10 X^Men,g«lr)Teßg-stg. What Has a Husband a Right to Expect of His Wife? By DOROTHY DIX A man has a right to expect his wife not to throw away the bait with ■which sho caught him as soon as they are married. No son of Adam would ever have undertaken to support a lady if he had only seen her when her head bristled with curl papers, her nose was shiny with cold cream, and she was attired in a wrapper that was not on speaking terms with the wash tuli. Xor does marriage change the mas culine point of view on this subject. A frowsy woman is just as unattrac tive married as single, und no woman has a right to expect her husband to display any enthusiasm about coming home to her of an evening unless she presents at least a neat appearance. Before marriage a woman does her best to make herself agreeable to a man. When he calls of an evening she is bright and cheerful, she devotes herself to amusing him. above all she hangs with baited breath upon his ut terances, laughs at his jokes, encores his stories, and feeds him on all the flattery that he will swallow. This makes a hit with the man. He mar ries to get more of it, and to acquire u permanent audience that will always give him the glad hand, and an in tense burner who will never weary of the task of lighting joss-sticks before him. >IIHI Has Iliglit to Expect Wife Will .Make Herself Agreeable Yet you could count on your fingers the number of wives among your por nonal acquaintance who ever throw a compliment their husbands' way, or who don't interrupt tliom in the mid dle of their best story to ask you what I you think about the latest cut in! l ash ion. This is bad policy and bad faith. | The man who married to get some- j body to admire him has a right to j expect a steady diet of the same brand ■ of flattery which his wife used in ante- j nuptial days and that she will con- j tinue to make herself as agreeable as < si wife as she was as a sweetheart. A man has a right to expect that j liis wife will control her tongue and ' temper. 1, myself, believe that tem- j per should be the first cause for dl- ! vorce, and that either a man or a j woman who finds that he or she is | married to a person with an unllvable ' temper should have the privilege of dissolving the matrimonial partner ship just as is done in the case of a business partnership where one mem ber of the first is so disagreeable that It is impossible to get along with him or her. There is no use in saying that a woman can't control her temper. She can, for the greatest virago on eartn Is so mild that butter wouldn't melt in her mouth when it is to her interest to be so. Because she is married to a man does not give a woman the right to insult him by all the cruel and bitter things a temper-maniac says in her rages. Xor does it confer the privilege upon her of nagging him to death, although many wives appear to think that it does. This is u mistake. The very least that a man has a J'ight to expect of his wife is that she »;hall conduct herself like a ludy in- SOUR STONED. COLDS. HEMES. REGULATE M BOILS-ID CENTS Turn the rascals out —the headache, biliousness, constipation, the sick, sour 6tomach and bad colds turn thena out to-night with Cascarets. Don't put In another day of distress. Let Cascarets sweeten and regulate your stomach; remove the sour, undi gested and fermenting food and that misery-making gas; take the excess bile from your liver and carry oft the WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP. nit M Absolutely No Pain yS My latest Improved appll. *G* HjapSftjiilg. , J ances. including an oiygen- ' red B ' p ■PPamtus, makes k extracting and all dcu- S fflaxZ'J/ tal work positively x > k\? x painless and is per- S O .V ■!» f fectty harmless. s (Are no objeo- Of* EXAMINATION X A"S" FREE XvO / s SCs Ji£ alloy cement 50c. X ■ \\ v X Crowns and Registered S AX. .X Bridge Work, $3, $4, $&. X A W X »-K Gold Grown ....•0.00 Qntduat* Office open daily 8.30 a. AMtoUot* X/lV X _ to «J* Mon., Wed. X/ ~ and Sat. TOf • p. m.; Sundays, *® •» b*. to 1 p. m, jr B * ffl 8322R S _ EAST TEKMB OF PAXMENTB |iin|l JPOrw the Hub) / Narrisburg t Pa, u suat ann •mh rAHTIftN! Wh9n Coming to My Off 100 Bo UltU I lun a Suro You Aro In tho Right Plaoo. J ************* Tiinnmimimmiiviiitu^ 11A Cold House Means Sickness ! -" Heavy colds, pneumonia and even tuberculosis are frequently the j; result of a cold house. An even warmth Is essential to your family's 11 health and even heating requires good fuel. Montgomery coal Is all 11 coal, burns evenly, thoroughly and gives the maximum in heat value. ! > Try a ton the next time. J. B. MONTGOMERY I; Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets ! «««««5«««5.5.......^ IWf|lM , WUM)<t>> Try Telegraph Want Ads. Try Telegraph Want Ads TUESDAY EVENING, stead of a fishwife. Xor does he mar ry to get some one to continually harp upon his faults. Marriage Is never so complete a failure as when a man is afraid of his wife because of her tem per and her tongue, and because the more he is a gentleman the less ca pable he is of dealing with her as she deserves. A man has a right to expect that a wife shall respect his personal liberty. By the time a man is old enough to marry he is pretty well established In his tastes and habits, and he does not marry to get a guide and mentor who will revise his entire plan of life. A man who has had the intelligence to succeed in a profession, or hold down a job that pays enough salary for him to afford to assume the lux ury of a wife, may be fairly supposed to know enough to come in out of the rain, what to eat,and, generally speak ing, how to take care of himself. One might also Infer that he is old enough to have a latch-key, and that If a woman trusted him enough to marry him she would trust htm out of her sight a few hours of an evening occasionally. This is the view of the subject that men take in their prematrlmonial ex istence; but, unfortunately, only too many of them find when they get married that they have got a jailer as well as a wife, and that instead of being an earthly Eden, matrimony is a reformatory. Yet there is many a wife who forces her husband to eat health food messes when his taste runs to lobster a la Xewburg. There is many a wife who, because she doesn't like to drink, never permits her husband to have a glass of beer unless he takes it on the sly. There is many a wife who makes her husband resign from his clubs and who would no more let him have a latch-key in peace than sue would let a child have a stick of dyna mite. There is many a man who can not even go to dinner with a friend, or play a game of cards in the evening with a lot of old cronies without hav ing to perjure him immortal soul by the lies he tells the tyrant on his hearthstone. Woman Has \o Big-lit to Interfere With Freedom of Hiisltaml This is all wrong. A fullgrown able-bodied man has got a right to his own opinions, to his own tastes, his own way of doing things, and his own freedom to eonie and go unques tioned Just as long as he is doing noth ing dishonorable and wrong, and be cause be is married to a woman doesn't give her any right to inter fere with him at every turn. If more women would realize this we would have happier homes, and more honiekeeping husbands, because there is something in tyranny that makes every one of us want to Jump over the bars. The qualities that have been enu merated are only the most elemental things that a husband has a right to expect of his wife, but if women would only respect them we should hoar a great deal less of a divorce court, for. after all, any woiyan can manage a man who gives her mind to it and is willing to take the trouble. decomposed waste matter and consti pation poison from the bowels. Then you feel great. A Cascaret to-night will straighten you out by morning—a 10-cent box from any drug store will keep your head clear, stomach sweet, liver and bowels regular and make you feel bul ly and cheerful for months. Don't for • get the children.—Advertisement. THE MASTER KEY By John Fleming Wilson By iptcU arrangement for Chb ptow a photo-drams corresponding to (he installments of "The Matter Key" may no* be aeen at the leading mov ing picture theaters. By arrangement made with the Universal Fflm Manufacturing company tt t* not only poasible to *ead "The Master Key" is this paper, but also after* ward to see oaoving picture* of our story. COPYRIGHT. 1014. BY JOHN PLEMfNO WILSON I "1 know it." he admitted. "But » good guess is better than nothing to work on. Let's go and see our skipper person." The launch captain received them genially and listened to John's story. At its finish he agreed with John that it was very likely that the Indian had recognized a native god and would re store it to its own temple. "I've visited those eastern ports a good deal." he told them. "I know boys on a lark from the ship will do just that trick—ran off with an Idol for n curio—and I know the fuss the heathens make about It too. They'll go any length to get back a first chop god."' Before they left he promised to keep an eye open for the Hindu and inform them if he got the smallest clew. With this they had to be satisfied, as in quiries elsewhere developed nothing helpful. Everett arrived on the evening train and after dinner listened to the story of their adventures with great interest. When he had asked a few questions he and John looked at each other. Finally Everett spoke. "It might take years to locate that lode without the exact plans," he said thoughtfully. "I don't doubt that your father. Miss Ruth, spent many a long hour and day prospecting for it. So we must have the plans if it's in the bounds of possibility to recover them. I think you will have to find your Hindu." "There is the question of the mine," John said soberly. "It has already i*** 4 " /wliriTr iffii SSbW/ 9 KmhlEp f' |U "But Mrs. Qrundy insists on the maid." been allowed to go pretty much to ruin. Tom Kane would do his be9t, of course, but actually we are looking for the bird in the bush when we have one | Don't Merely "Stop" a I Cough § Slop the Thine that Canae* It § J and the Couch will Stop Itaclf A cottgli in rcall? otip of our best friends. It warns 11s that there is in -1 Hammation or obstruction in a danger ipus place. Therefore, when vou get a bad cough don't proceed to dose yourself I with a lot of drugs that merely "stop" I the cough temporarily by deadening the throat nerves. Treat the cause—heal the inflamed membranes. Hero is a home made remedy that gets right at the cause and will make an obstinate cougb vanish more quickly than you over thought pos sible. Put 2Y 2 ounces of Pinex (50 cents worth! in a pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain granulated sugar syrup. This gives vou a full pint of the most pleasant and effective cough remedy you ever used, at a cost of only f>4 cents. Xo bother to prepare. Full directions with Pinex. It heals the inflamed membranes so gently and promptly that you wonder how it does it. Also loosens a dry. hoarse or tight cough and stops the formation of phlegm in the throat and bronchial tubes, thus ending the persistent loose cough. Pinex is a highly concentrated com pound of Norway pine extract, rich in sntaiacol, and is famous the world over for its healing effect on the membraneß. To avoid disappointment, ask your druggist for "2% ounces of Pinex." and don t accept anvtnin" else. A guarantee of absolute satisfaction, or money prompt ly refunded, goes with this preparation. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. On Curing Superfluous Hair By the Beauty Editor To the Beauty Editor: "Please ad vise nie If there is anything that will permanently kill a very bad case of superfluous hair that has become .tiff and coarse by repeated failures to find a real cure." Mrs. H. H. W. The only prescription I know of for completely removing every trace of Hupertluous Hair Is Mrs. Osgood's Won der named after o well-known society woman who found that If removed permanently her own unsightly hair growths. It Is absolutely harmless and Inexpensive. You can obtain Mrs. Osgood's Wonder from Kennedy's Drug Store; a signed Money-Back Guarantee comes in everv package. Other druggists slso sell It. Do not apply this prescription except to hair you wish totally destroyed n.ver Ito return.—Advertisement. RARRISBURG TELEGRAPH in the hand." "1 see your point." the promoter said promptly. "My offer of days ago still holds good. I'll finance this matter to the end. and I'll look after the mine too. So you can be care free so far as that goes. John." "Toil know 1 wouldn't take it for myself," John began awkwardly and was silenced by a smile. The next morning they had barely finished breakfast vrhen the launch captain was announced. The three of them found him burst ing with news. "I think I located your Hindu," he told them. "He came down at day light this morning looking for a steam er sailing for (he north. The Halcyon leaves at noon, and the steward gave bim a job in the galley." "But it might be another Hindu," Ruth suggested. The captain tnrned toward her and shook his head. "I don't think it's possible," he said. "He answered the description clear down to the rugs. Besides that, he seemed kind of nerv ous, and when one of the sailors jollied bim the man nearly had a fit. I'm sure he's your man." "There's only one thing for you to do," Everett said promptly—"take pas sage on that steamer yourselves to San Francisco. By that time you can be pretty sure whether he's your man or not." This was agreed upon, and TCutb started on her preparations immediate ly, Everett insisting that she take her maid with her. "But I don't need her!" Ruth protest ed. "She's so expensive too!" "You are merely a youngster." Ever ett said quietly, "and you must have • woman traveling with you. It is all right to do as you like in the mines, where no one would dream of speak ing evil or thinking it, but Mrs. Grun dy insists on the maid." John agreed with Everett and de parted to get the tickets, in spite of Everett's*warning that he had better send and get them. The result was that George Drake, just landed from the mine and in search of Wilkerson. found him shad owing Dorr. Drake explained his coming by say ing that, be had heard nothing from either Wilkerson or Mrs. Darnell, and he could be of no use at the "Master Key." "It's just as well." Wilkerson said sulkily. "I have a dozen things to at tend to. atad you can help. The first Is not to let that man Dorr get out of our sight or turn a band unless we know it." In u few senteuees tilled with bitter ness he told the story of the finding of the chest and the futile search for the plans and the abstraction of the idol containing them. When Wilkerson found that Dorr and Ruth booked passage on the Hal cyon for San Francisco and had in quired about the nest sailings for the Orient he took Drake aside and they determined that this could only mean #ne thing— DOIT was on the track of the idol. "We'll follow them!" he said savage ly. "We've spent too much to quit low." Jean Darnell received Drake coolly and listened to Wilkerson's explana tion jf his new scheme without a word. stormy eyes boded no good to some one, and Wilkerson feared she would abandon him. But there was the tenacity of a ti p-ess la her passions, and now she could not give up her sweet revenge nor forego the thought of possessing the wealth which had once been Tom Gallon's and which he bad tried to conceal. She agreed to go, and they decided to leave by train that evening, thus being 1n Snn Francisco in time to meet the steamer and watch for Dorr's next movement. Two days later Everett again met John and Ruth In the hotel in San Francisco. John's news was that the Hindu they sought had undoubtedly been on the Halcyon and that John had bought a steerage passage for Bombay. "You ought to get the plans before you get to India." Everett said ear nestly. "You'll find yourself in a strange land, where it will be like looking for a needle in a haystack to get hold of your man." Dorr acknowledged this and outlined his tentative plan of getting hold of the idol during the passage. "After all. we don't want the idol. I shall try to persuade the man of this and get him to let me have the papers concealed in it." At this moment Sir Donald Faver sham was announced. The entrance of the Englishman who had made himself so attentive to Ruth at the southern hotel awakened little enthusiasm in either Dorr or Everett, but for Ruth's sake they played the civil part. She, on the other hand, received Sir Donald with every evidence of lively pleasure. "We are this minute talking of go ing over to India, where you lived so long." she told him after the first greetings. "And you are just the man to tell us all about It." "Going to India!" ejaculated the bar onets "My word!" {To be Continued. J Beech' Nut T @g ato Catsup £- IIW W"Htl TWO years ago, we built a I model Catsup .plant in the finest tomato country of America. We get the tomatoes at their r f\. prime—take them fresh from the ! vine. They come from nearby Bmlfi -• *1 m farms and are not shipped long if' I II distances. PIP' |i, IM| We make them into Catsup iI E llli 111 IS direct—no materials are recooked. I I !|| 11 |j!||| I | Two hours in the making only, I II! II 111 I I and the finished Catsup is bottled, I 1 I sterilized and ready for you, |i I Making Catsup better than it has ever IrKfw* I been made before is simply the Beech j f|MSil Niit lesson over again— care, patience, 1' II Wc have had to increase our pack mSwi H ® eec^'^ut Tomato Catsup this year. iff Your grocer has probably received his J : lililtiiiJ" -im ft. supply by this time. Two sizes—2sc. "• 118 ' T'Sr and 15c. See him now. Eldf M # R 8F(? B tMakers of America's most fa -11 mous Bacon— Beech-Nat Bacon ElPlllitllllllil' BEECH-NUT PACKING COMPANY H "'-"-It" 1 1 1; CANAJOHARIE, N. Y. |Jj J IjH P er soorl, in this paper. IN MOYFN AGE STYLE A New Blouse that can be Made with Sleeves to Match or of Contrasting Material. By MAY MANTON 8497 Low Belted Blouse, 34 to 43 bust. Here is a new and smart blouse that can be used with different sleeves to give the effect of a sleeveless over blouse or made with sleeves of the material, just as one may like. The neck is finished with the new high, roiling collar, and the vest can be ma.le V-shaped or high. With the high neck a ribbon band can be worn across the throat so that whether ore likes theopen neck ordoes not, the pat tern is available. In the picture, serge is shown with velvet, a favorite combination of the season, but the effect could be copied in wool with silk, in plain and fancy ma terial, and in various other ways, while it Is quite possible to make the entire gar ment of one material with vest and collar only of a contrasting one. The value of the model as the means of making a cos tume of the earlier season up to date is beyond compute. Every woman has a serge fjown or a serge skirt, and if the serge skirt is used with blouse of velvet and sleeves to match the skirt, with collar and vest of fancy material, an .up-to-date effect can be obtained with very little labor. For the medium size will be required j*4, yards of material 27 inches wide, I* j yards 36, or I % yards 44, with 1 % yards 27, 1 yard 36 or 44 for sleeves, vest and collar. The pattern No. 8497 is cut in sizes for 34 to 42 inches bust measure. It will be mailed to any address bythe Fashion De patment of this paper, on receipt of tea cents. Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns, j A False Standard of Culture has gained ground in this century j which looks upon the bearing and rearing of children as something j coarse and vulgar an'd to be avoided. ) but the advent of Eugenics means! much for the motherhood of the race. Happy is the wife who. though weak and ailing, depends upon Lydia E.' Pinkham's Vegetable Compound <o| restore her to health, and when head aches and backaches are a thing of the past brave sons and fair daugh ters rise up and call her blessed.—Ad-: vertlsement. Try Telegraph Want Ads. FKRRUARY 9, 1915. "" r.XI.li CAUSKS DK.ATII Special to The Telegraph Lewlstown, Pa., Feb. 9.—Mrs. James Martz died at her home here as the result of a fall. About two weeks ago The vest Food-Drink Lunch at Fountains Ask ORIGINAL LJfIPI benuine nviiLlvli 9 A void Imitations— Take No Substitute Rich Milk, malted grain, in powder form. More healthful than tea or coffee. Forinfants,invalids and growing children. Agrees with the weakest digestion. Purenutrition, upbuilding the whole body. Keep it on your sideboard at home, invigorates nursing mothers and the aged. A quick lunch prepared in a HMMHranMH The Store of the ■ WINTER ■ ■ PIANO COMPANY ■ Will be open every evening until February 18th, till 9 o'clock. H. M. ELDRIDGE, Manager —■■lawM I START THE NEW YEAR EIGHT I Post yourself so that you can keep up with the times, and be able to converse intelligently with your friends. You need a copy of our ALMANAC, ENCYCLOPEDIA AND YEAR BOOK FOR 1915, a comprehensive compilation of the World's facts indispensable to the Student, the Professional Man, the Business Man, the Up-to-date Fanner, the House wife, and an argument settler for the whole family. $5.00 worth of information for 25c» CLIP THIS COUPON TO-DAY and bring or send same to our office. rvTCTsj) SSCTJ rE*m.in nVi gfcg [Si3 5E55 [gErtM i i [_J Herewith find 25c. for one copy of the HANDY ALMANAC FOR 1915. Out of town subscribeni must send K ||g 6c. extra to pay postage. (IS! I I Herewith find $ for a six months subscrlv- (SSI rani tion to the— including a free copy of the HANDY m, lafe ALMANAC FOR 1916 All charges prepaid. laPil jg H Address I—For Almanac only, pat cross (X) in upper square and || enclose 25 cents. [K IsjW 2—For six months subscription to the - and law [ji I] Almanac Free, put cross (X) in lower square and enclose $ fflS] THIS OFFER IS GOOD JUST WHILE SUPPLY LASTS An excellent New Year's Gift. Secure a copy for yourself and send copies to your friends, or let us mail them for you. Mrs. Mart/, went to her baek porch, slipped and fell. Neighbors helped her into the house and a physician was summoned. It was found that she had several ribs fractured and suffered Internal Injuries, A husband, two sons and a daughter survive.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers