When Glands Swell Blood Needs Attention Even a Sweat Gland May Result in Severe Consequence. In our Intricate body the use of 8. 8. S. for the blood has a most remarkable Influence. We little realize our gland ular system. It may be a tiny bulb no bigger than a pin point, anil yet If a disease germ gets Into It, there is a tremendous swelling. It becomes a boil, a carbuncle, it may l>e a "blood rising." and it is of,en a source of con tinuous misery If not checkod. Many of the most excruciating forms of tor ture begin with the swelling of a tiny gland, caused by a disease germ. And it is S. F. S. that spreads throughout the blood circulation to prevent Just such conditions. Or If they have al ready started, S. S. S. will soon put the blood in such a state of health as to overcome the tendency to glandular swellings. It Is a natural medicine fop the blood. Just as essential to health If the blood be impure, as are the meats, fats, grains and sugars of our daily food. It contains one Ingredient the active purpose of which Is to stimulate the exchange of new flesh for dead or waste matter. Get a bottle of S. S. S. today of any druggist, and If your case is stubborn, write to the Medical Adviser. The Swift Specific Co., ICS Swift Bldg.. Atlanta. Ga. This department is in charge of a noted physician. Valuable Item for Men Health and strength hitherto unknown will be felt singing In rich red blood through the ar teries and veins and life's great est ambitions may be realized as never before if the following special treatment is followed by those men. and women, too. who are stricken with that most dreaded of all afflictions, nerv ous exhaustion, accompanied with such symptoms as extreme nerv ousness. insomnia, cold extremi ties. melancholia, headaches, con stipation and dyspepsia, kidney trouble, dreadful dreams of dire ful disasters, timidity in ventur ing and a general Inability to act naturally at all times as other people do. Lack of poise and equilibrium In men is a constant source of embarrassment even when the public least suspects it. For the benefit of those who want a restoration to full. bounding health and all the happiness ac companying It. the following home treatment is given. It con tains no opiates or habit forming drugs whatever: The treatment consists of (J) three-grain cadomene tablets, packed in sealed tubes, and wide ly prescribed and dispensed bv physicians and well stocked pharmacists. Full directions for self administration now accom pany each tube. It Is claimed that these tablets possess the most wonderful tonic-lnvigorat ing powers which can soon be experienced after taking them. Two Fairs at Half Fare; Railroad Rates Cut In Two The railroads have greatly reduced their fares and made it possible for you to see both the San Francisco and San Diego Expositions on or.e ticket. Bv way of the Burlington Route (C. Bl & Q. R- R-) the cost of a railroad ticket to California and back will be only about one-half the usual price, and you can take in the incomparable Colorado scenery, including the Royal Gorge, see Denver, Colorado Springs, Pueblo and Salt Lake City on the way, stopping oft at any point desired. Returning, you may enjoy a sea trip up the coast to Portland, see Tacoma, Seattle and Spokane, and either Gla cier National Park or Yellowstone Park —the wonders of the world. You don't take a trip like this very often. You should see the best scen ery en route and not spend any more than is necessary io 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 Wm. Austin, General Agent Passen ger Dep'ts, C. B. & Q. R. R. Co., 836 Chestnut St.. Philadelphia.—Advertise ment. THIS GREAT TONIC FOR NERVOUS PEOPLE If Vour »rv«« nre Shattered hy Worry. Overwork. Over-lndulgeur* In *tima lart« or by ElCfinn of Any Kind. Begy'a >"erve Aid Tablet* Are What job \>r<l night Away. Mr. Begy. the well-known chemist who discovered Mustarine. the wonder ful pain killer, cares not what excesses have wrecked your nerves. He guaran tees Begy's Nerve Aid Tablets to stop your trembling; to restore your confi dence; to drive away forgetfuinaaa and make your mind keen and alert! to change your sluggish disposition for a vigorous active one In two' weeks, or money back. It you have worked too hard, lived too rapidly, smoked too much or have become weak, nervous, and lost ambi tion berause of stimulants or anv ex cess. arouse yourself right now and get a 50-cent box, two weeks' treatment, of Begy's Nerve Aid Tablets at any drug gist at once. Anv druggist can suppYv you. Three days' trial treatment 10 rents, from Begy Medicine Co., Regy Bldg., Rochester. N. T. —Advertisement. Rheumatism in Joints Pain Disappears and Swelling Van ishes In a Few Da;? That is what happens if you use Rheuma. the wonderful remedy that H. C. Kennedy and all druggists sell on the "money back If not cured" plan. There Is a vast amount of rheu matism in this vicinity, and If you know any sufferer, call his attention to this generous offer. Rheuma Is a quick-acting prescrip tion. You will know your rheumatism is leaving twenty-four hours after you take the first dose. It dissolves the uric acid and drives it from its lode-Ins place. Mrs. Alice A. Brown, Ithaca. N. Y.. writes: "For seven years I suffered greatly with rheumatism in my hip; at night I was scarcely able to sleep. One bottle of Rheuma cured me." That sounds miraculous, but Rheuma does miraculous things. Fifty cents a bottle.—Advertisement. FRIDAY EVENING, SXORY NO. 2— INSTALLMENT STORY NO. 2—INSTALLMENT NO. 3. NO. 4. WHCimYS ?WHQn&YS ? The Pursuifof Pleasure The Pursuifof Pleasure Qy BLISS flkpstisfct, lIU. by Path* Kxrhaaft. Inc. AI pirtur* right* u>4 all foreign •opjicbta itrictly nami (CONTINUED FROM YEBTERDAT.) j And then BUlle crowed. That la. It tnlrht oe called a crow. Few are given the exact faculty of describing tbe gurgling mutterlngs of a year-old Infant, whose widened eyes have ap praised a stranger and approved com- j plitely Few can rtand that »earoll ing analyaia given to very old folks and very young babies—a measure ment that aeema borrowed from those Infinitely wiser people who dwell across the Line of Life toward which the aged have been led ao close and from which the youthful have ao re cently come. As I say, Billie crowed i and held out his arms wit.u such a multitude of gurglings aa threatened to quite choke him. "He wants to go to you. Mr. White. ! I never knew him to make up with | strangers—with anyone before. He war.it you " "I'm afraid I'll drop him," he: laughed, even as his arms awkwardly 1 euDped to receive the child. "Drop him! You hold him Just like he was your own!" Jim White's heart almost stopped Ruth Sneers at Her Hatband's LOT* for Children. beating, even as his arms clung tighter to the one who had come to l him. Perfectly satisfied. Billie was making a closer study of this man creature he had decided to adopt. | L'nwinkingly his eyes studied the face j that looked down at him with such J fierce hungering. And then, slowly, 1 ever so slowly, hie arms moved up along the great chest and a pair of j rather sticky hands crept along the: cheeks and Anally the arms clasped ! about the neck, while the eyes closed gently and Billie slept. "Well, I never saw the beat —Bam, I wisht you'd look at " Mary caught the annoyed expres sion on Rita's face as she turned and spoke to her husband. He did not hear wrapt in his eager study of i the sluf.bering baby's face. She felt | a sudden fierce Jealousy consuming ber, as she caught the expression ot this man she seemed unacquainted with, this man who held a child to, his breast so perfectly, with such an expression of unalloyed happiness) upon his face. Something dawned i upon her, with that intuition which seems given women to amend for a certain lack of logic, which her hus* 1 band would never have found out— that the perfect happiness that had been hers through this man was due to the paternal instinct in him that made him delight in treating her as a child, to be humored and pampered and spoiled. "Come. Jim," she said softly, striv ing beautifully to make her voice sympathetic, "we must hurry now." Reluctantly he returned Billie to the mother. Rita noticed that for a few steps he moved on tip-toe, as though fearful of waking the child. Once she met his eyes and, like an overgrown boy, he flushed to the very roots of his hair and tried to hide the guilty expression upon his face. Diffidently, yet with a certain curious firmness he led her to the library, seating her in his favorite chair and perching himself boyishly upon the arm of it, his arms about her. "No wonder Sam's got a good di»« position," he said finally. She braced herself instinctively. Though he tried to make the conver sation appear casual, she hurdled everything he was about to say. just as she had once hurdled his em barrassed preamble previous to de claring his love for her. They are two subjects all women scent from afar oft. knewing no trail too desul tory but may be brought into their broad highway. She nodded Indiffer ently . "I sometimes wonder if home can be home at all without a baby," he murmured, more to the sympathetio flames than to her. "I remember how my mother always thought of me as her baby, even after I was In col lege." "Don't you ever think—Rita, don't you ever wish there was a baby in cur house?" His voles was low, his wcrds a bit stumbling now, as though he found difficulty expressing himself. "Wouldn't it sort of make things happier and " She forced a laugh to her lips, a gay, tender laugh even as her fingers twined fiercely about his own. She drew his cheek down to her velvety or.e, wondering that she could be thus artful when her whole soul was rising in revolt against this masculine demand. "But, Jim, I don't want any chil dren Just now. I want to enjoy my self, to see something of happiness. Sometimes," she tempered the blow, "sometimes I think. Jim. that I'm little more than a child myself. I've been caged and starved so long that I hardly seem grown up yet. Don't you understand, Jim?" in, There was a look of triumph upori Irs. Sharpe'a vinegary face as. an nouncing herself into the Reverend Deane'a study with a triumphant rustle of the newspaper In her hand, she stepped beside him. Slowly ha lifted his leaden eyes from the ser mon upon which he had been work- Ing. shrinking away a bit before thst expression he had come to know so well. He was frightened of this woman, this woman who seemed to read his thoughts, his heartaches; who took such delight in probing at his wounds. "Yes. Mrs. Sharps?" he queried wearily, as she thrust the newspaper into his hands with a waspish sweep, waiting beside him while his eyes readily found the leader that signalised another escapade of Mrs. James White, the daughter that had be«a his. DIPLOMAS FOR TVTENTY-KIGHT Columbia. Pa., June 4.—This even ing thp annual commencement of the Columbia high school will he held in th<> State Armory. There arp twenty eight members in the graduating class —twenty-one itlrls anil seven boys. The honor pupils are Ruth Ackerman, John I/. Gerfin. Harry P. Wohenadel. Janet Lee, Greta Moore, Kosa Sample Or EDWI> BUSS C liu. by P»th» Bxchinn. Inc. AS mortal picturr n£hu and all forttcm oopjiijhu itnrtlj »«mt Had been? Ai hia eyes caught the headline again, he suddenly found ! hlmself unable to read further for the mist of tears that sprang to hla eyes. !She was his daughter still. A little sniffle of contempt from Mrs. Sharpe and he whirled angrily upon her. The woman turned away anO stalked from the room, a certain defiance and aloofness to her back that was different from anything he had ever noticed marking her disap proval before. His eyes sought the headline again, sought and read it through, though it was hours before the meaning of the words fully penetrated to his brain. Hours he sat in his chair, motionless as one dead, leaden of soul, broken of heart: YOUNG HOSTESS PLANS 810 DINNER SURPRISE. Humored Mrs. James White Will Appear Tonight as Dancing Olrl to Entertain Guests. The rustle of the newspaper falling to the floor brought him to his feet, his eyes blazing with sudden resolu tion. He darted from the room, snatching his hat automatically from the rack, and rushed out upon the street, bewildered at finding himself In the open air. Then the nature of the impulse that had brought him here caused him to move forward to ward his son-in-law's residence. A fierce fanaticism tugged at him, driving him faster, ever faster. His daughter must be saved, must be taken away from the depths into which she had been dragged. She was becoming such a pewer for evil as •ven he was unable to combat. He rushed up the driveway, the gravel crunching under hla feet flrecely. The butler at the door would have halted him but he brushed the startled ser vant aside, tossing him upon his back as the fellow persisted in opposing The Minister's Daughter, Attired as a Dancing Girl, in the Vase of Flowers. him. Into the drawing room he leaped, his brain afire, his fanaticism ramp ant. his bleed boiling. Sweet, intoxicating strains of music from the orchestra in the balcony sened but to inflame him the more. The laughter of the guests, chatter of cutlery and china, applause, dazzle of color In the women's evening gowns, set off by the somber black and white of the men, held him silent for a moment. Then —then the fides of the great vase upon the long table In the center of the room burst open and Rita's bewitching face appeared, her neck and shoulders bare, revealing the dazzling whiteness of her flesh. Again the vase cracked and she step ped lightly upon the" table, dancing lntozlcatingly there to the hushed ad miration of her guests. A little sob of pain from the clergyman. He covered his face with his hands as though fending a blow, then sprang toward the head of the table, arms uplifted as might have appeared John the Baptist when he first came. "Repent this wickedness." he thundered. "Repent, for the Kingdom of God Is at hand." "You you you are the one one who has done this shameful thing," he choked. "It is you who have dragged my child into the gut ter," he said, pointing to White. He caught the laugh of Rita, that familiar laugh. It sounded in his ears, thundered there, maddened him. He leaped at the throat of the sneering man before him. His fingers clasped there and the impulse of the wild beast to tear and utterly destroy was upon him. But with that impulse came also cunning. Through the drawing room he dragged the man, heedless of the frightened cries of his daughter, her tug at his arms. Into the library he dragged his prey, shak ing him viciously the while, turning the key in the lock. The voice of Rita brought him to himself and he flung White into the big leather chair as though he were a bit of unclean carrion. He turned to his daughter and reached out his arms to her. but a bitter laugh came from her lips as ■he shrank away from him. The ac tion maddened him anew. He whirled upon White, who had risen, his faca white with rage. "You—you have dragged my child down—" "Dragged down down!" White'* laugh was so bitter that even RKa drew closer, searching her husband's race curiously, anxiously. "Dragged her down from—what? From what, I ask you? From a den where all life and light was excluded; from a home that had bars upon the windows. Wno starved and caged her Joyous nature till she thinks of nothing but pleasure? Who taught her anything of a woman's mission in life? Who taught her aught of the duties of a wife or the privileges of a woman? I ask you—Reverend Cyrus Deane—how that can be dragged down which has never been uplifted; I ask you that, you who guarded the gates of Heaven eo zealously for others that you mada a prison of your home, for fear soma harm might happen to those you had no time to teach and love?" Cyrus Deane could recollect nothing of leaving the place save the sight of his daughter being disdainfully thrust aside by a bitterly smiling husband, when she would have clug to him. H« had a vague Impression of ripping his way through the throng of dinner guests hammering at the door he had opened. He only knew that he wai very tired and very weak and sick— eick. He did rot know he had been communing with himself throughout the night. Mrs. Sharpe could have told him, for he had disturbed her slum bers. And the steady beating of his clenched fists upon his chest in rhythm to three words, repeated over and Over, endlessly, tended to engravs them upon his brain. "I have sinned—l have sinned—l have sinned," the Reverend Cyrus Deane had cried all through that long, long night. CONTINUED TOMORROW. and Sara May Stauffer. Honorable mention is accorded Harry Clarke Bruner, Isabella Hoffman and Mar garet Rankcy. The presentation of diplomas will he made by Professor William C. Sampson, borough superin tendent. and the annual address will be given by Dr. Lewis W. Rapecr. Th« class day exercises were held in the armory on Thursday evening. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Our Business Outgrew the Size of Our Previous Store— COMPELLED US TO MOVE A GREATER Store— -GREATER Selection— GßEATEß Values Come and convince yourself of the truthfulness of our statement. Drop in gentlemen any time, you will be under no obligation to buy. This is merely an invitation to ceme and acquaint yourself with our new store and inspect our display of beautiful suitings in more than a thousand patterns. HOME OF THE WORLD'S LARGEST CUSTOM TAILORS Harrisburg's Oldest Popular Price Tailors STANDARD WOOLEN CO. BRANCH OF THE WORLD'S GREATEST TAILORING ORGANIZATION POR MANY YEARS LOCATED AT 19 IN. THIRD STREET ARE NOW LOCATED AT 103 North Second Street Second Door North of Walnut Street Regular $20.00, $22.50 and $25 Suitings Tailored to (fjCJAA s SS» Measure For GUARANTEED SALE! —SPECIAL! —SALE! Grand Reopening Offer Commencing Today For a Limited Time We Will Make to Measure An EXTRA PAIR of $5 Trousers and Give Them to You TD 'PT'f Without Cost With X JLVXJJJ* X JZVXjXi • Every SUIT Order Remember for $15.00 you can get here a perfect fitting, stylish 3-piece Suit and an extra pair of Pants---all four pieces tailored to your individual measure and guaranteed to be up-to-the-minute in every respect. STANDARD WOOLEN CO. 103 North Second Street Second Door North of Walnut Street ALEX AGAR, MANAGER Harrisburg, Pa. MIP— i—^■■—^^—■— BUILDING BOOM IS PROSPERITY GUIDE Indicates Passing of Financial De pression; Night Forces of Electricians on Job Slay's unusually heavy building boom and the estimate thus far for June are considered especially sig nificant by city officials and building contractors as particularly indicative of a return of better times, financially and Industrially, for Harrlsburg, and this view is further supported by the painters, paperhangers, electricians and other craftsmen, who have many or ders on their books for late Spring and early summer work. While the outdoor work as a rule has been delayed to some extent by the weather, the interior decoration, wiring, and so on. has not been inter rupted. and In some instances extra forces of men have had to be put on the jobs. Tbls Is especially true, for instance, of the electrical work. "We're doing more wiring for light ing and cooking appliances in Harris burg and in the towns where our lines reach than at any other time in our history." said an official of the Harris burg L.ight and Power Company to day. "Not only have we an extra large force of men on the Job during the daylight hours, but beginning with this month we've put on a night force in order to facilitate the handling of the bulk of orders. In many instances, of course, the wiring is new. that is, is being strung in new buildings. In most instances, however, the wiring is being put into older dwellings whose owners or tenants desire to have elec tric lighting or the facilities for using the many electrical appliances. For Instance, we've already from 3.000 to 3,500 electric irons In service In Har rlsburg alone and we've ordered an other thousand. All this necessitates wiring, and that is what makes it nec essary for us to keep a night force working. Furthermore, we've always found that this is the best sort of evl- j dence of the passing of the financial l depression. Folks won't put In wiring and the hundred and one other little conveniences if they don't feel finan cially able to do so." DIVORCED I'KOPIvE WED Special to The Telegrnph Sunbury. Pa.. June 4.—Divorced less than two weeks ago. Annie I. Howell, of Delaware township, Northumber land county, was on Wednesday TUNE 4, 1915. granted a license to wed John H. Stauffer, a cabinetmaker, of the same township. Stai'ffer la also divorced, he having been granted a decree In 1907. HAND CAUGHT IN GEARS Special lo Tht TtUgrabh Sunbury, Pa., June 4.—Caught In the gears of a machine he was op erating at the Pennsylvania Railroad shops here, Harry Kessler, Chestnut street, was being drawn into the gear ing when fellow-workmen shut off the power. His right hand was badly crushed. CHILD TRAMPLED RY COW Gettysburg. Pa.. June 4.—Miriam Miller, 6-year-old daughter of Earnest Miller, of Hllltown, was attacked and trampled by an angry cow at the home of her grandfather while playing with li _g CASTOR IA For Infants and Children * In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears S) Signature of J a calf at the barn on Wednesday aft ernoon and the timely appearance of a farmhand probably saved the child from death. Her only injury Is % broken ankle. If rou need ere examination mnke an appointment. Call Bell Phone 3582. 208 LOCUST STREET Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect May 24, 1914. TRAINS leave Harrlsburg— For Winchester and Martlnsburg a J 5:03. *7:50 a. m.. *3.40 p. m. For Hagerstown. Cliambersburg, Car lisle. Mechanlesburg and Intermediate stations at 6:03. *7:50. •11:63 a. m.. •3:40, 5:32. *7:40. *11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanlcsburg at B:4K a. m„ 2:18; |:27 6:30. »:30 a. m. For Dlllsburg at 6:03, »7:50 and • 11:63 a. m.. 2:18. •3:40, 6:32 and 6:39 p. m. •Dally. Ail other trains dally except fiunday. H. A. RIDDLE, j. H. TONGE. O. P. A. 13
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers