HryASTOM* || fjSTORM Mothers Know That l> If -■■■ Genuine Castoria fifiil ;; *£ OUOL 3 per cent c alwattq / Hi 1 ' 'heFoodant/Rcgula ■o-iWciyS W * Uie Siomachs andßowdsof n MA/ «\W ill Bears the /J| Hf i : PromotesDigesttonJCfeerW SignatllTQ / ¥ \ V* f> nessandßestContalnsneiter „ XCV/VIT *2o |: Opium-Morphine norMa£ral nf All. lT P | NOT NARCOTIC. 1)1 (iM\f nill JkfcafMfciminmm | I AH/ H /MiW- , lV\ KM I IjUxSama * 1 i 1 m W ■il i JkMttU&~ I W\ _ If. (\ J(v In Hi: sgau-. ) \1 VI „ Mil Aperfect Remedy forConsß(» >A\f Alt II CO tlon,SourStomach.D^irrhoci : I V IV UWU "Worms.Convulsions/evcrish- I llf^ SBfls ness and Loss or SLEEP. 1 II up •* igPgiM IfccSinile Signature of IUI UV Ol m. TL • V Will i 1 OHE CENTAUH COMPASXi Ihl TI V iPPrC l|g| NEW YORK. 11111 IJ lUUIO tgPCIOTIim TM* OKMTAUM OOMMNV, MCW OITY. LIGHTNING STRIKES BATHER lightning, which first struck an electric light meter close to the pond. Com- Special to The Telegraph panions saw flashes of lightning pass Lancaster Pa Aurr 3 Whila f r om Win K° r ' s feet, and the physi- Lancaster, Pa., Aug 3. T\ hile cians who attended him found a flesh oathing at Ephrata Park, Ira Winger, open wound on one foot. He is not of Ephrata was knocked senseless by seriously injured. ■ I >lll u» ■ is ' f ■ . _ k'Sfc Sffc.- Absolutely No Pain S HSI My latest tmproved appli- jr ances, InrlufUnp- an oxygen- fc«d air apparatus, makes w extracting and all den- S W work positively X —A> wVV mSvM. palnleas and la per- XQ V jT ■gMIW fectiy UarmlftHß. > _cfiy S | <Aro mo objeo- EXAMINATION' / FREE /.vVJ " •" jr •Ooy cement 50c. _ . ■ S Gold Crowns and Registered S Bridge Work, *B, 94, 95. riT.iT,..,. SA AV S M-K Gold Crow» ~..9».00 Graduate S Offloo open dally &JJO a. S %. S ■*» •» •jh m.j Mon., Wed. S \/ ▼ .^ Kaa **• •P- Bk; Sondaya, 10 a. m. to 1 p. n, S ▼" S B*«l Fbone 8322R FAXMKNTS yf %"i& Market Street jfOror tba Hub) / Hcwrisburg, Pa. n m«*t H «t« an PANTinNI IV/,on Coming to my Offloo Bo unu I IUI« • Suro You Aro In tho Right Ptaoo. in mmmbmi—l in n ■■ msaammmammmmammmmm i! Buy Coal Now—Cheapest |l This Is the month to order next winter's nuppjy of coal. There's | ! I, a material savingr to be effected, and the wise folk are taking advantage | ] I of present low prices. Buy before the advance comes, and buy Mont- ' ] | gomery coal thus insuring the most quality for your money. J. B. MONTGOMERY j i Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets j | ' " 3)£fiarf/n€/if JD/~ Calcs and \ Service We'll Design You The poster stamp idea has struck Harrisburg. You have seen them and it has probably occurred to you that you could use them in your business. The value of them as advertisements has appealed to you. Poster Stamps in Single Designs or Series. You Wish. Poster stamps must possess individuality and original ity. The art work that goes into the designing is the quality which makes good poster stamps. The Telegraph Printing Company with service in every department required to produce quality stamps is at your disposal. Call our services into consultation, let us suggest ideas and designs, let us help you bring your business before tne public in a manner hitherto unexploited. THE TELEGRAPH PRINTING CO. n J * , TUESDAY EVENING, Story No. 11—Installment No. 2. MS? The Firui^^fblly Copyright, 1915, by Pathe Exchange Inc. All moving- picture rights and reserved. (CONTINUED FROM YESIEB&AT.) Clay scowled at his pretty wife. H« was in no mood for trifling. He was in no mood to admire the unusual sparkle of her lustrous eyes and was too wretched to note the paleness of her cheeks or that she had donned her prettiest manner along with her frilliest morning gown. "Can't you see that I have a head ache?" he grumbled. "Oh these mornings after," sh# answered teasingly as she slowly ap proached and planted a light, quick kiss on his nearer cheek. "Is his mightiness too cross thla morning to grant his little wlfie one tiny favor." "Yes his mightiness is." he answered ungraciously and Isabelle sagely with the wisdom that Is born of woman'! Intuition, decided to await a more favorable opportunity to press her re quest. Clay was too absorbed In his own troubles; too much engrossed with his aching head to think clearly or he would have realized that Isabelle's "tiny favor" must have been an im portant one. No trivial matter would cause her to arise at that hour. The "Can't You See That I Have a Head ache," He Grunted. days when she took breakfast with her husband were long since past. She usually spent her mornings in bed, recovering from the fatigue of the pre vious night's session at auction bridge. For Isabelle's chief folly was the play ing for high stakes at the home of Mrs. Cora Blake, an attractive widow Of fifty. Clay had frequently objected to hl» wife's visits to the Widow Blake's apartments. He had objected at first because he did not like some of the people she had met there and later he had continued his objections be cause of the financial drain that Isa belle's losings had Imposed on the family exchequer. Stories had come to Clay, stories of wild times at the Widow Blake's. Stories had come to him, too, of the fascinating widow's wild infatuation for Horace Stone, attorney and sharper, whose business dealings were often open to suspicion and whose escapades in which automobiles, chorus girls, wine suppers, stage doors, and midnight revels were largely in terspersed made the chief topics of conversation among the men about town. Careful Investigation, however, had failed to reveal anything objectionable In Stone's conduct while the play was on at Cora Blake's beautiful home. It Is true that the widow confessed to 60 years of age. It is true that Stone was 20 years her Junior, but Clay had gradually, through a mental process that he could hardly analyze, come to regard this as a matter entirely be tween the widow and Mr. Stone. As he had onoe said to himself with a shrug, "If Stone wants to woo a woman old enough to be his mother, that's his business. And if Cora Blake wants to be fooled by a man young enough to be her son, why that's hers." And so gradually his objections to Isabelle's auction games had grown less and less—had grown less probably not so much because he approved of them but because they provided occu pation 'or her while he indulged his favorite folly—his nightly time with th» boys. As may have been guessed before this, Isabelle's early rising on this fateful Saturday morning had to do with the play at Mrs. Blake's. Luck had been against her once more. * Th« fickle Goddess had deserted her almost entirely and when the play on Friday night was over she shuddered at the staggering amount of her losses. She had reached the end of her re sources. Her allowance for the next three months was pledged. Her Jewels were gone. All that? remained to her was the diamond engagement ring that Edgar had given her on the never-to-be forgotten evening when she had blushingly promised to tak® him "for better or for worse." Hacl It been for better—or for worse ? Many times she asked herbelf that question as she lay there all that long, long night, staring with wide open, but sightless eyes into the wall of dark ness that seemed to shut her in—a wall that had no opening to the right or to the left—above or below. Morning came at last. And with it fitful slumber. And then a slow awakening to the broad light of day and a full realization that she had a problem to faoe. Cowardice was not one of Isabelle's follies. "The sooner the better," she had murmured to herself, and after a careful toilet had gone resolutely to her husband's dressing room, there to put the whole sordid story before him, and ask for help once more. Well she knew that he would storm. Well she knew that the only times he objected to Mrs. Blake's now, was when she bad to come to him for money to re coup her losses. But there was no help for it. He was her only hope. But she had reckoned without the wet towel and the headache and the morning after grouch. And so as we have seen, her mission had ended in failure. A dejected little figure she sat In her husband's dressing oom, keeping up her pretense of gayety, only when Clay happened to raise his eyes to wards her—which was not often. "A telephone for you sir," said the butler, creating a welcome diversion, as he handed Clay the extension In strument. ''Hello —yes, this is Clay. Oh, hello, trwln. What's that you say? All right, Pll be right down." His wife saw the look of anguish md despair that came Into his face, is he hastily slammed up the re :elver, finished his dressing and rushed from the house without giving ler any explanation. CHAPTER TWO. Russell Irwin was early at the office '.hat Saturday morning. Things were *ad In the real estate business and it was only by being on the Job early ind late that he managed to keep things going—managed to hold the Srm of Irwin & Clay on top of the '.urbulent waters of failure that 'Jireatened to engulf them at any mo dent. (OORTIItUXD TOMOBBOW.) Come in and see my stock of DRAINS I before you buy. From 90.25 to 9?.5 E. BLUMENSTINE 14 South Court St., Hariisburg, Pa. HAKRISBURG TELEGRAPH THE PERSISTENT TONIC A New Skirt Showing That Feature in iti Latest Development By MAY~MANTON 8704 Tunic Skirt, 24 to 32 waist. The tunic continues to be a favorite In spite of all the other designs shown and here it is given a new and inter esting form. It flares gracefully and be comingly and is worn over a skirt,narrow enough for contrast, yet wide enough for fashion. The lower edge of the tunic can be finished with scallops or it can be left straight. It is one of the prettiest and most attractive garments that ever was worn and because of its inherent charm, it is a favorite. Here, it is made of taffeta over lace, but the model is a good one for any material that is soft enough to be gathered successfully. It would be very charming made of cotton crPpe or of cotton voile over taffeta and it would be pretty in a colored voile or colored cr(*pe over the same material in ■ white. In the back view, the flounce on the under-skirt is plaited and there, the material is chiffon, while the tunic is of faille silk. For the medium size will be required 2% yds. of material 36 in. wide, for the foundation, 4 yds. of lace 14 in. wide for gathered flounce, 2% yds. of material 44, lor the plaited flounce, j yds. 27 or 36, 2}4 yds. 44, for the tunic. The pattern No. 8704 is cut in sizes from 24 to 32 in. waist measure. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper, on receipt of ten cents. Bowman's soli May Manton Patterns. Roosevelt Will Support Governor Johnson in 1916 Special to The Telegraph New York, Aug. 3.—Hiram Johnson, Governor of California and nominee of the Progressive party for Vice-Presi dent in 1912 when Colonel Roosevelt headed the ticket, will be used as the battering ram with which to break down the doors of conservatism and force progressive principles and a nominee satisfactory to the members of the Progressive party on the Re publican national convention in 1916. That at least is the present plan, and It will be carried out unless de velopment prior to the primary elec tions next Spring make the adoption of a new program necessary. Colonel Roosevelt, who returned to his home at Oyster Bay to-day after a visit to the Panama-Pacific Exposition, talked over the political situation at length with the Governor of California and it can be stated authoritatively that Johnson Is not only willing, but eager, to make the fight. Mutuals Elect Officers; President Brown Speaks The annual meeting of the Assembly No. 4, Mutual Beneficial Association of the Pennsylvania Railroad, was held last night at Chestnut Street Hall. In attendance were 500 members, and seventy-five new members were ad mitted. Addresses were made by George W. Brown, of Philadelphia, president ot the General Assembly, and Robert Britton, a member of the Board of Di rectors. The members were requested to decorate their homes on August 28 in, honor of the veteran employes who xvlll hold a reunion in Harrisnurg on that date. These officers were elected and Installed: President, E. K. Smith; vice-presi dent, J. T. Gruver; secretary, C H Black; treasurer. J. M. Derlck; financial secretary, C. A. Runk; Inside sentinel, L. S. Howard; outside sentinel, C. N. HofTman; general adjustment commit tee J. E. Murray, C. H. Meek, and J. merries; delegates to the General As sembly. W. L. Koons, W. H. McDevltt, ■J' D , lce ' ?• F - Reed. H. A. Bixler, W. H. Runk; alternate delegates to the General Assembly, J. M. Fleming J W Keller, R. E. Monegan, C. L. Dice, j. E. Blosser and J. J. Ferris. Girls May Wear 1-Piece Bathing Suits For All Police Captain Cares Someone started a report yesterday that Captain Thompson had issued an order permitting bloomer bathing suits without skirts.' The Captain said to-day; "I issued no order. It matters little to me what is worn as long as it is a bathing suit. At many resorts they are wearing one-piece bathing suits. Divers giving exhibitions in local theaters wear them. I guess there would be no prolonged kicking if Har risbtirg bathers wore up-to-date cos tumes." Provisions Are Again ' Entering Mexico City By Associated Press Washington, D. C. f Aug. B.—Tele graph communication between Vera Cruz and Mexico City has' been re stored. Provisions began entering the city yesterday and other train loads are enroute. Other reports from Vera Cruz say that in a battle between Zapata and Carranza troops in the streets of Paso Del Macho on the night of July 30 the Zapata troops were forced to retreat. In another battle on July 29 on the outskirts of Cordoba, Carranza losses were small. Maxim Will Get Place on New Advisory Board New York, Aug. 3.—Hudson Maxim, the Inventor and Matthew B. Sellers, editor of an aeronautical publication have been selected by the Aeronautical Society of America to represent that organization on the navy advisory board, of which Thomas A. Edison, is chairman. H It was made especially to please you and refresh you and to quench your thirst. That it was made for sou is proved by flwel the fact that each of some ninety million Americans claim it was made especially for their delight. |nsjpK % Delicious and. Demand the genuine by full name — nicknames encourage substitution. % The Coca-Cola Company -m.— y „«, ATLANTA. OA. " 3&2o(Y)en /Alnreße-sT^ Importance of Culture, BY DOROTHY DIX The latest exponent of the new high-pressure, rapid-action method of child culture, which Is geared up to such speed that it entirely eliminates babyhood and childhood and in twelve short years turns a mewling infant into a human encyclopedia, has pro pounded ten commandments for mothers. Two of these are; ''Thou shalt not say 'Don't' unto thy child." "Remember never to say 'Thou must.' " Probably the lady's recipe for raising up young pedants is correct. Probably, if you start with a babe in the crddie and devote your time to stuffing it full of polysyllables and facts, it will be full to bursting of polysyllables and facts at a time when other children are still lisping and looking for the man in the moon, in stead of discoursing- about the prob abilities of there being canals on Mars. Personally I am an unregenerate cave woman when it comes to babies. I adore them when they are pink and soft and cuddly, and I think a five year-old who hasn't got a single piece of information concealed a,bout his person is the most entertaining human being on earth, and if I had a baby that I couldn't rock to sleep, or who didn't believe 1n Santa Claus, or who didn't talk baby talk, I should feel that I had been cheated out of the very best thing that life can give to a woman. Many Marvellously Precocious Chil dren Become Dull Men and Women None of your little Solomons in the cradle for mine. And I should have a clear conscience about letting my baby be a baby, and my child He a little unt ught child through all that beautiful dawn of life, because X was brought up on a racehorse farm, and I know what happens to the two year-olds that are raced too early. Also I have seen so many marvellous ly precocious children who turned into commonplace dull men and women. However, these be heterodox views, and I am not going to argue them with any expert child culturist, but what I do want to call attention *o are these two commandments to mothers: 'Thou shalt not say 'don't' unto thy child." "Remember never to say 'thou must.' " Not say "don't" to a child. Not say "thou must" to a child, when one-half of life Is "don't'" to us, and the other half is "thou must." Why. that's the trouble with the •world to-day. Men and women have not had It ground into their con sciousness since their earliest child hood that their Inclinations and de sires must not govern their actions, and that there are certain things that they must not do,' and other things that they must do stihply because one Is right and the other is wrong. There is not a man in the peniten tiary, there Is not a girl in the street, who are not there becauso their mothers failed to say to them often enough and Impressively f<|High, "Don't do that" and you "Must do this other." It is the mothers who have said "don't" and "must" to their children, and enforced them with a strong hand, who have raised up the men and women who have done the j big things in the world, and who keep I law and order in it. AUGUST 3, 1915. 'Don't' and 'Must' in Child Shown by Dorothy Dix Tou don't train the prizefighter who is going into the ring to battle for the championship on lollypops, or by encouraging him to sit around on silk cushions, and telling' him that his opponent will be dead easy and he won't have to exert himself much to win the purse. On the contrary, you harden his muscles by every known method, and impress on him that he's got to put every ounce of strength that's in him into his punch, or else he'll be beaten to pieces. Exactly the same method applies to children. We foredoom them to failure, if we do not strengthen their moral muscles, and if we bring them up to believe that they can do what ever they desire, and leave undone the things that do not appeal to their tastes. And that is exactly what we would do if we failed to say "don't" to them, or "must" to them. 1 never hear a mother lying to a child about taking a dose of medicine, and telling him that it isn't bitter when she knows it is. without feel ing that she Is a criminal. She is weakening the child by just that much. She should say, "Certainly to take It. All your lifelong you will have to take bitter medicine, and if you make a man worth while, you've got to learn to take your medicine, however bitter, without making faces." Who are the men who are the drunkards, the roues, the gamblers, the spendthrifts, the ne'er-do-wells? Without exception they are the men who were not taught the don'ts of life at their mother's knee, and who did not have enough moral fiber in bred In them to make them able to resist temptation. World's Failures Arc Those Who Have Never Been Taught "Musts" of Life Who are the men who aro failures in the world, the men who flit from occupation to occupation, and office to office, because when the thing they have undertaken to do loses Its nov elty, and settles down to the hard, steady pull of everyday toil, they have not the grit and endurance to go on with it? It is those men who have never been taught in their childhood the "musts" of life. Who are the women who go run ning home to mother and the di f ~~ 1 * Dealer Recommends Them '•For over ten years I have been n»lnfc, anil have Hold hundreds of donena of CafVVSi) tablets. "For Arndnclim - and Neuralgia I know of notliln* better and will always reroiiiiiieud C»fA'So tableta, whirl! I think hnve no equal." H. A. BROWN, Heading, Pa. At all dealers 10c and 2Be vorce court the minute the romance vanishes from matrimony, and they find out that it means self-denial, and self-sacrifice, and work, and worry, and patience, instead of just being all billing and cooing, and flattery? It is the women whose mothers haven't said "don't" to them and "must" to them, who have never been taupht that duty comes before inclination. "Don't" and "must," these words are heard far too seldom on mothers' lips. If you abolish them altogether we shall revert to savagery, for all civilization is built upon "don'ts" and "musts." wsuRATED MAGNESIA For dyspepsia. Indigestion, souring of food, gas. and hyperacidity of the stomach lacld stomach i. A teaspoonful In a fourth of a glass of hot water usu ally gives INSTANT RKUEF. Sold by all druggists in either powder or tablet form at SO cents per bottle.—Advertise ment. f FEET PERSPIRE ? j Hero Is » pleasant remedy easily applied—quick in result*—^reaeeless. It positively reduces foot perspi ration to normal if the trouble is not Neurosis —a few applications will prove Its wonderful efficiency. Cost is refunded if you are not entirely natlsfled with Mack's Foot Life Effective in all foot troubles —long- standing and painful cases of Corns and Callouses, chilblains and tired, aching feet, and any form of skin disease or bruise. FOOT LIFE also heals sores and reduces rash. So*-' by drug, shoe and department stoi % n 2oc and f»oc Jari. Trial Jar mail on receipt of 10c. DOG ON FOOT MACK'S MEDICALOO., *33* Trsmont Boston, L Mass. yr COUPON! \ •</ enclose 10e. \ 21 Send Trial Jar of f| Maclc » Foot Lift. I y' Name . v j /Addr««« Sufferers from skin tortures get speedy and permanent relief by using Dondi Eczema Ointment Cases of Eeaema of years' standing have responded to the treatment ana permanent relief effected. Price 33 cents. All druggists or P. O. Box 439, Har risburg, Pa. Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect June 87. 1»1S. TRAINS leave Harrisburg— For Winchester and Martlnsburg at 6:08, *7:62 a. m„ *3:40 p. m. For Hagerstown, Chambersburg. Car. lisle, Mechanical, urg and Intermediate stations at *5:03. *7.62. *11:68 a. n» •8:40. 6:37, *7:45. *11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanicsburg at 9:48 a. m.. 2.18; 8:88. 6:3u. 8:36 a. in. For Dillsbiirg at 6:03, «7:»8 and | *11:63 a. m.. 8:18, *3:40, 6:37 and 8:80 i P 'Daily. All other trains dally «xmbS Sunday. H. A. RIDDLHL I J. H. TONGB, O. p, 4. jy 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers