ISe^Ec^ |means tojrou® ffi' Th« WMstwch -RtfUx" Gas $K S£ Mantle, either Upright or Inverted. jw Jk gives full illumination from the gas ;A consumed in a mellow, restful iX V* I ,' tight that burns with uniform dear- 'l£ V.; ness during the exceptionally long i® li HEAD NOISES If you know of some one who is troubled with Catarrhal Deafness, head noises or ordinary catarrh cut out this formula and hand it to them and you will have been tlie means of saving some j>oor sufferer perhaps from total deaf ness In England scientists for a lons time past lia\e recognized that catarrh Is a constitutional disease and neces sarily requires a constitutional treat ment. Sprays, inhalers and nose doaches are liable to irritate the delicate air pass ages and force the disease into the mid dle ear which frequently means total deafness, or else the disease is driven down the air passages towards the lungs which Is equally as, dangerous. The following formula which is used extensive!" in the damp English climate is a constitutional treatment and should prove especially efficacious to sufferers here who live under more favorable climate condi tions. Secure from your Druggist 1 ounce of Parmint (Double strength*. Take this home and add to it pint of hot water and 4 ounces of granulated pugar: stir until dissolved. Take one tablespoonful four times a day. This will often bring quick relief from dis tressing head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and improve as the inflammation i:Wfhe eustachian tubes Is reduced. Par mint Is usei in this way as it acts di rectly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system and has a slight t■ ujio action that facilitates the recov ery of the patient. The preparation is easy to make, costs little and is pleas ant to take. Every person who has catarrh should give this treatment a trial.—Advertisement. NUXATED IRON Increases strength h delicate nervous k^r|Y|T|T|l rundown people. 400 ■II I I P er cent, in ten days 3 in instances. tails per I J|l .] jTTTj planation in large I»lJ tl ■ ■ B article soon to ap !■■■■■■■■ I>ear in this paper. Ask your doctor or druggist about it. Croll Keller F J Hplthouse, J N. Clark and all lead ing druggists always carry it in stock. • —Advertisement. $3.00 —TO— NEW YORK AND RETURN Via Philadelphia & Reading Railway, SUNDAY -|/\ OCTOBER ill Special Excursion Train From I.v.A.M. lIARRISHIRG 3.35 HuniinelMoivn 3..*>0 Snulara . 3.5S Her»h«\v 3.57 Palmyra 4.04 Annvllle 4.13 I.F.BANON' 4^4 NEW YORK (arrive) 1t.30 RETI RMHG Leave New York from foot \Ve»« 23d Street I.!M P. , foot Liberty Street 7.00 P. M. aame day for above Kittlon*. ■ I Cumberland Valley Railiw'd TIME TABLE In Effect June 17. 1915. TAaJIs'S leave Harrlsburg— For Winchester and ilarUnabun al »:03. *7:52 a. m.. »3;*» p. m. For Haieritown, Chambersburs. Car lisle, Mechaniceburs and Intermediate stations at *5:03. *7.62. *11:61 a. «n_ ■1:40, 6:17, *7:46. *11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mecbanicsburff at I:4S a. m.. i ll; t;U • :lu. 9.35 a. m. For DUlaburg at 1:03. *7:62 -n further Information. Harrisburg Business College Day and Night School Sept. 7, 1915 Business. Shorthand and CTTII Serr- j / >1 THE Office Training School Kaufman Bid*.. 4 8. Market S«. NOW IN SESSION Day School aad Night School Call or send for S2-page booklet— Bell phone iii-R. >-■ - people are not working under the I honor system. They are under bond i of suspicion, watched and guarded by I all sorts of checks and means to keep ! them honest. And if they can "set away with it" they feel like the little; boy who, when locked in his room to j meditate on his impish ly climbs out of the bedroom window and "shins" down the old apple tree, whose branches lead him to freedom. How many people fail to put down the penny for their daily paper when they tind it untended and lying in piles that are guarded by stones from the wind's onslaughts, but that have no guardian present to insure honest! payment? Papers lying thus make a i mute appeal to honesty. They sug-1 gest that it is taken for grajited that you will pay for what you take. Cafeterias find it possible to trust in the honesty of their patrons. In such you help yourself to what you I want and announce the sum of your J indebtedness. If you should cheat land deny rightful payment of the full | sum under these circumstances, you are a perverted creature. The natural thtng to do is to pay what you owe; •because it is taken for granted that you will. . Natural to Be Honest Honesty is a more natural human instinct than thievery. It came first. Cheating and thievery are not actual qualities so much as inhibitions of natural ones. I am not proposing that we turn the world upside down, remove all barriers to wrong-doing and give cranks and feeble-minded and even insane creatures full .sway. 1 am merely saying that the normal human being is decent and honorable. When he cheats it is probably largely to ad mire his own cleverness in escaping detection. His own instincts bid htm be honest. Apd if the world shows that it expects him to be honest, he would be ashamed to disappoint it. The honor system works whenever it is absolutely simply applied. In a community where it is used, the weight of public opinion swings over to taking honesty in others for granted. Who would dare go against it? Who wants to be dishonorable when every body expects him to be decent ? Who likes ro disappoint the faith of a child? Who cheats an absolutely trusting woman? Never the sober, honest, decent citizen. And the citizen who lies just beyond the pale of decency and honesty can be reclaimed often by a faith that takes the best in. him for granted. Even as we don't disappoint people when they expect wrong-doing from us, even as we want the game when we're given the name of thief, so I honor can score by taking our honor for granted. Wherever the honor system grows, honor grows to meet it. We are all inherently decent—or we are abnor mal. Abas with suspicion and doubt! :More power to honor and the honor II system! THE TUNIC IN ITS_LATEST FORM A New and Graceful Skirt that can bf Made of One or of Two Materials. By MAY MAN TON 8769 Tunic Skirt, 24 to 30 waist. There is no feature of fashions more in teresting than the determination with which the tunic holds its place. This one is very new and smart. It is finished with narrow tucks at the lower edge in which cords are inserted to produce the required flare and it is open at the front. The opening makes an especial feature, for that it gives just one more evidence of the period to which the designers are looking. The skirt beneath is of com fortable and moderate width. Here, the 1 skirt and the tunic are made of one ma terial, but an equally good effect could be obtained by making the tunic of one material and the skirt of another, as flowered taffeta over a plain, or, taffe\a over gabardine or plain cloth over plaid. Besides showing one of the newest and smartest models, the skirt is a very simple one and very easy to make. The founda tion is perfectly plain, finished with hemmed edges and tne tunic is shirred and arranged over it. j For the medium Kze will be needed ! yds. of material 27 in. wide, 2% yds. 36 ' or 44, for the skirt, yds. 27 in. wide,. ; 3- lx 2 yds. 36 or 44, for the tunic, i The pattern No. 8769 is cut in sizes from i 24 to 30 in. waist measure. It will be ! mailed to any address .by the Fashion Department of this paper, on receipt of . ten cents. ' Bowman's sejl May Manton Patterns. jHORLICK'S The Original MALTED MILK Unto— you say "HORLiOK'S" I you mmy got m Substitute. I jf RUDOLPH K. SPICEP ' FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBAL.MER 313 Walnut St. HARRISBURG, PA. . lV I' ] Dr. Wm. Tyler Douglas HAS MOVED HIS OFFICES XO 1634 Deriry Street, Corner of 17th HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Custom-Tailored Appearance Minus High Cost That's What You Get in Our Hundreds of clothes-wise men are wearing our Suits and Overcoats. It took some time to convince them that we could sell them a with style, fit and workmanship II ml equal to what a merchant tailor W H would turn out for S2B and S3O. jjl v| they are beginning to realize our W M Underselling Supremacy . Let Us Show You Our New Fall Suits From |1 to Their equal or near it in the high rent, high price district would cost you from $5.00 to SB.OO per suit more. Special Boys' Suits $1.98 to $4.75 Specials in Girls' Coats $1.98 to $12.00 You Can Have Your Bill Charged Without Parley, Publicity Embarrassment or Extra Charge Home 1 Gately & Fitzgerald Supply Co. 1 Family Furnishers I 29-31-33 and 35 S. 2nd St. || Clothiers The Pioneer Department-Credit Store / TRAVELETTE By NIKSAH FLAGSTAFF < The climate of Flagstaff. Arizona, is very much like that of Maine. He who watches weather bureau reports will not infrequently see the name of Flagstaff set forth as the point of lowest temperature in the United States. This is not in accordance with the current impression of Ari zona weather but Flagstaff is S.OOO feet above the sea and often lifty degrees cooler than other portions of the State. They call it the skylight city. Just bark of it rise San Francisco Peaks, the highest mountains in this part of the world, their bare tips hidden in snow, Flagstaff has run a pipe line to a spring far up the mountainside and its water system has the pres sure of a 5,000-foot column and en dangers the bottoms of the buckets of the townspeople. Flagstaff is planted in the midst of Mogellon (pronounced Mo-ge-yon) forest, a stretch of timber that cov ers a greater area tnan any other in the United States. It is a lumber-' built, rambling sort of village with a big sawmill on the outskirts, head quarters for cattle and sheepmen for a hundred miles in every direction. Away to the west over the rolling mesas wind the prettiest wagon roads in the world, seventy-five miles to the rim of the Grand Canyon. From the edge of the plain upon which Flag staff stands one may look seven miles down at the Colorado river or twen-, ty miles across Its gorge to the State of Nevada. If one should travel north from Flagstaff he would encounter the Can yon of the Little Colorado which vies with the mother gorge in magnificence but is much less known. This is wild country. A little further to the right the Hopl Indians every other year put on their wierd snake dances. It is the home of cliff dwellers here abouts and of that mysterious influ ence that has turned forest monarchs into stone. It is likewise the home of huge griszles and of white-tailed antelope, and of the most spotted fawns in the world. In it Arizona of fers a summer resort that will some time come ' into fame. • OUTBREAK OF TYPHOID Special to The Telegraph Dillsburg, Pa.. Oct. 4.—A serious | outbreak of typhoid fever has occurred I in Warrington township in the vicinity I of Wellsville. where seven cases have j been reported, one at Mount Top and | four near Hall post, office and nine rear Rossville. all within a distance of ajbout si* miles. ANNOUNCE BIRTH OF SON Special to The Telegraph Dillsburg, Pa.. Oct. 4.—The Rev. I find Mrs. G. H. Eveler. of South Bal | timore street, announce the birth of a j I son on Friday, October 1. > I,IOLOR IN SUITCASES Special to The Telegraph I Mount Union, Pa.. Oct. 4.—Saturday r being pay day at the various various f works, the town, although dry, showed I signs of being very wet. Every train i t coming from T\rone brought scores of | workmen, and with them came suit i Niagara Falls r Personally-conducted Excursions October 8, 1915 HOUND $10.70 T IP I From HARRISBURG SPECIAL. TRAIN of Pullman Par lor Cars, Dining Car. and Day I Coaches through the Picturesque Susquehanna Valley Tickets good going on Special Train and connecting trains, and returning on regular trains with in FIFTEEN DAYS. Stop-off at Buffalo on return trip. Illustrated Booklet and full In formation may be obtained from Ticket Agents. Pennsylvania R. R. I ——j \ THE | Office Training School Kaufmaa Bids-. 4 I. Market Sq NOW IN SESSION ' , Day School and Night School Call or send for 32-page booklet— : Bell phone <94-R. OCTOBER 4. 1915. " cases and traveling hags, believed to are seen on the streets* the polic< have been li'.led with liquors. Owing force has been increased to four men to the ma'ny fights and drunks that Ten arrests were made Saturday night I YORK. , ~~ I FAIR 0 EXCURSION TICKETS , Sold October 4 to 8, xood on flute of luue only, to York from Baltimore, Frederick, HnrrUbum, and Hll Intermediate atntlona and to Went York (Fair Grounds), from l.ancaater and Intermediate alatlona. except those front which the nnllmlted round-trip fare IN .*>o cent* or Iru. Special Train, Thursday, October 7 I.earea York . 8.35 P. i For Harrlaburg, making no Intermediate atop*. CONSULT TICKET AGEXTS PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD, r _ i The New Labor Law The new Workmen's Compensation Act goes into effect January Ist, next. If you are an employer of labor you should be familiar with every phase of this most im portant piece of legislation. We are prepared to supply this act in pamphlet form with side headings for easy reference. Single copies 25c with very special prices on larger quantities. The Telegraph Printing Co. PRINTING—BINDING—DESIGNING PHOTO-ENGRAVING HARRISBURG, PENNA. L, ~ , : — J 7