10 XfcfcMcn t^.lnTen&6 f ■ "Their Married Life Copyright by International NOTTS Sertlce. "Will it be all right for me to clean those shelves this morning, ma'am?" -aid Nora, poking her head into the llvingroom, where Helen was basking in the sun, reading a magazine story. "Yes, Nora, go right ahead." she (■aid, raising her head for a moment, ruid then going back to the story, which had reached an exciting part. "Be careful. though. about the things that aro hanging in the closet." Nora hardly heard the injunction, so anxious was she to get Rt the shelves in question. They were her pet abomination, and, as a rule. Helen \rould have rushed to help her re move the things from the closet, but somehow or other she felt lazy this morning. and without another thought had decided to allow Nora to struggle along with the whole thing. Finishing the story after a while ahe went into her own room and tossed the silk comfortable off the bed while she threw the covers back to air. Somehow the morning had (Tone to her head, and she felt a little reckless about anything that might Happen. That was usually the time in her experience when things actual ly did happen. But what could pos sibly happen, she thought gaily. It was too nice a day for that. She really must tlnd something to do that would take her out in the sunshine. She could take Winifred downtown for the shoes she needed, that was just the thing. Nora was still busy with the closet In the hall, and was curiously still about it. Looking out Helen saw that Mie was not there. The closet had 1 een emptied of all its things and the contents dumped on the bed in Wini l red's room. Winifred, who had been busy playing paper dolls on the floor, bid disappeared, and Helen, wonder ing what had happened, went out to the kitchen. "W'hat are you doing in here, , baby," she said, pushing open the. door of the butler's pantry to find ! ■Winifred bending over something Nora was looking at over by the win dow. Nora looked up, her eyes wide | and frightened. "What's the matter, Nora? lias Anything happened?" "Oh, Mrs. Curtis." began Nora. "I nm so sorry, but I couldn't help it, honestly I couldn't." The Gown Kutaed by a Smudge or Oil Helen had crossed the room and was 1 examining the thing that lay limply j over Nora's knee. It was lier best , evening gown, the one she had seen down town in the window. It had been caught up in a sheet and hung : away in the hall closet. Over the front breadth was an ominous darkj st Un that smelled peculiarly. "That oil I was going to use on my , dust cloth, ma'am." groaned Nora, j "1 had it up on the shelf and when Ii waa taking down Mr. Curtis' dress: suit the hanger caught and pulled it ov e• ".Co. ma'm. T was just going to use it.' Nora was weeping noisily, and j rfft*r a moment's reflection Helen | li.dn't the heart to say anyifting more. With a sigh she turned away. "Don't cry any more, Nora," she said, turning to comfort the heart broken girl. Helen knew that Nora u. s deeply sincere, and as there was j n«i nee« 4 ol' caving aljout spilled milk, sho to'liave the girl miserable.! •'Finish the closet as quickly as | possible, and then get out Miss Wini fred's things. I am going to take her downtown." Xora proceeded with the business; ••I the moment, wiping her eyes every ] no'.v and then and looking mournfully] at the gown that Helen had thrown j over the foot of the bed in the room j w ere all the other things had been pl, ced. A'inifred was prancing around. > an.'doua to get out in the air and light. Established 1867 In hermetically sealed sanitary cans. Finest for table use and baking. Ask your grocer for It. Send postal card for booklet of Prize Recipes to P. DUFF & SONS, 920 Duquesne Way, Pittsburgh, Pa. IA Cold House Means Sickness Heavy colds, pneumonia and even tuberculosis are frequently the ![ result of a cold house. An even warmth Is essential to your family's !» health and even heating requires good fuel. Montgomery coal Is all !; coal, burns evenly, thoroughly and gives the maximum In heat value. ! i Try a ton the next time. j J. B. MONTGOMERY | Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets Wa^Map Latest Euorpean War Map Given by THE TELEGRAPH To every *ea«ar presenttagr «Ma OCHTFOW am 4 M om*m to mw protmrMon ecpenaaa. rr MAlL—fit fltty or outside, for lie. (Ranpa. oaafc or meaey order. This ta the BTCK3-EST VALUE BVBR OFFERS©. I.nWt ]|)( HJnropean Official Map (S colore) —Portraits of It European Rulers; all stattstlos and war data—Army .Navy and Aerial Strength. Populatlona, Area, Capitals. Distances between Cities. Hlstorfss of Nations Involved, Previous Decisive Battles, History Hajrue Peaoe Conference, National Df ht«, Coin Valoes. HJX'PRa. 1-color CttAJBTS of Five Involved Buropean Capitals and Naval Locations. Folded, with hasdaomt oover to St tbe poefcet. THURSDAY EVENING, land as Nora released her she bounded into Helen's room with a little scream jof delight. Helen could not help j smiling at the child's enthusiasm, I Somehow it made her feel better, and j when Nora came in with the dress j made up into a neat package she smiled almost like her old self and Nora eagerly returned it. "Don't worry about it, Nora," she said kindly. "I think probably 1 can have it cleaned. Anyway It will give me an excuse to have a new gown." Helen did not mean what she said, but she was rewarded by the look of relief that spread over Nora's homely features. At the cleaner's, a little specialty ' shop in the forties, where Helen fre quently took things, she waited with her heart in her mouth while the I package was unwrapped and the dress i held up to view. The woman exclaimed as she ex amined the spot: | "What a shame! I hardly think It j will come out." She took the dress with her into the back of the shop and returned in i a few minutes, followed by a young ! man. I "What was it you spilled on It, 'madam?" he inquired politely. "Furniture oil." explained Helen. ! "Do you think ii will come out?" He shook his head dubiously. | "I hardly think so, at any rate It 1 would leave a stain of some kind." i 'What would you advise me to do j about it?" said Helen. Once more 1 she was beginning to feel depressed. Only s."> to Have It Made Over The woman who had been examin ing the gown looked tip suddenly. "We could repair it for you so that iit would never be noticed, if you care Ito leave it," she volunteered, r "Oh, could you: I had on idea you 'did things like that here." [ "Oh, yes, madam; we alter all the | gowns we sell and it would be very ! little trouble to do this." ! "What would you do'."' said Helen, ' picking up the dress. "Insert a new : front?" "We could do that, or else we could ; take out the front breadth and insert some accordeon pleated chiffon and drape the other up." Helen hesitated. She hated to have the dress altered in case she did not ; like it after nil. "Like this gown in the window," 'she said, noticing Helen's hesitation, I "you see it would be quite a simple , matter to make a skirt exactly like that. The style is much newer." Helen examined the skirt of the ! little gown that the woman brought in and hung up on a hook. "Why, yes, I like that very much, ' and you think mine could be made i to look just the same?" "I know it, madam." said the obllg i ing woman. "We do a great deal of j this kind of work. 1 am sure you will be pleased." "All right, 1 think I'll have you fix it for me." said Helen, pulling out ! one of her cards. "And you deliver I things of course? How much will I that be?" "Five dollars, including the ma terial.' said the little woman briskly. Helen thought that was very rea sonable. The gown was soiled any | way, and the cleaning alone would I have cost less than two, and now she was goirils to have the skirt* t*l i tered, so that It would look almost new. Winifred skipped along happily by ! her side as she went out of the store. The sun seemed to be brighter than ever, and after all. everything hap pens for the best, thought Helen to herself, with a warm little glow at j her heart. She was glad now that I she hadn't been cross with Nora. (Another Instalment In this series 'will appear soon ou this page.) BREATHE MUCH FRESH RIB. NIGHT MID DAY Fearsome Legend About Baleful Influences of "Night Air" Is a Myth Breathe all the fresh air you can get. night and day. That's what fresh air is for. The fearsome legend about the baleful influences of "night air" is only another of the carefully nursed insanitary bequests from our ances tors, according to Senior Surgeon Banks, of the United States Public- Health Service. When this superstititon arose may only be surmised. Perhaps it is a sur vival of the primeval cult of Sun worship, which led the ancients to classify anything outside the sphere of solar influence. Our forbears were wont to caution their offspring to "he careful about the night air,'' or chil dren were ordered to "come in out of the night air." It is perhaps fortun ate for the children living in the Arctiee circle, where the nights are six months long, that the Esquimaux mothers do not entertain this crude notion about night air, else their pro geny would spend lialf the year in doors. This idea is generally prevalent and even one of our well-known flowers is loaded down with the horrible name of "Deadly Nightshade." as a sort of verbal relic of this old notion. The low-lying mist or fog that sometimes gathers about the surface of the earth under certain ntmospherlc conditions, after sunset, was held, is held, to be "miasmatic" and pregnant with lethal possibilities. This is worthy of all the respect that should be put to anv hoary superstitltion, but it's place Is in the specimen jars of an archaeological museum, not in the show room of modern intelligent life. Night Air No Different The night air, minus the sun, is no different from the atmosphere of a sunless day. The atmospheric envel ope of the earth does not change from benign to malign in the twinkling of an eye after sundown. It is still com posed of oxygen, nitrogen, argon and carbon dioxide in the normal propor tions for the given locality. The open air treatment of tuberculosis and its kindred a-llics had iirst to combat this venerable jargon about the deadli ne.ss of night air, and only the re markable results of this hygienic aid to its cure brought the superstitious to a realization of the .silliness of their ingrained noetopnobia. This generation has witnessed the anticipation of human beings in re spect to the value of fresh air. whether in bulk or in smaller "drafts." From being a people immersed in hermet ically sealed rooms at night, breath ing our own bodily exhalations over and over again, a constantly increasing number of persons are sleeping In the open, or at least with open win dows, summer and winter, to their great benefit. In the morning they are refreshed with the pure oxygen of the. air breathed during sleep, not "stewed" nor "seedy" after eight hours spent in respiring and re-respir ing second-hand and shop-worn air in a closed bedroom. Soldiers Favor It A story from the trenches in France lis that a soldier wrote home to his wife to open her windows at night, as lie had found that the night air did.Vt hurt one bit.'' That is the experience of all the advocates of this sensible custom—once tried the old custom of sealing one's self in an air-tight bed room is never renewed. Diseases I which Involve the lungs can usuaJly be traced to their beginning in poorly ventilated sleeping apartments, inside rooms that do not have a share of the atmosphere. Nothing can live well or long without oxygen in the air, and it was given to us for breathing, night and day, not to be taken in sparingly, as if it were a dangerous potion. Sonie people are actually afraid of ordinary, common air. Those emancipated persons who open their windows at night will tell you, unanimously, that they cannot breathe in a charaebr unless the win dow is raised, their sense of comfort and vigor demands the life-giving qualities of fresh air. Xo greater pro breathe in a chamber unless the win than to breathe all the fresh atmos pheric air you can get, night and clay. BRANCH OF WIl.I) l.Il'E LEAGUE Lebanon. Feb. 4...—Members of the Lebanon County Fish and Game Pro tective Association have started a local branch of the Wild Life League, head quarters in Pittsburgh,which has as its object the propagation and protection of game purchased by the State De partment. The local organization will have as its primary object the securing of Lebanon county's portion ot game to be distributed by the de partment. iF YOU HAD M JMt NECK AS LONd A 8 THIS FELLOW, Irß AND HAD jf SORE THROAT || SI TONS I LINE IVljk. WOULD QUICKLY RELIEVE IT. 26c. and 60r. Hospital Size, SI. 1 N Rent an 1| UNDERWOOD Ij TYPEWRITER It's a sound investment —certain to Increase r5? your income Ssi) •The Machine Yoi Will El«t- W 1 tially Buy" Ml Jnderwood Typewriter Co. W 25 North Tlitrtl St. S{ WHOOPING COUGH SPASMODIC CROUP ASTHMA COUGHS BRONCHITIS CATARRH COLDS A simple, u(e and effective treatment avoiding dnias.Vaporizf'l Crrsolene stop* the paroxysms of Whooping Cough and relieve* Spasmodic Croup at once. It u a 6oon to sufferers from Asllima.Thealrcarrylngthe antiseptic vapor,ln haled with every breath, makes breathing easy; ft iMf soothes the sore throat sad stops the cough, ■ assuring restful nights. r l Hla Invwuabl* I* mallitrfK. ' aOW| with r«unt ohlldrwi. nfM X\\T«.. for I VAFOmSOLftITcO. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH |ja!==]ot=soc==iQi^=)ci[^sec^se[==]G][^=ißt^==3o(^SG][=^=3a(^=]Ot^SEJ[^=]nc^=jQ[^=)e]t^So;^Sot== | The Greatest of February Sales I I Is at the Big Store Outside the High Rent, High Price District g I . i No store is in a position to undersell us. No store does. $75,000 worth of de- | c pendable Furniture, Carpets, Clothing, etc., at ONE-HALF their original price and you j I can have your bill charged if you wish. !] Don't wait until April for that new Ruq or Carpet. Buy it now and save one-half, f j "A Dollar Saved Is a Dollar Earned." j SPECIAL PRICES IN RUGS, CARPETS AND MATTING | j I] A Special 9x12 Seamless Rug $.">.75 j A Special 9x12 Tapestry Rug $9.98 | i{ A Special 9x12 Matting Rug $2.75 n Special Tapestry Brussels Carpet, 3 wide, (>."><• yd. on floor | Special Matting, 15< 4 per yard in 40-yard rolls. | | \ Worth Double the Price ! We have one entire %k \ Jp I ( floor (2100 sq. ft.) of I oor s P ace packed jam □ wk\V /4t fuil ° f the bestvaiues in V ov^' n f s ° n cart j! | j ___—-- —— Some Furniture Specials Less Than One-Half Their Former Price a 42-inch Round Pillar Extension Table, Colonial de- 42-inch Quartered Oak Buffet $12.98 U sl S n . 4 s2o ™l^ ound - • • square pUlar • pla^ S 48-inch Quartered Oak Buffet $16.98 ■ Adams Period $12.98 8-piece Bedroom Suites $18.75 and up | JgfeT A GREAT SPECIAL | j | Just Like Picture /I I | | Special Adjustable Handle I | Home Gately and Fitzgerald Supply Co. Family | Furnishers 29, 31, 33 and 35 South Second St. Clothiers Our Location Meant a Great Saving to You WITH A RUSSIAN SUGGESTION i A Smart Suit with New Features. By MAY MAN TON 8522 Boy's Suit, 4to 8 year*. ! The diagonal closing of this blouse gives a distinctly new touch and the straight trousers make an important feature of the latest suits. Here, shep herd's check is used with white collar and white patent leather belt, but for the younger boys the washable fabrics are the preferred ones, and Sponge, galatea, . linen and the like are good for cold weather wear with the thinner and lighter fabrics for warmer weather, although the model is an appropriate one for any ma terial from velvet to cotton. Made of velvet or of ribbed silk, it is exceedingly handsome and suitable to the most formal occasions of the small boy's lite. Made of ; seree or galatea, it is just a comfortable little costume that can be worn every , day. The belt may be of leather or of i material as liked. For the 6-year stee will be required 3\ yards of material 27 inches wide, 2*4 yards 36, or yards 44, with yard 27 for collar. ( The May Manton pattern 8522 N cut In sizes from 4 to 8 years. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion I)e- I partment of this paper, on receipt of tea cenu. Bowman's sell May Mnnton Patterns. [Try Telegraph Want Ads. UNIVERSITY MAX MARRIED Special to The Telegraph Selinsgrove, Pa.. Feb. 4. —At Has erstown on Tuesday. Mrs. Carrie K. Cmith, of Beaver Springs, was mar-1 ried to the Rev. Charles T. Aikens byj Beech-Nut %®afo Catsup * ll'f PS TO one who craves To- if mmato Catsup as a relish /&? ffeQsK to gooc * cu * s " ie —the excep tional person who can ap predate a subtle seasoning a avor stimulating to f ■lt'i 11 !• ■H t ' ie a PP et Beech-Nut §■§ l!'• ■I I Tomato Catsup comes as 111 1 111. m «1 an achievement, i UntLmi Beech-Nut Tomato Cat -1 sup of this season's make is << now ready for you at your grocer's. The pack is larger than last year's. The num ber of users is also much larger. Order today. Two 1P- sizes—2sC. and 15c. ir<* it ll 111(1 111 It fW Maker* of America's most fa bs ' Belli U'lljK mou» Bacon— Beech-Nut Bacon L HfK;'n:S:;»e BEECH-NUT PACKING COMPANY M M IJ([ J|j|ll jI j j IjffllM CANAJOHARIE. N. Y. M Coming—News about Beech-Nut Bacon. Look for an !T"i —-'SL — nouncements in this paper. FEBRUARY 4, 1915. the Kev. S. W. Owncs, D. D.. IX. D.. president of the board of directors of | Susquehanna University. Dr. Aikens and his bride will- go to Washington. D. C., and expect to return home about j February 10. IB—BM—Pit FARMERS SELIjIXO TOBACCO i Marietta, Feb. 4.—Farmers In th!» section of Lancaster county the past few days have been hard at wr>rlc stripping and packing their tobacco. Many have sold at ten for leaf and two and a-half cents for fillers.