Beech' Nut *■ A NYBODY who has ever ' tasted real Tomato Cat- SU P can never forget the flavor—nor be satisfied with / M ything less delicate than mm 'I '|® Beech-Nut Tomato Catsup. i| 111 ®| I • One of the biggest facts IHi fci i llf 1 ?k° ut the American people | *!jf j| pjljw ft I is that they do care about ' 1 fla . vor » delicacy, quality, and are HflPflgft; i quite able to judge whether there ever was a Catsup so good as I Beech-Nut Tomato Catsup, i Full size bottle, 25c.: half-size 1 bottle, 15c.—no difference in price niSSSs S —so it's largely a matter of realiz i : ing real value. 1 i "111 l ij» gft %&,' Makert of America'* moat fa ; ! j f» J j r (Sp moui Bacon— Beech-Nut Bacon : ; ij iM! I ll l| fll Mg BEECH-NUT PACKING COMPANY , t ]||«r | 'S CANAJOHARIE, N. Y. . 1L fW IBIjH II i 1 I I 111 lillMfn Something interesting to tell you about Beech-Nut Peanut & it in Han r~ t \ Miss Fairfax Answers Queries ARK yor SURE? I 'ear Miss Fairfax: t am eighteen. About a year ago I "as employed as stenographer in a concern where my employer is a mar ried man. About nine months ago he I'MiU.me that he was going to tret a as soon as his wife, who is Mfy sick, improved. He has toM me mat he loved me and 1 reciprocate his love. The doctors say his wife will not live long. He has told me this, anil rEEUUTE YGUR BOWELS ID STOP COLDS. HEMES. SOUR STOMfICH Turn the rascals out—tlie headache, ■iliousness, indigestion, constipation, :he sick, sour stomach and had colds —turn them out to-night with Casca ■ets. in another day of distress. •' ' Casi arets cleanse and sweeten your stomach; remove the sour, undigested ind fermenting food and that misery-' nuking gas; take the excess bile from j CENT BOXES -ANY DRUG STORE Absolutely No Pain My latent Improved npptl j/ snces. Including an oxygen- . grs * J Ired air apparatus, makes to ■K*,"v ex trailing and all den- •. A # A a™BjiyC'/ tal work positively k\^ painless and ts per- S O jV" i fectly harmless. .S (-Vge DO objeo- EXAMINATION / > t flh"" 'Js.oo I free >/lvO / a alloy cenirnt 50c. X a \\' x Gold Crowns and R«*lstere« S \\ r Bridge Work, S3, $4, »5. _ X . A X 13-K Gold Crown (5.00 Graduate X X Olllce open dolly 8.30 a. S .if* S m. to «p. m.; Moa, Wed. Ajl-Stauu / \/ > and Sat. TOl »p. m.; Sundays. X X 10 a. m. to Ip. in, J^^__ BeU phon « *332R aP • S EA SY TEKMB OP~~ /Cei ..V S S paymjwVts |MMi /j2O Market Street (Over the Hub) Wzr X Harri&burg, Pa. it m«at Hart a m PASITinM I When Coming to My Office Bo OftU I lUli . Sure You Aro In tho Right Plaoo. | A Cold House Means Sickness jjj j Heavy colds, pneumonia and even tuberculosis are frequently the ] ! | result of a cold house. An even warmth Is essential to your family's jI ! j health and even heating requires good fuel. Montgomery coal Is all ]! > coal, burns evenly, thoroughly and gives the maximum In heal value.- 'I ' Try a ton the next time. J. B. MONTGOMERY ; Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets !| TUESDAY EVENING, has asked me if I would not wait 1 for him. I told him that he is very mean to talk about marriage to me when the doctors look for the ; death of his Wife. He said he did not care for his wife in the least, and drifted into marrying her. I toid my mother about this and she said that ! should wait for him if I loved him, which I most surely do. At this time there is another young man calling on me at my house. I who loves me also. He is a very nice I young man, but I have very little feel ing for him. H. f|. I consider it a very gruesome piece Of business to be waiting for ;i wom an to die in order that v ou max* marry her husband, but this is only" a little more shameful than waiting" for him to divorce her in order that you mar your li\ er and carry off the decompos ed waste matter and constipation poi son from the bowels. A Cascaret to-night will straighten you out by morning—a 10-cent box keeps your head clear, stomach sweet, li er and bowels regular an., you feel | bully for months. Don't forget the children—their little insides need a ; cood. gentle cleansing, too. Adver tisement. marry him. However, since your | mother approves of this match and you love the man, I hardly feel as |if you need my advice or opinion on ; the subject. <_' an you trust yourself ;at eighteen to make a wise choice? i Are you sure you are not dazzled by j the thought of having a man who is so much your senior and your em ployer besides showing you atten ! tions? BEAI'TY VS. BRAINS Dear Miss Fairfax:' JVill you please state how a girl who is pretty and stupid triumphs over a girl who is homely and bril liant, and give illustrations in favor of the former. INDIFFERENT. A girl who is pretty and stupid triumphs over a girl who is homely and brilliant only temporarily except jin extreme cases. The things that really make a girl loved are charm and sweetness of character, and, ac cording as to whether the pretty stupid girl or the brilliant homely one has these valuable assets, she wins or loses ', in the social game. At a dance the 'j pretty girl is more likely to have part ners than the homely one. But when [' it comes to friendships, the clever, In ' teresting girl holds hers far better ; than does the dull one, however, |' pretty she is. 1 DINNKK OX VETERAN'S BIRTH DAY Special to The Telegraph Lewlsberry, Pp., March —A din ner was given on Friday at the home ( of lieutenant William R. Miller, a veteran of the Civil war. in honor of i his seventy-fourth birthday anniver isary. His five daughters were pres ent: Mrs. David Lease, Mrs. Ward Xesbit. Miss Blanche Miller. Mrs. Erne Dugan and Mrs. William A. Par themore. Others present were Lieu tenant Miller: his sister. Miss Lindie Miller: his granddaughter. Miss Pau j letta Dugan, and Miss Marjorie En sminger. ■ Two Fairs at Half Fare; ! Exposition Rates Cut In Two |j The railroads have greatly reduced j their fares and made it possible for | you to see both the San Franoisco and i ! San Diego Expositions on one ticket. I By way of the Burlington Route (C. ; B. & Q. R. R.) the cost of a railroad ticket to California and back will be i only about one-half the usual price, i and you can take in th>- incomparable Colorado scenery, including the Royal j Gorge, see Denver, Colorado Springs. Pueblo and Salt Lake City on the way, | stopping off at any point desired, i Returning, you may enjoy a sea trip | up the coast to Portland, see Tacoma, ! Seattle and Spokane, and either Ola -1 tier National Park or Yellowstone j Park—the wonders of the world. You don't take a trip like this very I often. You should see the best scen ! ery en route and not spend any more ' than is necessary to do it. Tell me when you plan to go, how long you can stay, and let me make up an it inerary to fit your particular needs. Let me explain how and why the Burlington can serve you best. I'll be glad to do it. Write, telephone or call Win. Austin, General Agent, Passen ger Dep'ts, C. B. & Q. R. R. Co., 836 Chestnut St.. Philadelphia. PILES RELIEVED Also Eczema, Salt Rlieuin, I'leers. Old Sores and Carbuncles Under the influence of San Cura | Ointment surprising improvement is j made so quickly that it seems almost miraculous. Stubborn cases of piles like those of Rev. W. F. Gilbert of Titusvllle. Pa., [vanish before the marvelous antiseptic | Ointment. Mr. Gilbert w rites: I "For twenty years I suffered with | bleeding and itching piles: at times I i was confined to the house for more j than a month. Two years ago I began j using San Cura Ointment and one 50c 1 jar made a firm and permanent cure. I I have not been troubled since." San Cura ointment is guaranteed by George A. Gorgas, who is the ag.-nt in llnrrisburg. to help any of the above ! named diseases or money back. It ! relieves pain from burns, cuts and j bruise*, draws out the poison and of ten heals in a short time. 25c and 50< !a jar at George A. Gorgus'.- Ad vet • tisemeiit. | OARRISBURG fiSSb TELEGRAPH X&owex) t^fUnTeftg-s Why My Wife Left Me I By DOROTHY DIX lly DOKOTIIY DIX I "I lost my wife." said the tenth man, "because 1 did not understand that what is sauce for the gander is sauce lor the goose. Also because I put a sublime and childlike faith in the comfortable masculine theory of' woman's abnormal power to forgive any kind of treatment that a man hands out to her, and to go on loving him still. "T started out my married life with a very strict moral code for my wife and a lax one for myself. I thought a great deal about her duty to me and very little about my duty to her. She was to be like Caesar's wife, but 1 was to be as much of a rounder as 1 pleased. She was to always meet me with a glad, sweet smile—when ever I chose to come home. "Of couse. that wind of matrimo nial platform is accepted by some women, bub they are either poor-spir ited creatures or else they are finan cially dependent on the husbands that force them into such a contemptible position. They endure the situation because they lack the courage to as sert themselves and tight back, or be cause the husband means a meal tick et to them, and they can't afford to quarrel wtih their bread and butter. "Unfortunately for me, my wife be longed to neither class. She has as brave and intrepid a spirit as was ever housed in a human body, and she had quite enough money of her own to make her independent of mo for her support. And. incidentally. I should like to remark right here that one of the reasons that so many men object to women going into gainful pursuits is because they recognize! thta we men would have to treat our J wives better when they became iinan- ■ cially independent. The only reason i that women stand for many things from men that they do stand for is ■ because, if they get up and leave their j unfaithful or brutal husbands, they've got no place to go, no way of making | a living. However, so far as the money l question is concerned, it cut no figure i in the wreck or our happiness. 1 j was never a tightwad, and my wife was one of the women who would j have gone out to scrub rather than! make a profession of matrimony. Our j trouble came from the fact that I believed that the bonds of matrimony should all be worn by the wife and | the husband go free. "Of course, when I married I was, desperately in love with my wife. 1 am still. Underneath everything! that I have ever done, there has al- j ways been the real abiding love in my heart that a man has for the woman who is his real mate, and whom he respects as well as loves. I Hcsan to Get Restless "But after we had been married a j few years, and life had settled down J into humdrum domesticity I began to j get restless, to pine for adventure and | thrills—and I began to hunt up di-, versions, as a man will under such circumstances, outside of the home. j "It made me furious for my wife; to even dance with another man, but 1 had a dozen romantic adventures in' WOULD REQUIRE WISH! WOMEN TO REGISTER; ! Nurse Advocates Frequent Inspec-i tions of Premises by Health Officers I The washtub should be divorced from I insanitary conditions, just as should ■ tbe dairy, argues Sara M. F. Babb. a visiting nurse of the Town and Coun try Nursing Service of the American j Red Cross, in an important article on | health conservation entitled. "Inspect | the Premises of the Washerwomen." | which appears in tbe February num- ; ber of the American Red Cross Maga- I The pioneer efforts along this line of . Greenville. S. C.. us presented bv Miss j Babb. should command the attention of everv Board of Health and city coun- j cil in the United States. Greenville has | an ordinance which requires all i washerwomen to register and obtain from the Board of Health permits to take in washing. Inspections of I washerwomen are made by the Red j Cross visiting nurse in reference to i h-using conditions, general sanitary condition of the premises, water sup ply and drainage, communicable dis eases in the household., care in handling clothes, scrubbtngboards. ironingboards, and pots and tubs, the latter being re- I quired to be galvanized iron. Score cards are kept as in dairy inspection, and to hold a permit, premises, houses, etc.. must be kept clean, and any sick ness in the family must be reported promptlv to the Board of Health. The permit is withdrawn upon the failure of a holder to comply with all the pro visions of the ordinance. "I know of no measure of more lm- ; mense and practical value in the con- * trol or prevention of communicable i diseases than the ordinance regulating ] washerwomen," declares Miss Babb. "I was sent to inspect the house and prem- \ ises o" one woman who had applied for washing and found her ironing and nlacing freshly-ironed clothes on the bed where her son, far advanced in tuberculosis, lay. "The remarkable and deplorable sus- I ceptibllitv of the negroes to tubereulo-i sis, the rapidity with which they die of it. their bad housing conditions, the growing frequency of pellagra among them, and the almost general presence of specific diseases, make this law im p.-rative. both for them and for the protection of the white people: and it affords a splendid method of educa ting the colored population in the laws i of *-ealth and sanitation." Miss Babb embellishes her interesting ' article with a number of amusing lit- , tie stories of life among the negro washerwomen. She resorts at times to ( the use of dialect very entertainingly, j WILL NOT ACCEPT PUBLIC MONEY Syracuse, X. Y., March 2.—The The Right Rev. Bishop John Grimes, In a sermon here, declared that the Catholic church did not want pub lic moneys for the support of paro- j chlal schools and would not accept such moneys if they were offered by the Suite. He said It would be a calamitous day for the parochial schools if they were supported by the St!'»e and dominated by State super vision. CHARGED WIT H EMBEZZLEMENT > Tower City, Pa., March 2. Last January, when the State inspector front liarrlsbnrg examined the books of the Franklin Building and Loan Association, he found a deficiency and the secretary. H. T. Bressler, of Tower City, was suspected nncf expelled from , office. An auditing committee was then appointed and the books tlior- I onghly examined, which last week ! proved that a large amount of funds | were missing. A warrant chnrging em- j iczzlement was then sworn out before ! viuire Horn for the arrest of the sec-j ■etary. He asserts tliat he can prove his innocence. I which I indulged myself—just silly flirtations when a man plays at mak ing love for tho sheer amusement of the same. "Oh. I did the usual fool stunts that so many other married men do— ! opened wine for chorus girls and com plained about tho size of the baby's milk bill; sent flowers and presents to other women, and forgot my wife's birthday. Went on joy rides, and had midnight suppers at roadhouses with crowds that whooped things up until almost day, and then went home as cross as a bear. "When my wife spoke to me about the way 1 was doing 1 accused her of being jealous, and demanded to know if she thought that I intended to be always tied to her apron strings. Ewlhermore, I informed her that I intended to preserve my own personal liberty, and do as I chose without giving any account to her. and 1 also informed her that, after my hard day's work X needed the relaxation of some gayer amusement th«n sitting around home with her and the kids. " 'Would you liko to see me go about to parties with "other men, and take midnight rides with other men in their automobiles?' she asked me with a curious look in her eyes. "I could, you know," she added. " "Certainly I wouldn't stand for it." I cried hotly. 'You're a woman and my wife, and I expect you to remem ber that. It's different with a man.' " 'Oh, I don't know. We are both human,' she said. 'lf it were not for the children I should amuse myself quite as well as you do. But their mother's name must be kept blame less." ! '"Finally there came a time when I one of the children suddenly sickened and died, all in a few hours. I had gone that night with a roystering crowd to a dance, while my wife was alone fighting with death for the j child's lite. They telephoned every- I where for me, but eotild not find me, ] and when I came home in the morn ' ing white crepe was fluttering from ' my door and my little son was dean. i "My grief and shame and unavail t ing regret brought me up with a sharp turn. On my knees T repented and begged my wifes forgiveness, ! never doubting that a woman could j forgive all and wipe a husband's trans gressions from her mind as one wipes off a slate. | '* "Everything will be all right now, II shall never leave you again,' I said. | 'We will be happy as we were at first.' j "She smiled a smile that was sadder I than tears. "You think that our being happy I rests all with you,' she said; 'that you can come back home when you are tired of others and take your old place in my heart and life. What do you think I have been thinking and I feeling? Oh. no. You yourself shut j the door, and the door of a woman's heart, once shut, never opens again, j Men make many mistakes, but the greatest mistake they ever make is in ' thinking they can come back to their I wives." t "And then 1 knew that through my ! own folly I had lost the only woman ' I ever really loved." THE PETTICOAT HAS RETURED TO FAVOR K New Mode! Designed for Wear Be neath Fashionable Gowns. By MAY~AI ANTON r^| ==l I 8555 Four Gored Petticoat, 24 to 34 waist. No matter for how long a time we may have given up petticoats, they are really dear to the feminine heart, and their return to favor is sure to be met with welcome. Here is one that is excellent for it is without _ unnecessary ttimming, and allows a choice of flounces of three different sorts. For one use, the ciicular flounce will E>e the best, for another, the gathered flounce will be found perfect, and the plaited flounce makes the best possible finish for thin materials. In the illustration, the petticoat _ with circular flounce is made of messaline satin with trimming of heavy lace banding. One of the other views snows fine white cambric with flounce of embroidery, and another view shows crCpe de chine with a plaited flounce. Since these are all desirable ma terials and the special flounce suits each one perfectly, the design is exceptionally useful. There is no fullness at the belt line. For the medium size will be needed 5 yds. of material 27 in. wide, 2% yds. 36 or 44, with 3 yds. 27, I % yds. 36 or 44 for the circular flounce; 2 yds. 27, I}i yds. 36, 1 yd. 44, for the plaited flounce, and 2hi yds. embroidery 13 in. wide for the gathered flounce The oattetn No. 8555 Is cut in sizes from 24 34 in. waist measure. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department oi thib paper-, on receipt at ten--cut* Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. WILLING WORKERS MEET Special to The Telegraph Blain, Pa.. March 2.—On Saturday afternoon, the Indies' Society of Will ing Workers of the Reformed Church met at the home of Mrs. James Shu mnn. Members present were Mrs John A. Snyder. Mrs. J. W. Keener, Mrs. Reuben H. Kell, Mrs. Frank ltei:< ingcr. Mrs. Daniel Keck and Mrs. James Shuiuan. MARCH 2, 1915. Location 9 N. Market Sq.? Our Stocks of New Spring; Goods Are Nearly Completed# ; AND OUR OPENING DATE | Will Be Announced Shortly I The Last Word in Millinery S ,Women's and Misses' Suits, Coats,) Dresses, Skirts, Waists, Petticoats, £ House Dresses, Muslin Underwear,# Children's Dresses, Coats, and | Men's and Boys' Clothing* KAUFMAN'S The Home of Good Values, Big # {Assortments & Underselling Prices % rr l fin ~ ~ ~i rt mi ~ - - a GIRLS! LOIS OF BEAUTIFUL Hi iDIBROFF-25 CENT DIME Hair coining out? If dry, thin faded, bring back its color and lustre Within ten minutes after an appli cation of Danderine you cannot find a single trace of dandruff or falling hair and your scalp will not itch, but what will please you most will be after a few weeks' use, when you see new hair, line and downy at first—yes— but really new hair—growing all over the scalp. A little Danderine Immediately doubles the beauty of your hair. No Wholesale Liquor Dealer Forgets to Lift License One less wholesale liquor dealer will do business in Dauphin county during tho ensuing year, according to Coun ty Treasurer A. H. Bailey to-day. James N. Reese, 109 South Second street, made application for relicense and the privilege was granted, but up until midnight, Saturday, the time limit for lifting the license, Reese had not appeared at the county treasurer's office to pay the necessary SSOO fee. "Which means," said Mr. Bailey, "that Half a Million Matches a Minute It will take just Company. It is a safe about a minute to match for the home, read this advertise- Safe Home Matches light easily, but not too While you are easily. They are safe reading it, nearly —safe and sure, half a million matches will The sticks are extra been struck, burnt extra strong. and cast aside, in Safety again! this country alone. ara J 1 ney are non-poison- That gives you an ous * Safety once more. idea of the extent They cost nQ mQre to which matches than other brands of enter into the ma tches. As a matter everyday life of the 0 f f they cost less, American people, because every Safe Of the hundreds of Home Match isa match different brands of matches made and sold in the United States, there is but It is called the Safe Home Match. It is made by the Diamond Match sc. All grocers. Ask for them by name. ~7AL' difference liow dull, faded, brittle and scraggy, just moisten a cloth with Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, taking- one small strand at a time. The effect is amaz ing—your hair will be light, Huffy and wavy, and have an appearance of ab'indance, an incomparable lustre, softness and luxuriance. Get a 20 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any drug store or toilet counter, and prove that your hair is as pretty and soft as any—that it has Ijeen neglected or injured by careless treatment—that's all you surely can have beautiful hair and lots of it if you will just try a little Dan derine.—Advertisement. this license will be void during the en suing year." All the others lifted their licenses except applicants for the St. Lawrence Hotel, Berrysburg, which was heard to-day, the Ann Street Hotel, Middle town. an dtho Paxtonia inn. Remon strances had been Hied against these. SO KILLED OX GUNBOAT By Associate J Press Galveston, Tex.. March 2.—Dis patches received at the Mexican con sulate here tell of an explosion 011 board the main gunboat Progreso which resulted in the death of 30 per sons, including live women. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers