"For the i| Woman 1 Who Knows" 2 For the woman who knows, 9 nothing need to be satd as to X 5 the merit» of Peruna. She 5 I knows already that Peruna is 0 J a great remedy for her many v ■ ailments. Y [ But there are many women O £ who do not know what a valu- S t able remedy Peruna Is. Ca- t tarrhal complaints of any sort. 0 > whether of the head or the In- O ► ternal organs, yield to Peruna <> Cf If taken regularly. S k Mrs. 1,. A. Patterson. 23S Utah § Ave., Memphis. Tenn., is one 2 who knows "I have been a Q ■ friend of Peruna many years. B We always recommend it to our 5 B neighbors." g B Mrs. L. Martin, Tolo, Cal., 5 (g also knows of Peruna. "I am O Jf . sure Peruna saved my life. I § X had been very sick three X g months. Doctors were in de- X 0 spair. Xo one can describe my § .$ joy and happiness because of O |o the change Peruna produced in <> § me." | 0 Women ib all walks of life V $ are making similar statements. § 2 They also find It a reliable and Q (X valuable household remedy. X Every woman should have a o [5 copy of "The Ills of Life." O KJ Sent Columbus, § EE free from Ohio Q The Peruna Co. 5S o iXK>OOOOOOOOOOOOO HWI RHEUMATISM HOW Says We Must Keep Feet Dry, Avoid Exposure and Eat Less Meat <3tay oft the damp ground, avoid ex posure, keep feet dry, eat less meat, drink lots of watar, and above all, take a spoonful of salts occasionally to keep down uric acid. Bheumatism is caused by poisonous toxin, called uric acid, which is gener ated in the bowels and absorbed into [the blood. It is the function of the 'kidneys to filter this acid from the blood and cast it out in the urine. The pores of the skin are also a means of freeing the blood of this Impurity. In damp and chilly, cold weather the skin pores are closed, thus forcing the kid neys to do double work, they become weak and sluggish and fail to elimi nate this uric acid which keeps accu- Kiulating and circulating through the Kystem, eventually settling in the ■oints and muscles, causing stiffness, koreness and pain called rheumatism, f At the first twinge of rheumatism ket from any pharmacy about four Eunces of Jad Salts; put a tablespoon- Kil in a glass of water and drink be- Kore breakfast each morning for a R eek. This is said to eliminate uric Kcid by stimulating the kidneys to HirmaJ action, thus ridding the blood V these Impurities. Salts is inexpensive, harmless is made from the acid of grapes Hi lemon juice, combined with lithia H Is used with excellent results by of folks who are subject Hriheumatlsm. Here you have a effervescent Uthia-water which overcomes uric acid and ■- beneficial to your kidneys as well. ■ FINE TREATMENT^ FOR CATARRH HIST TO SCAKK AJTD COSTS I.ITTLE ■ If you have catarrh don't be misled or Fulled into believing you can obtain a Bure for your trouble by breathing a ■imple medicated air. K Catarrh is a constitutional disease ■nd inhalers, sprays and nose douches Kierely temporise with the disease and Bldom. if ever, bring any lasting bene- Bt. To effect a cure use a remedv that drive the disease out of your «vg- Don't employ a remedy that will Hve tbe dtsease down into your lunga bronchial tubes. Such methods lead to consumption, and fre- produce catarrhal deafness and Kd noises. you have catarrh In any form go your druggist and (ret one ounce Parmlnt (Double Strength), take home and add to It "-i pint of hot and 4 ounces of granulated sugar; until dissolved. Take a tablespoon- times a day. He first dose should begin to relieve miserable headache, dullness, HinK. sore throat, running of the W catarrhal discharges, head noises loathsome symptoms that al ■ accompany this disgusting dis- of smell, defective hearing and dropping in the back of the are other symptoms that show ■L j«nce of catarrh and which mav Klrrome by the use of this simple Kfent. Every person who has ca- Vhould give this prescription a ■ There Is nothing better.—Adver- HtnL ■ PILES RELIEVED Salt Rheum, Clcers, Old - ft Sores and Carbuncles the Influence of San Cura surprising Improvement Is quickly that It seems almost cases of piles like those of H F. Gilbert of Titusvllle, Pa., the marvelous antiseptic Mr. Gilbert writes: years I sultered with itching piles; at times I ! to the house for more Two years ago I began HCura Ointment and one 50c a firm and permanent cure. ■Tot been troubled since." Ointment Is guaranteed by Gorgas. who Is the agent In to help any of the above H diseases or money back. It pain from burns, cuts and ■ draws out the poison and of in a short time. 25c and 50c George A. Gorgas'.—Adver- Cumberland Valley Railroad J TIME TABLE i In Effect May >4. ltll TRAIT® leave Harrlsburg— For and Martlnabarg at i-o*. *ViO a. m.. *8:40 p. m. "For iVigerstown, Chambersburg, Car lisle. Hfccnanlcsburg and Intermedlata ■ta!tlV r 5:03. *7:50. »11:53 a. n»" "»*4OX*S, *7.40, *11:00 p. m. Addfllonal trains for Carlisle and MechjPicsburg at »:4» a. m.. 2:18; 1:17, • ■so, v:to a. m. Foe Dlllsburg at 5:03, *7:50 and a. m.. 2:18, *1:40, 6:32 and «:»# p • tWilt. All other trains dally excent Bundar. H RIDDLE. J. H TONGK Q. P. 4. UN I'KItTAKERS " RUDOLPH K. SPICER Funiral Director ant* Embalmer aui »aUn IL. Mail f««w TUESDAY EVENING, ?&2b(Y)en t^.lnTeßes The Ogre Jealousy How He Creeps Into the Heart and Makes Life a Torment By BEATRICE FAIRFAX Most people, when making a sum mary of their own good points, as sure you seriously. *1 haven't a par ticle of jealousy tn my nature.' and most people making this statement are telling vast untruths. Unfortu nately. 'particles of jealousy' seem inherent In the average human being. And there is probably no more con temptible petty vice no more dan gerous leading to major vlciousness than this same quality of jealousy. The most usual form of jealousy to take Is that of begrudging the right of one's loved one to care for other people beside one's self. A loving and otherwise happy wife will make her self miserable because of her hus band's Affection for a favorite brother or some congenial comrade, or even because of a fancied interest in some of her women friends or in some girl he meets in a business way. A girl will be miserably jealous of her sweetheart's mother or of some old friend he chances to mention te her. Men. too. are prone to this vice and when they are subject to it. it is all too likely to take a violent and dan gerous form. But when women with nothing better to do but devote them selves to being jealous of all sorts of "phantom rivals." they succed in de stroying their own peace of mind and that of practically every one who comes within the radius of their mi asma of contemptible feelings. There is probably no cure for jeal ousy except the swing of the pendu lum of one's common sense toward sanity, kindly judgment and the sav ing grace of a sense of proportion. Jealousy takes two forms—that of fearing the known and seen and that of suspecting all the vast realms of the unknown. The wife who fears all the people of whom her husband talks affectionately, and the man who dreads the individuals over whom his sweetheart waxes enthusiastic, are alike absurd and illogical. The woman who resents the exist ence of people whose Influence she suspects of swaying her lover's mind, and the man who conjures up fancied rivals, are after all fighting nothing more serious than their own fevered Imaginations. If these sufferers would only say to themselves, "after all, I {Practicability Is Keynote of Central High Cooking School \ Need For Cleanliness Impressed Upon Students; Girls ;! Can Already Prepare Meals "Just Like Mother"; I; Learn How to Balance the Meal; Suggestions ■! From Home Often Adopted; Nothing "Fancy" 5 or "Newfangled" About System; Removing !■ Adam's Chance to Blame It on Eve A large, well-lighted and well-ven tilated room. In this corner a highly polished, glistening kitchen range with fire burning brightly: in that a large gas store of the most modern design: along one side several scrupulously clean, white enameled sinks and a cool-looking refrigerator; on the other, long rows of well scoured, shining pots and pans. Four lines of desk-like tables, arranged to form a hollow square: a score of trim, white-aproned and white-capped girls busily darting here and there, each with a mixing bowl in hand, sifting flour, breaking eggs, measuring and pouring liquids. That is Harrisburg high school's "cooking school"—or, more properly, the domestic science branch of Cen tral high school—as It impresses you as you step through a door into the basement at Central. Yet are met by Miss Frances Ham ilton. the teacher. She is white aproned and white-capped like her pupils. She smiles and immediately you feel at home. It was rather late yesterday when a Telegraph reported visited the •kitchen" and the little "housekeep ers'' were busily scrubbing, scouring, washing and cleaning: their tables and utensils preparatory to ending their afternoon's work. Spotless Town And how they worked! Never did your grandmother with ashes scour her old iron kettle more thoroughly than these white-aproned little misses scrubbed and polished their aluminum and granite utensils. When they were done everything fairly glistened. Spot less is the one word that describes everything. As Miss Hamilton describes the work her pupils have already done, the work they are now doing and what she hopes to have them accom plish your Ideas of a "cooking school" undergo revolutionary changes. "I was always under the impres sion that you taught girls how to do a lot of foolish, new-fangled stunts with food in a cooking school," you may sheepishly exclaim as Miss Hamilton reels off a long list of things that the girls know how to cook. The Tilings Tliej Can Cook And it's a revelation, the things those trim, capable little misses can cook. Scalloped oysters, baked apples, apple tarts, whipped cream, cocoa, creamed toast, creamed vegetables, soups of all kinds, sauces of every va riety, biscuits of the light, tasty kind, rcllß, cakes, jellies, muffins, puddings, candy, roast meats and gingerbread. Can your mother beat that? Then they have learned how to treat burns. Simple, you say? Tes, but you know there are hundreds of house wives who would apply the wrong thing. And they can make a fire. Just think what this means for the hus bands that will soon be: And last, but not least .they are taught that cleanliness in the kitchen is an abso lute essential. If you want to see how well the girls have learned this lesson just stroll up to Central and take a look at the kitchen. It is absolutely Combing Won't Rid Hair of Dandruff | The only sure way to get rid of dan druff is to dissolve It, then you destroy It entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply It at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. Do this to-night, and by morning most. If not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more appli cations will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of It, no matter how much dan druff you may have. Tou will And, too, that all Itching and digging of the scalp will stop at once, and your hair will be fluffy, lus trous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. Tou can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It Is inexpensive and I never falls to do the work.—Advertlse- I menu am merely calling Into things that probably do not exist, and am looking for trouble that I may ac tually cause bv thinking it long enough. I certainly won't be so silly as to face imaginary rivals, and to waste my own energies in fighting battles with enemies who don't exist." They might very easily dismiss the foolish shadows that skulk n the land of evil shadows cast by their own minds. If there are real rivals for one's af fection in the world, it would be very sensible to save one's energies for a conquest of them, and not to wast© one's self tilting at shadows. Fan cied rivals exist only in your own brain. Make sure that the shadows they cast do not become perceptible to the eyes of your beloved; for then indeed, "phantom rivals" may become living realities. As for real rivals for your affection sitting about and hating them while you resent your beloved's disloyalty can only accomplish one thing. It will kill your faith in true love and cause vou to doubt your own power to in spire it. Instead of belittling and hat ing the person who attracts the wan dering fancy of the one you love and forcing him to secret meetings and all the thrill of a clandestine affair, drag the thing out into daylight and its cobweb illusions will go. The mistake that most jealous peo ple make is to sit and brood over their jealousy itself The real way to fight the thing is first to make sure there is a cause for it and then to set about removing the cause. Don't hate your rival, don't distrust your faith less admirer, but instead proceed to see what charms you may emulate in vour rival, and what weak points you make painfully evident by your own superior fineness. By the time you have gone actively about removing the cause of your jealousy and an alyzing the situation, you will find the whole thing reduced to absurdity. After all. when you begin to cata log and tabulate and analyze jealousy, you are likely to find the most blame worthy person in a whole lopsided triangle to be yourself. And when vou come to despise jealousy itself you will probably turn into a sane, broad-minded, lovable person who could never, in the natural course of things, have anything to be jealous about! spotless—no other words describe It. How to Balance the Meal Then, too, the young cooks have learned how to balance a meal. As Miss Hamilton explains It, that means they know just how much protein, car bohydrates. fat. oil and water to have in each and every meal to make it bal ance. 4 "In other words," explained, the teacher, "they know better than to serve roast beef, macaroni and cheese and scalloped salmon with a heavy salad at the same meal. They know how to vary the menu." If you are a traveling man and stop at many Penn- j sylvania hotels, you will know what a boon to humanity it will be when every cook learns this lesson. Another thing that impresses you at Central's cooking school Is the evident willingness to work that the pupils exhibit. "It's no trouble at all." proudly de clares Miss Hamilton, "to keep my girls at work. In fact, I have consid erable difficulty in restraining them from doing too much. You see, each girl literally eats the results of her own skill and that alone is an incen tive to them to excell. Then, too. the work is fascinating to girls. They love It." Where Mother Comes In Each girl not only learns to cook in the school, but she is urged to carry on her studies at home. While no credit is given for work done at home, yet each day as the roll is called the girls respond with a list of the things they have accomplished or helped to accomplish at home. If mothers have any suggestions for im proving the student's work, they are made and the girl explains her mother's suggestion in the school. If it is a good one it is adopted. Then, as it frequently occurs, there is a new way of doing a thing learned in school and the girl explains it to mother —and mother learns. This co operation between the mothers at home and the teacher In the school is working wonders for the girl pupils in Miss Hamilton's classes. There Is nothing "fancy" or "new fangled" at Central's cooking school. The girls learn how to make the same delicious. appetizing dishes your mother or wife makes, and they make them in the same way. The only dif ference is that your wife or mother learned by the light of her own bitter experience. Where Eve Gets Her Come-back "Just what Is the object of your school. Miss Hamilton?" the teacher was asked. "Why, to make better cltlieni," flashed back the teacher, "and," she added smilingly, "to remove Adam's chance to blame It on Eve." MT. GRETNA WATER SUPPLY State Authorities Let Contract For Rtfle Range Reservoir speci.il to The Telegraph Mt. Gretna, Pa., April 27.—The con tract for the construction of the new : 150.000 gallon water reservoir on the | State Rtfle Range reservation was [awarded to-day to Emanuel Keener, jof Colehrook. The reservoir will give |Mt. Gretna three times Its present wa ter supply, the old dam having a cana ! ctt yof 60.000. i A second contract was awarded to David Rlsser, of Lebanon, for the clearing of forty acres of tlmberland, In preparation for the next guard en campment. BRIDGE PART** AT HECK TON Special to The Telegraph Dauphin, Pa., April 27. —An Infor mal little bridge party was given Mon day evening by Miss Emma Heck at her home at Heekton. The guests play ed on the porch and the prise winners were Dr. Walter Park and Mrs. Wil liam >*"•'. Refreshments were served to the tt»'J owl««: Dr. and Mrs. Wal ter ParK. Mr. and Mrs. William Nell, of Bteelton: Miss Anne Miller, of Dau phin: Miss Heck, Mr. Rockwell, and Nicholas H. Heck. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH IN THE FASHIONABLE EMPIRE STYLE. 4 Smart Frock Adapted both to Wool And to Washable Fabrics. By MAY MANTON 8578 Empire Dress for Misses and Small Womeu, 16 and 18 years. Empire styles not alone are exceedingly J smart, they are almost always be- i coming to girlish figures. This dress can j be made of serge as it is in the illus- | tration, or from linen, from Sponge, or I from other washable material, or if \ something still handsomer is wanted, it can be made from poplin or from silk, 1 and in whatever way it is treated, it gives ! extremely smart lines and the newest I lines as well. For the simple dress, pockets ; will be desirable, but if an afternoon#; frock of silk is wanted, they would be \ omitted. There is a three-piece skirt and j a perfectly plain blouse that are joined 1 by means of a belt. The high military I collar makes a feature of the Spring, but ' later we will want the square neck j and shorter sleeves, and the suggestion in the small view is a good one for wash- j able materials. Since the frock is closed j with buttons and buttonholes for its entire length, it is one of the simplest ! possible to wash and iron. The trimming I of contrasting material cut into bands and arranged under the front edges is a . good one, but any finish adapted to the I material can be used. Braid or banding could be applied over the front edges or, when serge or gabardine is used, a nar rower design braided in soutache would be pretty. For washable material, scalloped edges would give a (jood effect. for the 16 year si re will be required 5 yds. of material 27 in. wide, 3% yds. 36, yds. 44, with l\i yds. any width to trim with straight bands as illustrated. The pattern Ko. 8578 is cut in sizes for 16 and 18 years. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of •his paper, on receipt of ten cents. Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. Water Supply Gives Projects Approval The State Water Supply Commis sion last night issued its approvals of the applications at the recent session. In the list was that for the coal wharf at the Island. Other applications acted upon fa vorably were: Commissioners of Dauphin county, for permission to construct a bridge over Wieonisco creek, at Lykens, Pa. Gratz Water Company, for the sup ply of water to the public in Gratz borough. Dauphin county. The Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany, for permission to make a change in the superstructure of bridges No. 118.53 (old No. JM) across Mahan tongo creek, about 650 feet from the mouth of said creek, and about 1.16 miles west from Mahantongo station, between Dauphin and Northumber land counties. The Lancaster. Elizabethtown and Middletown Turnpike Company, for permission to make a change in or addition to a bridge across Little Conestoga creek, along Lancaster, Elizabethtown and Middletown turn pike, on the boundary line between Manheim and East Hempfield town ships, Lancaster county. 'lhe Susquehanna Coal Company for permission to change the channel of Bear creek, for a distance of 500 feet, at a point 4,000 feet above mouth of said stream, In Wieonisco township. Dauphin county. Christian Hess, for permission to make permanent repairs to his mill dam across Fishing creek, Newberry township, York county. Letter List LIST OF LETTERS REMAINING IN the Post Office, at Harrlsburg, Pa., for the week ending April 24. 1915: Ladies' List Mrs. J. B, Anderson, Miss Rosie Baker. Mrs. L. A. Bern hardt. Mrs. Harry Black. Miss Ruth M. Blair. Mrs. Anna Chrltzman, Miss Marion Chrlstman, Mrs. Walter C. Con rad. Mrs. Llna E. S. Cunningham. Miss Alice Daniels, Miss Josephine Edwards, Annie Evans. Miss Mae Gordon, Mrs. G. H Gulrard. Mrs. Clara Hake. Mrs. Clar ence Haugh, Miss Marie Henry. Miss Eveiy Horst, Miss Minnie Johnson, Mrs. John J. Kelley, Mrs. Eleanor Mer cer, Mrs. Bessie Millen, Mrs. S. P. Mitchell. Miss Lucy Myers, Mrs. Mag gie Nutter, Mrs. J. Nunger ID. L.), Sirs. Maggie Ort. Miss Bern Tee M. Price. Miss Mary R.ilpe. Mrs. Minerva Rau denbush. Miss Olive Shaffer, Miss Jen nie Singer, Mrs. Annie E. Thompson, Mrs. Harry Walter, Miss A. E. White, Mrs. Bruner Toung. Gentlemen's List H. C. Anderson. James G. Anderson, P. C. Bentzel. A. Block. George Burgess. Dan earner, Walker 8. Clark, R. S. Coughlln, Dr. W. F. Danzer. William D. Duncan, D. O. Gunnells. John Harder. William B. Hay, Frank Hoffman, Joe Hummel, E. E. Jaroby (Captain), J. R. Johnson, Russell Jones, Dr. D. N. Kremer, Harry Maltckvttz, J. C. Marshall Hon. Lewis T. McFadden. W. Millet, L. Mullen, Dr. Myers. Daniel Nichols (D. I*), William Perslong. Alhert Ream. Mr. Rtead. G. W. Rockwell. A. C. Shunk, Charles Snyder, Earnest Stratton, William W. Upper man, John Wagner. Isaac F. Wert. Firms —Mahargues' Bakery. Foreign H. R. Harwood, Peter Forgla. Yuesel Michae. Toney Waetan Persons should Invariably ha.v« their mall matter addressed to their street and number, thereby insuring prompt delivery by the carriers, FRANK C. SITES, Postmaster. OPEN SEWER BIDS MAY T Bids for the construction of a sewer tn a ten-foot alley to Monroe street, and tn Monroe street, will be opened at 12 o'clock noon, Friday. May 7, bv Com missioner W. H. Lynch, superintendent of streets and public Improvements. . | i.juxhT" rtg~\wr <"1 fix~ nr~ n~ r- nrir ri~ i~" |For Tomorrow, Wednesday Only: | A Rousing Big Sale of Over: 1500 Newest Untrimmed Hats! { This Special One-Day Sale gives you an opportunity of selecting the newest and I best Untrimmed Hats ever offered in a sale in oar city. And at prices which are\ lower than ever quoted anywhere. Our crowded space in oar temporary store com- \ pels this sacrifice in order to make room for our Summer stock which is arriving 4 • * K daily. ' 1 ' Untrimmed Untrimmed J HATS /Mf HATS L|jfp \ Worth to sl, For Values to $1.25, | I Rough Braids, Chip Hats and Hemp Good Quality Chip and Hemp Hats, I Hats, Newest Shapes black and colors. Newest Shapes, black and colors. f f ■» f Untrimmed /*/\ Untrimmed I < hats nyr HATS gyr ; Values to $1.50, VVV Value* to $2.00, V/VV ' Hemp Hats With Cable Edges; Large, Fine Quality Milan Hemp Hats, With Small and Medium Shapes, black and Cable Edge. All Styles; Choice of i colors. black white and colors. I t Kaufman's Temporary Store! fg- 9 NORTH MARKET SQUARE ? Woman With Price of SSOO on Her Head to Speak Here Friday Afternoon Rose Livingston, of New York, who will speak here at the Technical high school next Friday,.is a woman with a price actually upon her head. A dozen times during the past seven years efforts have been made to kill her by "cadets" and other denizens of the underworld who resent her rescue work among the white slaves of China town. She has been repeatedly beaten and stabbed and now cartles a bullet in her breast as the result of one of the at tempts to take her life. Yet notwith standing these attacks and the fact that the leaders of the underworld have offered SSOO to anyone who can "get" her. she still continues her rescue work in the dives, saJoons and other resorts of Greater New York where "the girl who disappears" is so frequently found. Her work is made possible by a women's society of a Brooklyn church, which sponsors her and makes itself responsible for her personal maintenance. LANCASTER COUNTY WEDDINGS Special to The Telegraph New Holland, Pa., April 27.—Miss Llllle M. Overly was married yester day to Lloyd Killian, at the parson age of the United Brethren Church, by the pastor, the Rev. Ira R. MacDon aid. Blue Ball. —Miss Kathryn Kaldren, of this place, was married to Sam uel H. Mentzer, of East Earl, at the parsonage of the Lutheran Church by the pastor, the Rev. J. W. Smith. Maytorwn.—Miss Margaret Sterner, of this place, and Christian Brandt, of East Donegal, were married yesterday by the Rev. Ira Mac Donald, at Shlp pensburg. The Rev. Mr. Mac Donald was a former pastor here. ' j | |j: est materia!# jjjj II obtainable in ji if the world's mar :| i f ill | jjjjj: kets are used in jM I Ljjl III): Our Sales Agents In al||| Harrlsbur* are !| Ill||i|S J. H. BOH BR :' I V F. J. ALTHOUSB |£ CUNNINGHAM'S !|jf Hurler's Cocoa, like ; 1 HuyUr't Candy, U Supreme |j|| APRIL' 27, 1915. CANADIANS STOP GERMANS London, April 27.—T0 the Canadians belong the honor of spoiling the Ger man's plan in Flanders, according to a dispatch to the Daily Mail from its l i . I GOLD DUST | —it actually works at hundreds of tasks daily "Let the Gold Dust Twins do your work" is much more than a popular phrase. It is based on truth, an actuality, for Gold Dust really works. >.ui The millions of women who use it for dishwashing and scrubbing know this. u t Gold Dust should be used for cleaning and brightening everything. 1 ft 1 MIBQaW I* «■ the only washing and cleaning powder | needed in any home. The amall quantity required ia quickly taken up by hot or cold, hard or eoft water—forming a •; HeS&£MsKM perfect cleaning aolution. The valuable antiaeptio j|| kv PfflHtifil Jujfifl deanaing agent it containa helpa to make thinga li aanitarily clean,aa well aa bright and new-looking. Sc and larger packages sold eTerywhere BOLD DVSTTWtMB OSESEFAIRBANKSsSSID do yomr work" MAKERS Absolutely No Pain JmßK] My laMt luiyrotea apptl- Mice*, Including aa anygen- X . y M atr appmtai, makes X A k X weSww dMcttnc and all X Vv »fl!* X /SHjsgflr tal work poatOrely X kV 7 S JESSBL x v„ aad Bat THIS p. m.; Bandaya, x v X X > jX "w-«»»»» S BASY TEKMH OF //VV PAXKSNTI |pHH /jJO Market Street WgSv low tbo flnl) / Harrlmburg, Pa. nmm h.h .mi oft HTlflll I Whon Coming to My Oftloo Bo uflU I lull • Suro You Aro In tho might Plaoo. I i —— correspondent In Northern France. They were supported In turn l>y a French force, by Belgians and by Eng lish resriments. The guns they lost temporarily were not behind their line, but on the left side. 5