" mi .i if-- A BOUT the only busi ness that runs itself is the one that's runnin ) 1 , | downhiU^^j About the only pipe that's left to Itaell W '• the one thst never did give satisfac /fcllim/zlkaH tlon—and maybe that was the fault of ■ the tobacco. Try VELVET, The I * ■ Smoothest Smoking Tobacco, its aged ■ llir -M in-the-wood mellowness makes n*ry ■ PlPe avor ' le - I® C tins and 5c »ni )I 1H IS YOUR OWN TREE HEXL "GRADUATE?"! City Forester Mueller Propounds 12 "Exam" Questions Leading to the "Diploma" Is your tree a "graduate?" In an interestingly illustrated pam phlet prepared for the information of Harrisburg folks City Forester Harry 1 J. Mueller asks that question among , ii dozen quizzes relative to the condi tion of the trees. For a satisfactory answer to each of the dozen questions Forester Mueller allows 8 1.3 per cent, and a complete I answer to all entitles the tree, as the! forester quaintly puts it, lo a "col-1 lege diploma." Mere are the questions: Is opening: about tree of standard j size (Four feet square for tree of six 1 inches in diameter or less: increase! of foot square for every inch increase in tree size.) Is ground well-loosened to admit air and water? Does tree get good proportion of rain from sidewalk or does water all drain over curb into gutter? Is tree protected from chaffing by I G, Those of Middle Age Especially. When you have found no remedy for the horrors that oppress you during change of life, when through the long hours of the day it seems as though your back would break, when your head aches constantly, you are nervous, de pressed and suffer from those dreadful bearing down pains, don't forget that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the safest and surest remedy, and has carried hundreds of women safely through this critical period. Read what these three women say: From Mrs. Hornung, Buffalo, N. Y. BVFFALO, N Y. —"l am writing to let you know how much vour medicine lias done for me. I failed terribly during the last winter and summer and every one remarked about my appearance. I suf fered from a female trouble and always had pains in my back, no appetite and at times was very weak. "I was visit ing at a friend's house one day and she thought I needed Lyuia E. Pinkharo's Vegetable Compound. I took it &nd have gained eight pounds, have a good appetite and am feeling better every day. KverylKxly is asking me what I am doing and [ recommend Lydia E. Pmkhair.'s Vcgetablc Compound. You may publish this letter if you wish and I hoi>e others who have the same complaint will see it and Ret health from your medicine as I did" —Mrs. A. IIOBNUNG. 01 fttanton St., Buffalo, N. Y. Made Me Well and Strong. MACE DON, N.Y. — "I was all rim down and very thin in flesh, ner vous, no appetite, could not sleep and was weak, and felt badly all the time. The doctors said I had poor blood and what I had was turning to water. I took different medicines which did not help me, but Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound made me well and strong, and I ani recommending it to my friends."—Mrs. FRKD CHACE, li. NO. 2, Macedon, N.Y. The Change of Life. BELTS vi LI.E, MD.— "By the use of Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound 1 have successfully passed through a most trying time, the Change of Life. I suffered with a weakness, and had to stay in bed three days at a time. Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound restored me to perfect health, and I am praising it for the benefit of other women who suffer as 1 did."—Mrs. W. T>. DL VALL, Koute No. 1. Beltsville, Md. For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for fe- 7/1 lit male ills. No one sick with woman's ailments (Of W does justice to herself if she does not try this fa- 7/ fa«eJ®\r mous medicine made from roots and herbs, it 17 x t/ 11 *a« restored so many suffering women to health. 11 I/ I E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. (t\ )n) (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS., for advice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. I* Be Sure and Ask For Reading A s ~ Easter Hams and Bac Our sugar-cured, hickory-smoked Hams and Bacon can 1 be purchased at all the leading Grocers and Butchers in IJ j < I Harrisburg. Every piece has the Red String and branded RACO. Reading Abattoir Co. READING, PA <! MONDAY EVENING, j six-foot high, comfortably loose ;guard? Is tree free from "borers"? These j are detected by sawdust oozing from j holes in trunk and can best be de j tec-ted between April and November. I Are trunk and branches free from all cocoons, egg-masses, larvae, cater pillars. beetles, scale? Is head free from all dead wood, j has it been pruned by competent ex pert? Are all cuts painted? (b) Poes tree stand perpendicularly and is present site permanent home? Have scars fn>m horse bites or other injuries been cleaned out and i painted to prevent harboring of in | sects and to stop decay? j Does tree remain green and in full , leaf to middle of October? Have you put as much nourishment i into the soil as the tree needs for the j year? Give it a treat; dig in wood ! ashes, ground bone or well-rotted J manure. Are any wires interfering with your j trees, either by swaying or by electric I current, and are there any gas leaks i in ground around roots? j "Here," concludes City Forester 1 Mueller, "are the twelve good points 'of a good street tree. The total per- J centagc, if below par. reflects on the j man. not on the tree. The tree always | does its best. Alan forgets that he i has taken it out of the God-made | forest where it could and did take j care of itself and has placed it in a j rian-made city where it is dependent I on man's care for thrifty growth." Runaway jj June I By George Randolph !> ! Chester and Lillian Chester. | by Serial I'ubll- <[ j cation Corporation. She tiptoed out and hurried down the hill to the station, where she caught the first commuters' train. Ar riving at the city, she sought Officer L»owd and prevailed on him to phone j Ned's friends and June's parents that j .N'eil had been kidnaped. .Tune in a pretty little morning robe was busy among the flowers in Mrs. j Villard's boudoir window conservatory and singing softly when she heard a footstep behind her. Turning, she saw Viilard towering above her, his hands j in the pockets of his lounging robe, and he wag grinning. '"Oh:" exclaimed June, startled. "Good morning." "So this Is friend wife's pretty new companion." observed Villnrd. "Well,' friend wife hag excellent taste.'' June moved away. "Don't be in a hurry." he chuckled.: "We must get acquainted," and. sud denly reaching forward, he put his hand under her chin and turned up her face. She jerked away, but he closed thfi door toward which she darted and, i gathering her in his long arms, crush-! Ed her to him. June's struggles wer*: futile and her shrieks muffled, but on* pair of ears heard. There was a trash of glass, the flash of a long, lithe, i white and brown body through thf room, and then Viilard released his hold. Bouncer! He had sunk his eeth Into Villard's arms, and now lie; was a whirlwind of canine fury. The man turned pale with fear, kick-' ing and striking at the enraged ani mal. "Bouncer!"' That cry from June saved Villard's life, for the dog, with a yelp of joy, • was springing for his throat as he feil. i The man lay back. The dog stood still, j motionless. The man's hand moved nervously. The collie moved precise ly that same amount. Viilard did not twitch a muscle from that time on, ex <*ept tp speak. "Call off the dog!" he ordered. "Watch him. Bouncer," said June quietly. June rose from the chair into which i shp had limply sunk, but a cold anger lwd come to replace her weakness. She walked from the room and, going to the liuuse phone in the hall, called to the kitchen. "Has Mrs. \*illard returned?" she in quired of the maid who answered. "Not yet." "Do you know where to reach her?" "Any one down at the cottages will hunt her up and give her your mes sage."' ■'Ask her to come home immediately, please. Tell her it is quite important." She walked back to the boudoir and glanced iu at the door. The two stat ues were as she had left them. At the sound of her footstep Bouncer wagged the tip of his tail, but not for one fleet ing instant did he remove his flerj eyes ,froru the pale gray eyes of Bert Villard. Mrs. Villnrd. hurrying up the stair? within a few moments, found June In the landing alcove, white, shivering as if with cold. 'Tin sorry. Mrs. Villard. but I ani going at once," she said before the old er woman had even a chance to speak "Why. child"—Mrs. Villard's fac« was full of concern, but as she stared at .Tune her brows knotted and a flush crept into her cheeks—"what—what if the matter?" she faltered. June was already halfway up the! stairs. She turned. Mrs. Villard, with j out a word, followed her. Side by sldf! the two women stood looking at the man and the dog. Mrs. Villard need-1 ed no explanation to tell her what had! happened. For the first time in hei! married life she gave way to anger. "You beast!" she cried. her cheek?! scarlet and her eyes flashing. "This is' the last! I warned you to leave this! girl alone! I hate you! I could seej you torn to shreds! Go on. Bouncer!" j The collie crouched at .Tune's feet. The man rose cautiously. "You forget!" husked the man. "Wc! have a bargain!" Mrs. Villard lowered her eyes for s moment. "It. is broken!" she suddenly flared "You have paid me well, and I have served you well. But we were not to' Interfere with each other's life. You have Interfered with min«. I am through!" She stripped her hands of her rings' and threw them at him. She swept from the room, followed by June and 1 Bouncer. They heard the man tele-! phoning for his raoer at a nearby ga- J rage, and while Mrs. Villard was still] packing her clothing her husband came j along the ball. He stopped at the door. "I don't thin!; yon will find t.hatyoui new line of work will pay you as well; is being uiy wife." the man snarled, j Mrs. Villard sprang to the door and 1 closed It in his face, and Villard laugh-! Ed mockingly. "He is a beast!" said Mrs. Villard! and sat down as If she wished to ] say something more. There was the, Round of wheels at the door. Mrs. Villard suddenly buried her fac® In her 1 hands and cried. CHAPTER 111. EONEY! June was face to fac« with another angle of that eter nal problem, which, It seemed, to her. had complicated the en-1 tire relationship of men and women, i Mrs. Villard had plainly sold herself,' and the price is never great enough foi | any woman who has done that. Always in June's rapidly widening observation i the man gave and the woman received, 1 and her very dependence made the 1 question of matrimony one of essential barter and sale. It waa wrong! It de stroyed the very source and fount of H ARRISBURG TELEGRAPH P T T TT f TTTTTTTTTSf T ▼ ▼ ▼ ▼ T ▼ ▼..T-T' * CALL 1991 _rr^m 9 l FOUNDED ' ANY PHONE JM/TC/LLL(Z4L4 8 1 I ► Whenever You're "Queen Elizabeth"—The Novelty j • /r . rom Supreme, In Women's Gloves < y I lie "Queen Elizabeth" conies to Bow- —\oull be welcome in the large man's to be introduced to Harrisburg. It is " r summer pergola (rurniture „ „-n i i n- . r , i < ► floor). Her! you can find rest a silk glove difterent from any yet advanced. < ► in a comfortable rocker beneath ) will note, by the illustration, a dainty 7?" 4 ► this flower-decked arbor, away trill that finishes the wrist, or extends along y from the din and bustle of a busy the arm. -■ ► Pre-Easter Store. Come in elbow stvle. at $2.00, and 2- %J>"" ,m * .inS"Ar>l° 0m ° Pe " "bro'den-* 1 ' 00 ' Pla ' n and "nirMring em- J V. ) j f Kayser and Fownes Silk Gloves * Complete assortment of these excellent makes; long and short: self and con trasting embroidery. Priced at J 500 to JH2.O(i §§ Main FIoor—BOWMAN'S. Lowered Prices Easter Baskets ' ; For the Beginning of a Busy A variety of clever shapes 4 Domestic Week *° choose from at 3c, sc, < 10c, 15c, 25c and 39c < Unbleached Muslin at H'/jf yd. Chick-Chick Easter Egg Dye 4 regularly 12'.4c—10 inches wide; will simple to use, clean to handle, bleach easily; cut from full pieces. Packa° ' ' CIU ' co ' ors to a " shades. Sheeting at 240 yd.—regularly 32c Basement.— BOWMAN'S. < —<X) inches wide; unbleached. J < Challies at 40 yd.— regularly 5c To Repaper the Home Now in Persian and Oriental designs; 20 Means a Considerable e different patterns to select from. Saving in Desirable ► Wash Suits For the Sheeting at 220 yd. - regularly 28c WT 11 D J ► Bl inches wide; unbleached. w all r apers J Small BoVS Easter Calico at 4'/S0 yd.—regularly 6J4c— 15c, 18c and 20c wall papers, suitable < K * stripes and figures; cut from full f° r all rooms, in a good selection of pat- < Over a dozen different and ex- pieces. terns, at roll *. tremelv smart wash suit novelties Sheets at 690—regularly 90c—made hJlrVn'l V • UU " l ja l jcrs - for * V "... . , , F T> .I I I- L-I I ru -, bedroom, living room and hall; satin < ► that will please the little men. ?' Portland muslin; 3-inch hem; _>ox9o stripes, Jaspe lined and floral designs inches. , lt < ► /-vi • t« • i. • • . f Jt 00 roll j Oliver I wists 111 a variety ol • Main FIoor.—BOWMAN'S. BOWMAN'S—Fourth Floor. styles and many combinations in / —- —4 y vestees, French blouses, Jnitl ~fh/? ► Russian blouses and middies. Ll^ * Made of reliable fabrics—linens, Hastings Kitchen Cabinet Club, 4 ► . . , , bowman Refrigerator Club. reps, chambrays and madras. ; Bowman Sewing Machine Club. ► Prices are 50<*, 98<% $1.25, iy» ► $1.50, $1.95, $2.95, $3.50 ,Jv«t,i£."r ~,nU" " you " m, " , " rr ~ IvOW < ► Third Fioor.— BOWMAN'S. J 4 '■ ±± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± ± A AAA# A ->• -»■ 4 lore. "Was there no remedy? June, shaken though she was by her paiuful j experience of the morning, was i strengthened in her own resolve. The j answer to the problem was independ-1 ence even though she suffered in the : attainment of it, even though Ned j suffered. Their love would V* all the: stronger for it, and it would be pure al-1 ways. Could she have seen Ned at that mo ment all her theories aud all her de ductions would have taken swift flight, i and she would have bathed with her tears the swollen wrist which he had just freed from the rough rope that had bound it. See Runaway June in motion pic- I tures every Monday at the Victoria Theater. The pictures each week por tray the episode published in the Tele- | graph the week previous.—Advertise- : Runaway june will be shown in mo- | tion pictures every Monday at the J Royal Theater, Third street above Cumberland. Be sure to see them. — ! Advertisement [To He Continued.] Putnam's Corn Extractor Destroys All Corn Misery Acts Painlessly—Never Fails Takes the sting right out- -cleans j "em right off without pain. Thousands! say it's the surest thing to rid the feet I of callouses, sore foot lumps or corns.) Don't suffer—that's foolish —buy ai 25c bottle of Putnam's Painless Corn) and Wart Extractor, it does the trick j quickly and is invariably satisfactory. Sold bv druggists everywhere and byj C. M. Forney.—Advertisement. \MCSEMKXTS PHOTOPLAY TO-DAY %\IT \ STEWART nnil EARI. WlUnl* featured In Broadway- Star 3-reel production "From Headquarters" The arcret nervier man unknow- I lnu.lv aeck* hi* own daughter for anmh'ii 11 with Intent to kill. Word cornea from Headquarter* to call off the search nation the »lrl from trial. ••THE STORM," --reel liloßrapli. \ dramatic feature alinllur to the famouN Marr Plekford release "Tea* of the Storm Country." ——" Mil • i' WILMER. VI.VCEXT & Majestic aitkm, mors. Wed. Mat. & Night Mar. 31 Selwjn and Co., preaeal The Dramatic Senaatloa of the Century Within the Law nlth CLARA JOEI. aa MARY TURNER PHICESi Mat., 25c to fl.OOi Eve., j 26c to $1.50. <im Try Telegraph Want Ads. ' EXAMINATION AT IH.AIX Special to The Telegraph Rlain, Pa., March 29.—Examination |of the eighth grade pupils, for this district, which included pupils from j Blain borough, Jackson, Madison and (Toboyne townships, preparatory to en tering the high school, was held here ! on Saturday. The class was composed of thirty-two applicants. THEIR LAST SERMONS HERB i The Rev. B. H. Hart, pastor of the j Fifth Street Methodist Church, will preach his last sermon on Easter Sun- j ] day before leaving this city to go to , t his new charge. The Rev. John H. ! Daugherty, of the Riflge Avenue . I Methodist Church, preached his last . I sermon last evening to a crowded ! I church. Fifth Street Church also was , ! crowded. ti_ —a \ AMISI MKXTS | 12 .Voon till II I'. M. •IfMNf 1.. l.aNk; • l»reM«>ntN H. 11. WAHM3K In Till: UHO.ST BHKAK r. reelw; our rt'Kiilnr program: i The Ileiirt of a Bandit; The lllack i Diamond; The C.lrl Wlio I\r|it Hook*. I Admission, 10c Children, 5c THEATER UEAI TIFI I, * 'j "You can telephone from my office." What would YOU do? See what Anna Little does, as the heroine of The Black Box. See its 15 gripping episodes at this theater. There's a punch in every scene, a smash in every episode. If you enjoy the movies, you'll ba enthralled when you— SEE THE BLACK BOX The Photoplay Serial Supreme IS Episodes— one a week [Saw through this ad here. Between the"l tut tart' thus ufarnted tut the,iter I name. date. etc. Yeur editor will extla in J ißpEigSai | Shown at the l'alacc Theater every I Wednesday for 15 weeks, commencing Wednesday, April 7, MARCH 29, 1915. BOY ll.\s APPEXDrciTIS Dillsburg, Pa.. March 29.—Harry ]l T rich, the young- son of Mrs. Mary jilrioh of Warrington township, was taken to the York Hospital, where he underwent an operation for appen- I (Ileitis. VKTNRANS llol,I) IIKIMOX About 500 veterans of the Spanish \\ ar, with their wives and friends, were present at the reunion and social held In the City Grays' Armory. Saturday eyening, in honor of liarrisburg Camp, No. 8. I'nlted Spanish War Veterans. A M I' SF.M EXTS AMI'S KM EXTS , y j "ThouSha't TAKE A TRIP But Thou Shouldst See " From Cone y Island u 'll r te the North Pole" Henrietta Crosman WITII a OTHIOIt GOIM) ACTS With 6 Other Good Acts For sc-10c-15c | L t r , 1 Have Vou Heard the Pipe Organ everybody is talking about- The New $25,000 Pipe Organ Orchestra Very Aptly Termed the Pipe Organ With the Human Voice VICTORIA THEATER SEE THE GREAT NEW SERIAL I RUNAWAY JUNE by George Randolph Chester |j| in Motion Pictures 1 Eighth Episode Today at i; ROYAL THEATER Third Street, above Cumberland ;! || VICTORIA | i NINTH EPISODE RUNAWAYJUNE And the $25,000 Hope-Jones Unit Orchestra Admission, 10$ Children, 50 Dr. Fox Makes Bitter Attack on Liquor Before a crowded auditorium, the Rev. Dr. John D. Fox closed the Palm Sunday services in the Grace Methodist Church, last evening, with a bitter at tack against the liquor trafilc and every supporter of it. Or. Fox strongly urged his audience to line up with Governor Brumbaugh on his local option stand and do every thing to secure the passage of the bill now pending in the Legislature. 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers