8 \fc?o(V)en T^Unreße-8 Unfortunate By BEATRICE FAIRFAX " * * • For God above Is great to grant, n« mighty to make, And creates the love to reward the love." —Robert Browning. Daily I receive letters from boys and girls who sign themselves "Down hearted." or even "Broken-hearted," because of some unhappy love affair. "I cannot live without him," is a pathetically common sentence—it ap pears throughout the letters of my young correspondents In conjunction with such sentences as "Why did I have to love her at ail if nothing was to come of it?" Love is never wasted. Beginning at the little thrill of joy you feel when you see a beautiful flower, and going through your affection for a dog, your devotion and admiration for some pretty child, to the great love you bear your parents, no love is wasted. And an unhappy love affair ought to bring ability to build char acter in its wake—not ruin and de struction. Out of an unselfish love come sympathy and understanding and self-forgetting tenderness. Even if the love that taught these things goes out of a life. Is not the life richer for what it has learned? Once you have loved, and blun dered or failed love in some way that makes it go out of your life, you have learned what not to do, and so you are prepared with wisdom enough to hold the next love that comes! The Real Test For. after all is said and done, the real test, the real power to love and to Inspire love, lies in the ability to bear and forbear. The men and the women who have self-confrmand and respect for the rights of others, who are able to say, "How would I feel in her plaoe, or in his case?" and to lay a course accordingly, may be sure that they are on the right road to a perfect love. You may say that one person can not do It all. Very true—any more than one partner In a business can do it all; he may strive and slave, and yet, if the other partner deliberately sets to work to wreck all his efforts, the result will be blank failure. And, after all, a love affair is the prelude to the entering into a business partnership. When you ask a girl to marry you, and when she consents, it is as if you were signing preliminary papers to go Into such a partnership. Observe that before marriage you are both trying to secure the best opinion of the other. Tour acts are open and above board, your manners are correct, your thoughtfulness Is remarkable. There is a disposition on both your parts to forgive any trifling error and to think of the other as the most perfect' being. How many there are who. when they find that the man In the case, or the girl in the case, suddenly appears with feet of clay, imagine that all the light has gone out of life and that there is nothing beyond but a vista of gloom that can never be dispelled! How much worse, how much more tragic, it would be If the man or wom an had found out the failings of Have you made a (RISCO CAKE? Try this recipe; or make your own favorite cake, using' Crisco in place of butter. Use one-fifth less Crisco than butter and add salt. If you will merely use Crisco properly there will be no need to mix any butter with it. Your Crisco cake will be as nice as the more expensive cake you formerly made with butter. Crisco cake stays fresh and moist longer. (Clip this Recipe) Eggless-Butterless-Milkless Cake 25c % cupful Crisco % teaspoon fill nutmeg 2 cupfuls brown-sugar % teaspoonful powdered mace 2 cupfuls water 2 teaspoonfuls baking soda 1 cupful seeded raisini 4 cupfuls flour 1 teaspoonful rait 1 teaspoonful baking powder 2 teaspoonfuls powdered cinnamon JC cupful chopped nut meats 1 teaspoonful'powdered cloves 3 tablespoonfuls warm water Pot the Crisco into a saucepan, add sugar, water, raisins, salt and spices and boil for three minutes. Cool and when » ■Jf cold add the flour, baking powder, soda dissolved in the warm water and the nut meats. Mix and turn into a wr ; Crisooed and floured cake tin and bake in a slow oven for one and a half hours. I WILDCAT FALLS INN, MARIETTA, PA. CHTCKEN AND WAFFLES A SPECIAI/TY Under new management. Special boat service. Ind. phone. A. L. RESCH, Propr. Try Telegraph Want Ads Try Telegraph Want Ads WEDNESDAY EVENING, Love Affairs the other after marriage! This Is the way to regard these so called unhappy love affairs. Better half a dozen unhappy love affairs than one unhappy marriage- From the for mer there Is escape: from the latter there is a long and weary road to travel before that escape becomes possible. There is the natural tendency of the man who has found the girt of his heart wan-ting or for the girl who has found the man wanting to Im agine that the sufferer is the most abused person in the world; that no grief was. ever like his or her grief, that no person was ever so heart broken. Look about you; you will And thousands of men and women before whose trials yours will seem the mereet trifles. Take courage and thank your lucky stars that if you think you are heartbroken you have thought wrong—perhaps it is only your self-esteem that is hurt. Rise above the blow and go your way stronger and better. Love is a constructive, building emotion. In the lower forms of life it leads to feats of bravado—as in the case of the fighting one sees from bird to moose and the strutting ex hibitions of beauty from the plumage of the little oock-of-the-walk in bird land and on to the antlered deer. To mother bird love brings the protec tive nest-building attitude. Love makes for construction in all life and is not meant to destroy or to be used for destruction. A capacity for loving wisely and well, an unselfish desire to give of one's self, attracts. The people who are described as "so lovable" are generally those who fairly radiate affection. The cold, selfish nature may attract; the calculating or co quettish may charm, but to win de votion and feelings of loyaj affection postulates the suggestion of power to feel in turn. "To have a friend you must first find one" has become one of the rules of life since the very beginning of time. No one can hold friendship long unless they feel it too. No one can hold a great love without calling It into being on the one hand and making full and absolute response on the other. No "heart-breaking" love experi ence is. In truth, devastating. For the love that has surged through a man or woman's being and has been de nied will not always be denied. Nothing in all the world is wasted. A great love will be answered some day In some way. Perhaps a big love will come in time; perhaps a power to interpret life through some work of fjjie art will grow out of the capacity for feel ing that has been engendered; it may be that out of giving love unwisely once will come the talisman of knowl edge of the human heart that will surround you with love from all who see you meet your problem. But in the capacity to love lies the key to all of life. Love carries its own reward in being and in creating all the beauty that Is born of love. wramys? Unto Alone Hy EDWfr BUSS Osprisht. IMS by Path* Ezehiac* las. AS marine pictw* riffats and all for«4f» copyright A strictly rmrrad. (CONTINUED FEOli YESTERDAY.), They did not speak—the pair. There was no need for words. The mur mur of the waterr, the ceaseless un rest of it. the rhythmical rock of the slender lined yacht, all, everything wrought an eerie enchantment round them, an enchantment that came in the guise of freedom from all restraint, an enchantment In the costume of night's license, yet an enchantment bands stouter than any the hands of man cotild ever fashion. She murmured a little sound of perfect happiness, a sound that blended into the sounds of the night so pwfectly he was not consciously aware of it. A wisp of her hair was taken by the roguish breeze and flut tered across his cheek. The perfume of it intoxicated Wen. And yei it was but a part of the night. He reached out his hand to put the vagrant lock. In place. » His finger tips moved across her cheek and the thrill waa but another of this wondrous night's myriad phases. Her eyes sought his own, bathed in the question, the wild, unharnessed wonder she read there, and then a long, fluttering streamer a plume of black cloud reached out Its giant fingers and snatched the huge moon from its place in the heavens. And, frightened at their mother's flight, the chattering stars fled to find her. And but one long, steady star loomed high. Nor did it bend its light. Nor did It turn to A lie* Visits Lynn on His Yacht. pry upon the man and woman. For a million nights, Just such nights, had ths,aged star known. And a bil lion pigmies of the earth planet had the long wicked star looked upon. He had seen them gay and sad, laughing and crying, well and ill, liv ing and dying. They came and went —these little marionettes, dancing on a string pulled by an Invisible Hantt. And to mere dust they always came finally, after a few minutes-—as the venerable star counted time. They amounted to nothing, after all. But he—he, instead of watching them, might look upon the Hand itself, the Invisible Hand that had painted the night and whispered their meaningless nothings Into the ear of a man and woman. IV. The dazzle of Allca's spirits wad bewildering, the glorious excitement of the girl so boundless it transmit ted Itself to every guest at the recep tion. The very air was vibrant with It. But Felix Lynn alone seemed im mune, as he moved silently from place to place, a little absent, a little apart from everyone and every thing. But the hostess, try though sh* would, could not keep her eyes from wandering in his direction, could not repress the little thrilling pride of possession As she picked him out In stantly from the throng, nor sup press the twinge of Jealousy that ha should not be with her alone. Times there were when the brain of her would halt and a soft, dreamy expression supplant the eager, rest less one in her eyes. And she would come bat* to the present, gently put by the dreams of the past and futurft which had reached out and touched her, put them by with a smile that glorified the beautiful face of her, erasing the thoughtless lines there as by the passing of a huge spiritual sponge over her countenance. And Felix Lynn avoided her sed ulously, seemed unable to be near her. She noticed it but convinced herself It was merely another phase of this strange Jealousy that so com pletedly possessed her. Bhe was also keenly delighted to see hs avoided Esther Halsteadi She had thought F,sther a bit overly Interested in Felix; had caught stray, wistful glances the rlrl cast at him which maddened her. And then she told herself that she had been wrong. Or, at any rats, that it was entirely one-f#ded. She started from her reverie and, with a gay laugh, ladled a glass from the punch bowl. But her eyes were fastened Inquiringly upon her maid, who vai just returning from the phone. Somehow, the dazed, some what frightened expression on the girl's face alarmed her. She shiv ered slightly as though a cold, dank ahadnw had passed across the sunlight of her happiness. She would have stopped the maid then thrust the Impulse aside, though, as the girl approached Estlter, she oould not resist bending her ear in that direction. She caught the cold, dazed look that filmed Esther Halstead'a eyes as she revived the message, caught the meaningless sound of her voice as she parroted the words: "My—father—- dead —" caught the sympathetic forward surge of friends, then, with a shrinking within herself, noticed the swift stride wit.R which Felix Lynn reached the stricken girl's side. Like a tigress she moved forward, •waying a little from the hips, hor eyes blazing. Felix Lynn drew Esther a bit closer to him, then thrust out his Jaw squarely, speaking over her bowed head: "Please do not crowd—please. My wife's father has Just died. The mar riage was kept secret to prevent this very thing." For a moment Alica felt her llmba numbed, felt something go icy cold within her, then crackle up with a sound perfectly audible to herself. And then the numbness gave way to a prii kling. as of a thousand needles. Ar.d then the banlted Are burst into full flame It was a lie. It was un true. It could not be true. It was a lie told to trick her. But they could not do It. She sprang forward, thrust ing herself between the pair, hurling them away from one another with vicious strength. (CONTINUED TOMOUOW.) CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears _V? Signature ot HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH I New and Smart Costume of Exrap* tioDal Interest By MAYMANTON 8636 Empire Gown, 34 to 42 bugt?) It would be hard to find a more attract ive eown than this one. It gives the Empire effect at it* best, for while the skirt is wider than was that of the Empire period, it nevertheless is not exagger atedly so and the lines are the prettiest most attractive, most graceful that could be. The long sleeves of lace are most effective aa well as thoroughly comfort able for the warm weather and long sleeves with open necks are delightfully j reminiscent. There is a plain flaring skirt that can be made in three pieces j or in four, that is with or without a seam at the front. There is a Mttle body lining to which the sleeves are attached and it can be made with high neck and j faced to form a yoke when needed. Also the sleeves can be made short and, in spite of the fashion for long ones, warm weather will surely bring 6uch a demand. j Here the materials are soft lustrous satin with lace sleeves and lace guimpe portions, but the model is one that can be adapted to many fabrics. It would be_ charming made of the chiffon taffeta that is so mucn liked and would be lovely in poplin and it also can be utilized for the beautiful 1 cottons and a good effect could be ob- j tained by making the bolero-like portion of one material and the skirt of another. Rose-colored taffeta, for example, for the bolero with an embroidered cotton crftpe or cotton voile for the skirt and a pretty net for the sleeves would make a beautiful costume and there are numberless other effects that can be obtained from the one model. For the medium sire will be needed 6yds. of material 27 in. wide, 5 yds. 36, or 44 in. wide, and 1% yds. 18 for the sleeves, Iyds. of lace for the neck drapery, yd. 18 for the yoke, when high neck is used. The pattern 8636 is cut in sizes from 34 to 43 inches bust. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion, Department ef this paper, on receipt of ten cents. Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. mus&oenW l LAST DAY FOR SUBMARINE PIC TURES AT THE COLONIAL Six thousand persons have attended the Colonial so rar this week to witness the Williamson Submarine Motion Pic tures. made at the bottom of the ocean. These wonderful films have been the talk of the town since Monday when they were first presented. An interest ing lecturer, who was a member of the Williamson party on Its expedition to the Bahama Islands, describes each of the several hundred scenes. All sorts of under water life and conditions are shown. Fishes by the hundreds, and of dozens of different species, swim in front of the camera as the movie man grinds the crank hundreds of feet be low the surface of the sea. A new bill of vaudeville and pictures comes to the Colonial to-morrow for the balance of the week. The program will be headed by a musical comedy act called ••O'Brien's Night Out," in which ten persons take part. It is the most elabo rate musical comedy act the Colonial ever played. The prices during the last three days of the week will be the same as ref/ular Colonial prices five and ten cents in the afternoon and ten and fif teen cents In the evening.—Advertise- I ment. • CHARLIE CHAPLIN IN "WORK" TO DAY AND TOMORROW AT THE RE GENT Charlie Chaplhi, the greatest come dian in the world, will show here in a new two-reel comedy. "Work." Thit, is positively the first time shown in this city. Critics of newspapers say that it is one of the best comedies that was ever made. This Is shown in addition to our regular Paramount program. Jesse L. Lasky presents "Rule G,' in five reels, to-day and to-morrow. "Rule G" grows out of an article which appeared In The Saturday Evening Post, under the I title "Keeping John Barleycorn Off the I Train." Railroad officials said this ar ticle got very much closer than any previous article had ever done to the great absorbing battle they have put up for many years to make train opera tion safe by keeping trainmen and liquor apart Wednesday- we also show "Pathe News." all the latest events happening all over the world. Friday—"When It Strikes Home," a Shubert production, with such stars as Edwin AugL-st, Grace Washburn, Muriel Ostrlche.—Advertisement. "THE GODDESS" AT THE VICTORIA TODAY To-day we offer the third instalment of the g-eatest picture play serial that has ever been screened and which fea tures those two popular film starts, Earl Williams and Anita Stewart. This remarkable play has already become universally popular end is being shown In the highest character theaters throughout the country. See "The God dess" here every Wednesday. To-mor row we present Mrs. Leslie Carter in a film version of her greatest dramatic success, "The Heart of Maryland.' This great play, with this great star, has thrilled thousands and thousands of people throughout the length and breadth of the nation and has always been enthusiastically received. Shown only at the Victoria to-morrow.—Ad vertisement. JITNEY OLUB TO MEET To decide on a permanent place to meet and get away from meeting on Sundays, the executive committee of the Harrisburg Jitney Club will meet with W. J. Perrln, at 19 South Fourth street, to-morrow evening llllllllllillllilllllHllllllllllllllllil f Tv^^NiK"T^rS*\ You know wh at gas speed means for cooking. 11 CVCn m ° rC speedy for heatin S water, iTouch a match or a gas lighter to an Eagle Gas \ Circulating Water Heater and in a few minutes the j water is hot for all household purposes. ? Wl OUR SPECIAL JUNE "ifsJfil PRICE ON THE EAGLE Wmk »$12.00 y' '| $2.00 Down $1.25 a Month L Ifer" j| These heaters are perfect in every respect I , K| I backed b y our full guarantee. The special price ap ' I plies during J une onl y or "nti l a limited stock is sold. fg%sH Hill Reductions given at our show-room or by our j.j 111 representatives. Harrisburg Gas Co. Telephone: Bell 2028 Cumberland Valley 752 Jniiiß PATTANG PARK If Manager Davis had not booked King Kelly as a special feature at Paxtang Park this week his headline!" at the park theater would have been strong enough to guarantee a big week's business. Margeurite Sawtelle Duffy and her company present one of the best novelty comedy acts that has been seen at the park playhouse. Pretty girls are a feature of the offer ing and the manner in which the com pany works in the audience is both unique and amusing. Clarlse and Gro gan introduced a musical act, in which the harp and piano play a prominent part that is far above the average. The work of Mr. Grogan, the blind pianist, is a most credible performance, while Miss Clarlse at the harp, must always respond with two or three encliores before the duo can finish their act. King Kelly is unusually enthusiastic this season. The big crowd that greet ed him at his first ascension on Mon day evening clearly showed parachute jumping to be as popular as ever. Kelly is already preparing to do some specially hazardous stunts on Friday and Saturday. The railroaders' picnic on Saturday will bring an unusually large crowd to the park and the air king promises to give them their money's worth when It comes to his part of the show.—Adv. TO TALK ON'AVIATION "Dangers and Development of Avia tion" will be the subject of a lecture which will be delivered by J. B. McCal ley. a former resident of this city, be fore the Engineers' Society at its "meet house Friday evening. McCalley's pro fessional flights have taken him into thirty-three states of the Union, Mex ico and Canada. He crashed into the billboard on Island Park when start ing on an ascent here. He began his aviation career under Glenn H. Cur tlss and made his first ascent at Ham mondsport, N. Y. Mr. McCalley is now regimental adjutant of the Four teenth Infantry, National Guard of Pennsylvania. HAIL ON SMALL AREA Dillsburg, Pa., June 23. An odd hail storm passed over a small section of Washington township, near Mt. Zlon church at 2 o'clock Tuesday morning. The hail stones fell thick for a short time, cutting the leaves from the trees and damaging garden vegetables. An odd feature of the storm was that the hail fell only on the Cocklln farm occupied by Oscar Donson and the most damage being about the buildings, where the shade trees were practically stripped of their leaves. BABY FRETFUL WTTH ECZEMA Had To Be Carried At Night. Could Not Let Clothes Near It. Applied Cuticura Ohtment Then Washed With Cuticura Soap, Eczema Gone In Few Months. 8702 Knorr St., Tacony. Philadelphia, Pa.—"My baby had eczema. It was like deep cracks and then It would weep and get a hard surface on it. She was awful to look at. Every place where there waa a creaae, like the back of her ear and In her neck. It waa awfully bad. The child had to be carried at night. We could not let her clothes be near It. She waa fretful. "She waa a year old before I tried Cuti cura Soap and Ointment. I applied the Ointment and left it on five minutes, then waahed with the Soap. The eczema waa gone In a few months." (Signed) Mr*. M. Fagan, November 7, 1914. Dr you realize that to go through Ufe tortured and disfigured by itching, burning, scaly and crusted eczemas, rashes, and other •kin and acalp humors Is, In the majority of cases, unnecessary? Cuticura Soap and Ointment afford Immediate relief and prove successful In the most distressing cases, when the usual methods fall. Sample Each Free by Mall With 33-p. Sldn Book on request. Ad dress post-card "Cuticura, Dept. T, Bos r.u." Sold throughout the weridL JUNE 23, 1915. OUTDOOR SUFFRAGE MEETING Special to The Telegraph Blaln, Pa., June 23. Mrs. E. B- Blnz, of Philadelphia, a representative of the State Woman's Suffrage Asso ciation, will speak at an outdoor meeting on Thursday evening at this place. Literature will be freely dis tributed for the cause. Look Out For That First Little Tooth When the baby begins to drool new teeth with boric acid solution when the saliva flows from his —and there will be no teething mouth— then the teeth are about to troubles for baby or for you. come and tfien above all - must Nurse your b « by> ifyou c ,„ bnt you be careful of your baby s food. jf y OU cannot remember that in the Give hinj the right food so his last forty years, millions of babies little stomach is comfortable —and have had their teeth essily and wash the little red gums and the naturally with the help of Nestles F053 Nesil6's food puts no strain on even consumption to your child, the little ««on«tch. It brings health Nea . l6 < s Food is m , dßfrotn cow - 8 £! milk " ith •» cow Angers ban - , E »P ea ' ll r , in th ,* ished. Nestles Is made from milk milt fh tf i. 00 T l ' ° f CQW ' of cows that are carefully inspected, milk -thaUorMt you know, comes Th . ~k jg k from sick cows and unsanitary dai- , ifi £ jußt to make / ura nes - that may bnng stckness and th , „ £ modifled and ' your baby's special needsareadded. It is powdered and packed in an air- Pfc J?? l 'K ht can. No germ can possibly " touch it. It reaches you pure and r '° ur ' > * b y' You add only Smnd th• Coupon for a iimpfi box of Nmitlrn'm antl a booh about \ A NESTLfi'S FOOD COMPANY. Woolwortl, BU «- Naw Y»rk ~ 'I City THE SUMMER FASHION BOOK. / of the Celebrated- W. PICTORIAL PATTERNS yryu at the Pattern \li I \ Y American women ute jßttlf I J \ PICTORIAL mill ill I \ REVIEW wifjlh I WWtj% PATTERNS FASHION BOOK: r fn " l^e a ' 0016 m 'Y\ Summer Fashions. W? i?k'. when purchased with * one 15 cent pattern. JUNE PATTERNS i noiv on tale. Dives Pomeroy CQ, Stewart FUNERATi OF MISS DAISY HOLTZ Blaln, Pa., June 23.—Funeral serv ices wa« held to-day for Miss Daisy Holtz, whose death occurred on Sun day morning at her home. Services were conducted at the home by the Rev. J. C. Reigrhard. Interment was made in the Union cemetery. Miss Holtz was 38 years old and was a, member of the Lutheran church. She was a daughter of Mrs. Mary A. Holtz.'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers