes Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment. Child Entirely Well, w.'< 2113 Carter St., Wilmington, Del.— T "My little boy of seven years wa« broken out with rash on the left «lde of his face. It eame in red pimples. Tliey fwere dry and left, his face scaly. At times he would dig his face. Rest, he couldn't get till just so tired out he would fall asleep. ''l used different, drug* and salves and found thoy didnogood. Nothing did any good. Finally I sent for a free sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment. 1 washed his face with warm water and the Soap and applied the Ointment. 1 bought t wo cakes of Cuticura Soap and some Cuti cura, Ointment and he is entirely well. Nothing but Cuticura Soap and Ointment did it." (Signed) Mrs. Ullie M. Lyons, October 27, 1914. It is better to prevent than to heal. Cuti cura Soap and Ointment are prophylactic* as well as emollients. Sample Each Free by Mail With 32-p. Skin Book on request. Ad dress post-card "Cuticura, Dept. T. Bo»- ton. ' Sold throughout the world. EAT LESS MEAT If BUCK HURTS Take a glass of Salts to flush kidneys if bladder bothers you Bating meat regularly eventually produces kidney trouble in some form or other, says a well-known authority, because the uric acid in meat excites the kidneys, they become overworked; get sluggish; clog up and cause all sorts of distress, particularly backache and misery in the kidney region; rheumatic twinges, severe headaches, acid stomach, constipation, torpid liver, sleeplessness, bladder and uri nary irritation. The moment your back hurts or kidneys aren't acting right, or if blad der bothers you, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any good pharmacy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days nnd your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts Is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com bined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush clogged kid neys and stimulate them to normal activity; also to neutralize the acids in the urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts cannot injure anyone; makes a delightful effervescent lithia water drink which millions of men and women take now and then to keep the kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus avoiding serious kidney disease. —Advertisement. Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect May 24, 1914. TRAINS leave Harrisburg— for Winchester and Martlnsbura at 6:03. *7:50 a. m., *2:40 p. m. For Hagerstown, Chambersburg, Car lisle, Mechanicsburg and lntermedlata stations at 6;03, *7:60, *11:63 a. aZ •8:40, 6:32. *7:40, »11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanicsburg at t:4B a. in.. 2:18. 3:17 <:80, 9:30 a. m. For Dillsburg at 6:03. *7:60 and •11:61 a. m.. 2:IS. *3:40. 6:31 and p. m. •Dally. All other trains dally exceot Sunday. H. A. RIDDLE, J. H. TONGB. Q. £. a. OS r CLOC» U REPAIRING or adjusting, jewelry cleaning or repullahlng, take It to SPRINCER™^^^ 2OS MARKET ST.—Bell Phoa* WEDNESDAY EVENING, hard worked and full of cores, and having assured me a million times that ho loved me, and assumed my support for life to prove it, he natur rally suppsed that the question was settled and that he might go 'about his other affairs in peace. But my sensitiveness would not brook this. "If a day passed that he did not swear that he worshipped me 1 1 im agined myself neglected. If he failed to kiss mc when he was hurried off in the morning I saw in that an unmis takable indication that he had wear ied of me and had fallen in Jove with some other woman, and by night I had worked myself up into such a state ot hysterical jealousy that it took hours of persuasion and assev eration of his undying affection to calm me. "Such scenes were a frequent occur rence in our home, and while they gratified my morbid vanity, for thai is all that sensitiveness is. they gra dually killed' my husband's affection for me. They made love a duty, and i obllgittii/n, instead of a gift. They made him know that he was under contract to deliver a kiss every morn ing as long as he lived, or else pay for the lack of it with a scene, and when a woman forces that issue, she has lost out. "My accursed sensitiveness also killed all coniidence between my hus band and myself. We could never dis cuss the most trivial affair without my getting my feelings hurt. If he said that we could not afford this or that, 1 would immediately becomlr furiously angry because I imagined that he intended a covert criticism of the way I managed the household, and I would say that if he thought I was too extravagant, it was a pity he hadn't married some woman who was a better tlna'ncier. "And so it went. I made any com radeship between us impossible, for how can you chum with a woman who goes about with a chip on her shoul der always looking for offense, always suspioioning -the worst, and with whom any frank conversation is ab solutely impossible? "After a while my husband grew tired of trying to handle me with kid ' gloves, and sidestepping my supersen sitive feelings. Instead of inviting me to weep on the second button of his waistcoat when 1 burst into tears at nothing, he slammed the door be hind him and told me not to act like a fool. And that was the end. I lost him through coddling my sensibilities instead of trying to act like a rational [human being." A SMART WINTER COAT A New Model that can be Made to take Two Distinctly Different Forms. By MAY MANTON i $438 Double-Breasted Coat, 34 to 44 bust. It is not often that one pattern can be i made to serve two entirely different end* but here is a coat that can be made with a tunic to wear over a plain skirt or with out the tunic 1o wear over a fancy skirt and the difference is so complete that it scarcely would be recoKi.ized as funda- ! mentally the same. The short double- ' breasted coat is much liked for the tunic skirts and for the draped skirts that still keep their place and the coat with the open tunic is one of the newest of the sort. The model while it includes all the latest features, is eminently a simple one, for the seams to the shoulders mean easy fit. The tunic when used is joined to the lower edge and the model will be found an excellent one for all the fashionable serges, for the broadcloth that is so much liked, as well as for gabardine, wool velours and the like. | For the medium size, the coat with ' tunic will require 6 yds. of material 27, yds. 36, 3% yds. 44, 3 yds. 50 in. wide, with 1$ yd. of velvet for the collar; the coat without tunic 3H yds. 27, 2J4 yds. 1 36, 1 J'g yds. 44, 1 yds. 50. The pattern 8438 JS cut in sizes from 34 to 44 inches bust measure. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion De partment of this paper, on receipt of tea cent*. Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. EDUCATIONAL Harrisburg Business College 329 Market St. fall term, September first. Day and night. 29th year. Harrisburg, Pa. WINTER TERM BEGINS MONDAY. .TAN. 4TH DAY AND NIGHT SESSIONS SCHOOL OF COMMERCE 15 S. MARKET SQUARE HARRISBURG, PA. Try Telegraph Want Ads. WKaufman's Clean Sweep Saleff Store »«j«' >nd Girls- Every GirU , Balh Robts Store Opens w«tk t. gg c jm T Very Very w'sofo 95c Ope»* g All colors and all Made PM y p I Men's Silk Hose, black and And on Sale I I infants' coats *i r n K , colors; 25c value, 1C p B Worth t. $4.98 For «Pl.*>U, 1 or 10c ALL DAY THURSDAY Jg| oddi«tand^l,*,l^. - N ( Men's Silk Four-in- Men's SI.OO & $1.25 TUTTDCT\ A V'C Infants' Long Muslin Skirts Untrimmed Velvet Hats Hand Ties KID GLOVES X Jtl U JK.wJL/ A X u Worth to 39c, For Worth to $3.00, For 1 25c value, 1 A Not all sizes, /?Q_ IC for iyc for ovc T>pnnM rnnPON IJC z^c L Jji\.VJ VJIII. VV UJI VXI Small lot anil .-sliulitl.v Assorted shapes and eol- I V -J soiled. ors. I" 1 .. ,rll IT L (Bring this with you) 1 Men's Blue Chambray en 5 , p on cvc lg " , n c ... Muslin P P »; rna » c I' V Work Shirts neck JERSEYS 6 Hours 0( Broom Selling Worthß9c For " CHILDREN'S HOSE Collars attached; Gray only, 75c O (J* H«A • L m • ' IT 50c value n- value, for £*%JC HH 8.30 to 11.30 m the Morning tyQf for fa I C ' Mi 2t05 in the Afternoon , ... They are lust blnck and | *——^—ii—Made ol good qualit\ mus- ribbed: sold all over at 10c. \ N Men's Percale Dress H|U|l 4 ®c Large Size 4-Stmg Brooms * ' % MEN'S SEAMLESS SHIRTS For lOe E»'h I [ TRIMMED HATS ] ( \ I COTTON HOSE U u„der«d cuff™ or" ■Mil «. Worth to $4.00, For Women's Handkerchief. n ra In i2. la c k a " Co '" T a "" h " di WHIMM * " 09 C i vata«! 2 Jor C .... 6 J /Zc lor™*": 45c Only One Broom to a Customer ( „„ .CK^E* 0 ( v •VV J v • j mwm%%wwtwwwm»v>w%%%vt%%%%w**%%%%w%»w\w%wiw»vm%%wwwwvw%%%%»m%%*wwmw\vmwvw%%%twvw%vwww<ivw%%»v%w%tv»»v>»>*v»\wj # Here Are The Biggest Kind of Clean Sweep Reductions Ever Made ij { on WOMEN'S and MISSES' SUITS, COATS and DRESSES | >ll SUITS COATS DRESSES Extra Size # I Women's «v- O *i_ sold up g* m n Women's x f ■ sold up /•» a Women s and Misses Cloth and Silk a <! 11l — J*»&«rs3.7s Suits, Coats and ji! # ! Newest styles, all-wool materials In Made of all-wool materials, Black and .. „. 1 u,< '' , __ |> ■ (i smut styles niKt rnlnrN, in »eri!f*. , i ■j| every color and size. colors. .Newest full length styles. All «.r.-,i<s, silk poplin. »iik meamUne unit I > ;i 1 C |! sizes. pretty velvetn; nil % J \ !! i fj; Women's &O J. sold up, 1 - ] li| ir;r»„„,r™fc'r">o-3w * oo Women ' sand Misses ' c ' oth and Silk ° ne lot of Ex,ra Si2e Suits: sold ts nn I S\< Clean Sweep Sale Price I-*" «P«^* VV IX t C AA up to $15.00, for j! I 1 i! Splendid styles, materials and colors in I |VAeC£kfi JISp «4i pJk 1 1111 ~ ~ , , K ; All-wool mixtures and black thibets. C99W*™ 1 SAl,trf>J,W Oridn nml ooiln, anil broken aMnrlmciits. < 1 1 all sizes. _ t HICK « I I ]i Xewest styles in every si/ze. Han«l*ome M j te*. every color nnd »t/e ]| i j\\ Women's & O •. sold up * n rA m Freach .erae. .iik popim a.d .ilk mi- One lot of Extra Size Suits and tf»Q J-f| I; %;! Misses' OUIIS to $20.00 .1 X Kll Women's & p . sold up A/* fA nt ' Coats; sold up to SIB.OO, for <; i #j! Clean Sweep Sale l'rleo » * Misses VsOAlSto Sl .>.oo JpJVf ][ j JI; Beautiful materials, styles and colors. *'« 1,11 s "< <l> ,I,ati .... Women's and Misses' Cloth and Silk One-lnt r>f Fvira Siyp an H /t» «r»__ !; \ C'' Ml sizes Hundreds of pretty coats in splendid" s , ro One lot ot H«xtra oize ouits and u* O <[ J Ij| all-wool mateiials. All sizes. DfPCQPC #i"'.oo. Cl«b\x *7 QC Coats, sold up to $20.00, for ... »\J\J ;! |I; Women's & P *i - sold up An rm •» i'HICK .■'P. " j| |i; Misses' OUUS to $22 fit ,'ice ■ ▼ Clean Sweep Sale .Vco^^^« UU *" " ,,k Coats, sold up to $30.00, for .. . 5b 15.00 !| % [ All new materials, styles and colors in ' " v ' 9t every size. . A variety of pretty materials, colors ! Jj! ' ' and Styles in all Sizes. Women's and Misses' Cloth and Silk WOMEN'S EXTRA SIZE CLOTH ii if ST'" Suits r«s«. sl2 »: r- tii Dmses»p«ss9.7s tt AA I lj! Clean Sweep Sale Price E7 CleTSweep Be.ut.fu, .t>l« color. rCSSeS Pnce «PD.UU jj I Stunning styles. Finest materials in all ~ ur , ri mn.ed Plushes, Zibellncs, etc. »««■".«.. Ctanneuoe, Crepe de Chine nnd np 7,', ni" » ny y "«"«> ««Ke. ,j c !' the newest shades. All sizes. Black and colors. All sizes. imported S<TKTO». All >Jce>. * f J A Few Men's Pants Bar- TI r« I c ll- cut* Clean Sweep Prices on All 1 gains at 1-2 and Less lli| WJ 1U lhC Greatest JaQUary oelling or Men S Boys' Suits and Overcoats 5 Men's Blue Serge PANTS, lUEill a „d B oyß ' Good WINTER CLOTHING Boys' NORFOLK SUITS, SI,OO Continues Tomorrow T ■r - They should be sold at $3.50. 1 Only 50 pairs of the fine plain -- . i Men s $lO and C W $2.89 Men's Fancy Worsted Pants sl2 Winter Suits *T Balmacaans at "■tpt-T They should fetch $4.00. ff 4Jg fk New Winter Suits of fine Cassimeres and The newest Balmacaans and Shawl Col- Boys LONG OVERCOATS, J p M Worsteds Many of them all wool. All lar Overcoats. The greatest coat bargain in * sizes to 44 chest. Harrisburg. All sizes. J The same material and the They are values to $5.00. ' same style of pants other stores BOYS'RAINCOATS 'S I —— j ——————^l^— Breeders' Association to Convene Here, Jan. 26 At the annual meetings of the Penn sylvania Breeders' Association and the Pennsylvania Dairy Union, which will be held In the Board of Trade Building In this city, January 26-2S, "Tubercu losis" and "Foot-and-Mouth Disease" will be leading topics. The fertility of the soil will be given special attention, the discussion being led by Dr. C. E. Throne, of the Ohio Experimental Sta tion. "Pastures" will be discussed by Professor F. D. Gardner, of State Col leen, and Professor W. H. Tomhave will give a meat demonstration. D. D. Altken. president of the American Hol steln-Frieslan Association. will lead the discussion on pure-bred stock. Berkshire, Holstein and other breed ers' associations will hold meetings at the same time, it will be a big and lively time for stockmen and dairy men. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH HEATH OF GARIBALDI STIRS WAII FEELING IN ITALY By Associated Press Rome, via Paris, Jan. 6, 11.55 a. in. —The death on the French battlefield of Lieutenant Bruno Garibaldi has caused a revival of public sentiment throughout Italy in favor of war, this feeling being augmented by the be lief that the Italian military prepara tions have now been perfecyd. About 1,000,000 men will be arms within tho prcsene montlj and another million men are being formed into a reserve ready to be called out at a moment's notice. x POLICIES EXCLUDE WAII RISK By Associated I'ress Paris, Dec. 31 (correspondent of the Associated Press). —One of the Ameri can life insurance companies lias paid out about $400,000 on policies held by soldiers who were killed in the war. The last policies issued which cover t the war risk woer dated July 25. After that date American policies were so modified as to exclude all risks con nected with the war. A captain of ar tillery who paid liis first premium on a $5,000 policy on July 25 was killed in one of the early ensagements. CHARGED WITH THEFT Nathan Parker and Bessie Parker were each held under S2OO bail on a charge of stealing a tablecloth from Joseph Abedhlmed, ft street vender, after a hearing before Alderman Murray Inst. night. Constable Grove made the arrests. A \\l .\ I. Y. W. V. A. MEETING The annual rneetlne for the election officers of the Young Women's Chris tian Association for the coming year, will be held In the John Y. Boyd Hall. Thursday evening. January 14, at S o'clock. The yearly reports of the various departments will bo heard and the work of the year gone over. JANUARY 6, 1915. French Trench Blown Up by German Forces By Associated Press Berlin, Jan. 6 (By Wireless to Lon don, 2.55 p. m.—The German War Office this afternoon gave out an of ficial announcement as follows: In the western arena of the war, at a position north of Arras, we have blown up a French trench 200 yards in length; we also took some prison ers. The counter attack of the enemy at this point failed. NO DECISION REACHED Washington, D. C., Jan. fi. Brlga CASTORIA For Infants and Children, S The Kind You Have Always Bought ure dier General Hush L. Scott, reported to-day from Naeo that no agreement lias been reached yet between tlio contending Mexican factions to pre vent firing into American territory, but that negotiations were being con tinued. MAIIRIED AT lIAUKRSTOWX Special to The Telegraph Hagerstown, Md„ Jan. 6. Miss Edna T3. Howe and Harry F. Rlct>, both of Mechanicsburg, Pa,, wore married hero on Monday at the par sonage of Christ's Reformed Church by the Rev. Dr. Conrad Clever. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers