_ I Are You Fond of Yourself? By BEATRICE FAIRFAX Prida is generally considered as a rather contemptible thing. It is, un less it has the right foundation. To be proud of the circumstances Into which chanie has thrust you, to be proud of the beauty with which a .clean-living line of ancestors has dow ered you, or to be proud of the wealth with which a hard-flsted grandfather has Invested you—any of these is In deed a contemptible form of pride. But this pride I should scarcely call worthy of the name—it is rather con temptibly stupid snobbery, and, heaven help us, most of us are all too likely to be snobs of just this unin telligent sort. That we are snobs of this sort some of us calmly know, and some of us stupidly don't. Some of us And amuse ment in our own instinct of exclu slveness. and others take it so sol emnly that we are hopelessly impeded by it. With a temperate excluslve ness tempered by a sense of humor and based on a knowledge of human frailty I have no fault to find. It actually has an instructive value to the excluded ami compels them to cultivate powers and manners that will take them inside the paling of worth-while society. Exclusiveness implies the survival of the fittest. It is necessary to human society. With the sort of pride that makes one dainty and exclusive and insistent on good manners, one can And no more fault than with that which makes one in sist on eating with a fork instead of with a knife or 'on keeping one's hands clean and smooth. Being proud of yourself means first of all not being ashamed of yourself. To fall In having your soul and mind and body as clean and well ordered as circumstances will permit would be a matter of which one should be hor ribly ashamed. But in order to be proud of yourself you must bend cir cumstances to your will and be a lit tle cleaner and neater and finer and stronger than they seem to permit. Making the most of yourself is * V/kolesome- Palatakl«^^^if^\^| Ruhls Bread Direct from our oven 2 * #/ Phone Co your caoCe , A » , Vvaeorw RuKls Pentrook Baker 4. JT matters not how "hard" @F®S^T~T^ you are on Hose, you ® .cannot wear out a box of six sS HOSE inside of six months — H 4 But if, perchance, you IX) wear a hole in them tthem six months, bring JJ B| That's our guar- ft figures out a antee in writing— fraction over 17c. a on every box. pair. In fineness of they are beyond compare. iJliPffl/iiir Newark Shoe Stores Co. —HARRISBURG BRANCH— KUIXXfI 315 Market Street, Near Dewberry I V.l Jr Other Newark Store* .\enrbyi TOftdft If JSEBBBT York* Heading;, Altoona, Baltimore, Lancaster. riMWI w r "Open Saturday nlsrhtn until 10.30 o'clock to accommodate our CUM tome rs*** MA 11. OItDEWS FILLED BY PARCBK POST. ■ 157 Stores in 97 Cities. A REAL FLESH BUILDER FOR THIN PEOPLE Who Would Increase Weight and Put On Healthy Stay • There Flesh Thin men and women who would like to Increase their weight with 10 or 15 pounds of healthy 'stay-there" fat should try eating a little Sargol with their meals for a while and note results. Here is a good test worth trying. First weigh yourself and measure yourself. Then take Sargol— one tablet with every meal—for two weeks. Then weigh and measure yourself again. It. isn't a question of how you look or feel or what your friends say and think. The scales an«l tape measure will tell their own story. Many people, having followed these simple directions, report weight In creases of from five to eight pounds with continued gains under further treatment. Jr= S"ve This Coupon for ill v The American Government * The Panama Canal I BY FREDERIC J. HASKIN fl, V „ THF. BOOKS THAT SKOWJJNCLE SAM AT WORK. • THE HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A HOW TO GET THESE BOOKS—Cut this coupon from six f~ consecutive Issues of this paper and present them at our ol£ice V with 98 cents, to cover the cost of production and handling. I Fifteen cents extra If sent by mall. SOME FACTS ABOUT THESE BOOKS—BJth are the I same size and bound exactly allko in heavy clotll. Each has I about 4t>o pases printed on fine book paper. E<fth are pro- I ! fusely illustrated with official etchings, drawings and maps. OUR GUARANTEE—This is not a money-making propo rj sltlon. We are distributing these patriotic books at cost I II solely because of their educational merit. THUTRSDAY EVENING, scarcely a cause for pride—you have to make a bit more of yourself that the material warrants. There is no necessity for looking down on the people beneath you—the thing: you have to do is to look up, quite un enviously, at the people above you and very calmly to proceed to reach and pass them. It Is very easy to make excuses foe yourself. Hut how can any of us be proud of the person we have to ex plain and make allowances for? You may well be proud of yourself if at the end of a day you know you have seized on every opportunity that flit ted across your vision and if you know that you have held yourself rigidly to a standard so high that you had to strain every nerve and muscle to reach it. The very moment that you have just cause to be proud of yourself you are likely to be most humble about what you have yet to accomplish. True pride is actually of royal lineage and is quite unashamed of failure since it means to build on failure to success. True pride exacts everything of it self and nothing of the world: but it never permits the world to drag it down or soil It. It is never ashamed of its beginners and never fails to recognize the fact that whence you come means nothing and whither you are going everything. It is quite ready to lend a hand to fellow travel ers and quite unwilling to yield one jot of Its staunch climb upward to any temptation. You can't be proud of yourself un less you are climbing, but that pride is a purely personal matter between you and your soul and should be in flicted on no one else. It should mean excluding no human being from your sympathy, hut every unworthy thing from your plan of life. When you can look yourself straight in the eyes and tell yourself, "I did my best and I criticised no one else because his best did not happen to be mine," then you may indeed be proud of yourself. Sargol does not of itself make fat but mixing with your food its purpose is to help the digestive organs turn the fats, sugars and starches of what you have eaten, into rich, ripe fat pro ducing nourishment for the tissues and blood—prepare it in an easily assimilated form which the blood rail readily accept. A great heal of this nourishment now passes from thin peoples' bodies as waste. Sargol Is designed to stop the waste and make the fat producing contents of the very same meals you are eating now develop pounds and pounds of healthy flesh between your skin and bones. Sargol noninjurious, pleasant, efficient and iexpensive. George A. Gorgas and other leading druggists are authorized to sell it in large boxes—forty tablets to a package on a guarantee of weight increase or money back as found In every package.—Advertise ment. | |n<rfrrtfr»r*rrrrrrffrrfrr | || NEAL of t NAVY j By WILLIAM HAMILTON OSBORNE ■■■■ Aalhcr of "Red Moaie," "Running Fight," "Cattpaw, " "Blue Buckle. " etc. Novelized from the Photo Play of the B«me N»me Produced by j the Pathe Exchange, Inc. iCorTrislit. lIU. *>» WlUlam Hamilton Osborne^ scrutiny. "Here's the mine marked ' on the island with a cross—what kind of a mine—what's cinnabar?" "Quicksilver ore," returned the girl. "It must be a quicksilver mine." "Nothing else upon It, except the words 'Stone castle,' nothing else." The girl sprang to her side. "Yes," said the girl, "these two other words below." She placed her finger upon them. They were two small words near the lower left-hand ccrner of the map: Latitude. | Longitude. "Yes," went on Mrs. Hardin, "but what latitude and what longitude?" j Annette smiled. "That's the point, i It doesn't say. That's what I've got to find out, but I'll find out, never fear." Mrs. Hardin lit a lamp, placed the map flatly upon the table, and exam ined every nook and corner of it. "Well," she said at length, "I've scoured the map and I can't make head nor tail of it, so we'll have some tea." She placed her hand upon the han dle of the little tea pot. She drew It away suddenly, for it was unusually hot. Her hasty movement dislodged It from its moorings and the boiling water spouted out over the table. Most of the boiling water spouted on the map. Mrs. Hardin snatched the map away and wiped it with her ker chief. Then she handed the map to Annette. "Get it cut of my sight be- i fore I scour the whole thing off the j face of the earth," she said. Then j she stopped. "Annette," she went on, sharply, "what's the matter?" Annette was pointing to the map, j "Look! look!" she cried. Well might she exclaim, for there, upon the yellow surface of the parch- j ment where only half a dozen words : had appeared before, there now ap- j peared a multitude. "Latitude 18 degrees, 30 minutes; north; longitude 123 degrees, 40 min utes west. Granted to Ilington, Span- j ish-American explorer, for distin- i guished service by Joseph Bonaparte, j king of Spain, in the year 1809; the original grant being in possession of the fathers of the Santa Maria mis- j sion in Lower California, to be Bur- i rendered to the heirs of Ilington upon iproof of Identity and presentation of j Ithis map." I Annette stared at it. "Jove!" she finally exclaimed. "Lost Isle is Lost ! Isle no more, thanks to a tea kettle * full of boiling water; but, look, look, it fades again." "Fades as it cools," sold Mrs. Har din. The door opened stealthily. Joe Welcher entered. "Joey," cried An nette thoughtlessly, "tell us—where's 18 degrees latitude. You can pass examinations. And 123 degrees longi tude. Right off the reel." Joe Welcher mistook the inquiry for | mere airy persiflage. He failed en- | tirely to connect it with the map. He ! strode to the tablo. The map still lay ; there but now upon its face appeared j none of the recently revealed inscrip tions, it was as blank as it had been before. Welcher's fingers itched to get hold of the map. He needed It in • his business, for his business Just now was keeping out of trouble. He stretched forth a hand to take it. "You and your old map," he said, with an attempt at jocularity, "it's like ' a game of solitaire. Let me look at it again." j Annette folded it up and thrust it into her bosom. "Not so, Joey," she returned. "It's never going to leave | my possession again. It's precious to me now." A sudden light broke in upon Joe's j understanding. He peered at her cun- ; ningly. "What's that you were say- ! ing about latitude and longitude?" he j queried. "Never you mind, Joey," laughed j Annette, "all in good time you'll know. ! What's on your mind?" "How did you know anything was ! on my mind," replied Welcher. "Well,! you're right. There's an old friend of yours downstairs, just come over from New York—Miss Irene Cour- ! tier." "We'll tidy up, then you can show her up," said his foster mother. She swept Annette's belongings into a huge old-fashioned valise. She had no sooner finished than Inez Castro en tered the arena of events. "I read about it, just a line in the shore notes of a New York paper— the fire. And you were utterly de stroyed; you saved nothing, as I un derstand?" "Nothing but Annette's valuables," returned Mrs. Hardin. "What next do you do—where now do you go?" Inquired Inez. Mrs. Hardin's eyes glowed. "I—we ■hall go to Neal; for the present any way, we have no other plans. We can live near him for a little while at least." "And Neal is—?" queried Inez. Mr*. Hardin told her—at the Naval Train ing school at Newport. Neal of the Navy SHOWN IN MOVING PICTURES i PHT IYNTT A T EACH WEDNESDAY i V/UJUUniliXr ' AND THURSDAY Season's Greatest Movie Serial HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Inez clapped her hands. "The long arm of coincidence," she cried; "my father and I, we have our little villa at Newport, as you had your little cottage at Seaport. And you shall visit me, as 1 visited you. You shall visit me—and you Annette Illngton— at my villa, in Newport. Good." It is to be said of Inez Castro that she was universally resourceful. She had no father. And as for a villa at Newport—she had never thought of such a thing until that instant. Her villa at Newport was a castle in the air. CHAPTER XVIII. Scar Face. Welcher, upon the advent of Inez Castro, had left the room. Inez had handed him a slip of paper—one that he was anxious to peruse. He went below to read it It was another little seductive note from her, asking him to meet her once again at their tryst ing place—Lonesome Cove inn, three miles south of Seaport. Fortified with proper stimulants, Welcher made his way at once to that hostelry. At last she came. Welcher sprang forward and caught her in his arms. "You've got to let me see you often —often, do you understand," he said. "Let me tell you, charming one," said Inez, "that what happens cannot be helped by me. I have a husband, have I not? A hard master, this Her nandez. When he commands, I must obey. If I fail—" Bhe looked up. She rose. The door waa still shut, but within the room, crouching behind Welcher, were three interlopers—Hernandez and his two companions, Ponto and the brute. "What are you doing here?" cried Welcher, stepping back. "I thought I locked the door." "You are fond of locking doors, friend Welcher," said Hernandez, "but this time you merely turned the key —a key which doesn't lock. I have rights here, 1 imagine. Since my wife sees fit to enter, I enter also. May I inquire of my fair wife," he proceeded suavely, "what the heiress, Annette Illngton, intends to do?" "None of your business," snapped Joe Welcher, in return. "May I inquire of you, sir, then," went on Hernandez, "what you intend to do?" "That's none of your business, too," eald Welcher; "but If you want to know, I'm going to Annapolis. I'm go ing to join the navy." "Listen, friend Welcher," said Her nandez, "you have failed 1 us once. If you fail us again we will have you broken. We want that map of the Lost Isle of Cinnabar—we want every iden tifying thing that came aboard the Princess with Annette Ulngton, the child, and you must help us get it. Understand?" Hernandez pointed toward the door. "Annapolis," he said "then report to us at Newport in due course." Before Welcher was able to report to Hernandez or to Inez Castro at Courtier villa, in Newport, other things happened. A week later Neal Hardin, in his apprenticeship seaman uniTortn, hur ried from his training ship to the rail road station in Newport, and waited half an hour for a belated train. He was unprepared for the sight that met his eyes when the train pulled in. Annette was more than a dream —she was superb. Neal seized as mahy suit cases as he could manage, motioned to a porter to bring the rest, and led his little crowd toward the street car. Inez Castro called after him. "Where are you going?" she demand ed. "This is our vehicle. Pile In." It was a huge gray motor car. "Yours?" queried Annette. Notwithstanding the fact that Inez had never seen the. car before, she nodded. "One of mine," she said. At the villa Inez turned her guests loose and bade them do as they pleased. Neal and Annette immediate ly left the pleasing but unnecessary society of the others and wandered through the rose-lined paths behind the house. Annette started suddenly. "Look, look. Quick!" she commanded. Neal looked. Fifteen paces to his right there was a clump of bushes, and peering from this clump of bushes there was a human face, sin ister, forbidding. Without a word Neal leaped in the direction of the face and dodged around the busheß. Luck favored the pursued and was against the pursuer. A taxicab came whirling around a corner, and the in terloper leaped upon Its step, opened the door and flung himself inside, giv ing a quick order to the driver. (To Be Continued.) COMMUNION SERVICER The holy communion will be ad ministered in the Reformed Salein church on Sunday morning and eve ning. Preparatory services will be held on Friday at 7:45 p. m. A NEW AND GRACEFUL SKIRT i | A Sectional Model that is Simple and Adapted to Many Materials. By MAY~M ANTON *762 Sectional Skirt, 24 to 33 waist. Sectional skirts make an important feature of the latest fashions. Tnis one 1 consists of three straight pieces, each joined to the other beneath the finished edge. It flares most generously at the lower edge, yet with only moderate fulness at the belt. It is an exceedingly fashionable model and also a very prac tical one both for silk and for wool fab rics. Taffeta is charming so made the wool voile that is to be extensively worn is perfectly adapted to such use, all the fashionable crapes are appropriate and indeed a long list of materials. Here, the skirt is plain, but if liked, each section could be trimmed with banding or, la place of being simply hemmed, the lower edges could be scalloped. For the medium size will be needed J yds. of material 27 In. wide, SJ-4 yds. 36, yds. 44. The width at the lower edge is 3 yds. and 22 in. The pattern No. 876 a is cut in sizes from 24 to 3a in. bust measure. It will be mailed to address by the Fashion Department of this paper, on receipt of ten cents. Bowman's Bell May Manton Patterns. 1 ' True Secret of Keeping Youthful Looking (The Beauty Seeker.) "The real secret of keeping young-look • Ing and beautiful," says a well-known r hygienlst, "Is to keep the liver and bow els normally active. Without these re -1 aulsites, poisonous waste products re ! :naln in the system, polluting the blood . and lodging in various organs, tissues, 1 loints. One becomes flabby, obese, nerv | ous, mentally sluggish, dull-eyed, wrin kled and sallow of face. 1 "But to get liver and bowels working as they ought, without producing evil after-effects, has been the problem. For- I tunately, there is a prescription of un questioned merit, which may now be had , in convenient tablet form. Its value Is due largely to an ingredient derived from | the humble May apple, or Its root, which has been called 'vegetable calomel' be cause of Its effectiveness—though of • course it Is not to be classed with the real calomel of mercurial origin. There no habit-forming constituent in 'senta -1 tiel' tablets—that's the name—and their use is not followed by weakness or ex haustion. On the contrary, these harm less vegetable tablets tend to Impart tone and elasticity to the relaxed intes tinal wall. Sentanel tablets, which may 1 be procured from any druggist—a dime's worth will do—will prove a revelation to any constipated, liver-troubled person." Chief Cause of Pimples, Blotches, Sallow Skin (Messenger of Health.) Unsightly eruptions, pimples, bolls, blotches, sallow or muddy skin, usually are due to a sluggish liver, a constipated bowel—and a polluted blood stream as a consequence. How foolish in such cases to resort to outward applications, which can never have natural, permanent re sults. If more people only knew it, there Is a very simple remedy, to be found in any drug store, which Is as effective as it Is harmless and quick acting. It is an old formula, long recognised by the medical profession, which has been put in tablet form, and at such small cost no one need, row be deprived of Its wonderful bene fits. "Sentanel tablets"—that's the name are entirely vegetable and there's no hablt-formlng Ingredient. You need only get about a dime's worth, and swallow one at bedtime to realize there's nothing: else quite so good for the purpose. Tho action in the morning Is so easy, so sooth ing, and instead of a weakening after effect, you feel truly refreshed and invig orated. Sentanel tablets are not only the finest remedy known for constipation and torpid liver, but offer the sanest, most sensible treatment for complexion difficulties of the character mentioned. Great Demand for New Constipation Remedy i They say that the advent of the "senta nel tablet 1 ' as a vegetable substitute for calomel has resulted In an extraordinary demand for this remarkable product, ft seems to have made a hit particularly with those afflicted with chronic consti pation, who were quick to recognize its advantages over calomel and the usual laxatives. Sentanel tablets, aside from their effl- | cacy, doubtless owe their success largely I to a tendency to aid in bringing about ; natural functioning—lnstead of encour aging the "cathartic habit." Also, Instead i of injuring the membraneous lining of the organs involved, they exert a healing Influence. Instead of weakening, they add tone to the Intestinal wall. And they work so easily and gently, they are of course preferred on this account to the violently acting purgatives. Their lnex penslveness Is another reason for the popularity of sentanel tablets. One need ! procure only a dime's worth, and take one tablet upon retiring, to be convinced that the Ideal remedy for constipation, torpid liver, and their many evil conse quences, has finally. been found.—Drug gists Review. NUXATED IRON Increases strength! h °' delicate, nervous, fij^T IyBTITI] rundown people 20n M 111 l P er cent. In ten days ■ 111 ■PVI in many Instances. SIOO forfeit it mAMVi article soon to ap- j Ask your doctor or I druggist about It. Croll Keller. F. .1. 1 Althouse, J. N. Clark, and all leading i druggists always carry It In stock. | ' RUDOLPH K. SPICER FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBAI/MER 313 Walnut St. HARRISUURG, PA. «■ —— * Try. Telegraph Want Ads fa ■ ■ 1 - ■ OCTOBKR 7, 1915. Peaches and Cream! Doesn't the thought of them make your mouth water? Why not get strength as well as palate-pleasure by eating them with . f SHREDDED WHEAT The filmy, porous shreds of baked whole wheat give pal ate-joy as well as stomach satisfaction. In Shredded Wheat Biscuit you get the strength-giving, body-build* ing elements of the whole wheat grain in a digestible form. A perfect meal without kitchen worry or work. Heat one or more biscuits in the oven to restore crisp ness; cover with sliced peaches and serve with milk or cream. Delicious Wholesome Satisfying Prepare For Coal Trouble by putting into your cellar as much high grade Sua- Glo Coal as you can conveniently store. Serious trouble is expected in the coal regions owing to the scarcity of experienced miners "Poorly prepared" coal will be put upon the market in an effort to fill all orders as fast as they are received. Men are scarce and cars are scarce. This will re sult in coal being scarce. We have just received a letter from a large coal shipper which reads: "It would not surprise us in the least to see prices advance $2.00 to $3.00 per ton before the end of the year." We are advising all our customers to put in as much of our SUN-GLO COAL as they can find room for. United Ice & Coal Co. Forster & Cowden Third & Boas Hummel & Mulberry 15th & Chestnut Also Steelton, Pa. \ , t jrv, YOU CAN'T DO BUSINESS '/nm l I I ik w ' t ' lout a checking account in a good |. (/Hl] \ | AfWfm commercial bank. Every business \ i. " jgU JL J man and men of salary have an ac ! V ■ f v«/' yg") count wherewith to facilitate paying i kills ant * ins « rin S safety in # their I I transm ittance. Have you one? If |~*| not °^ en an account r '^ t awa y * n FIRST NATIONAL BANK 224 MARKET ST. . / BB— ——— » - aa— ammssmewm aaanBgaBMWBWWWBM K«»uponM J WORLD FAMOUS EMBRQID- To Indicate you are a regular reader you must present ONE Coupon like thk one* with 68 cents. THE WORLD FAMOUS EMBROIDERY OUTFIT \» P» anteed to be the beM collection and biggest bargain in piw. w m offered. It consuls of mote than 450 of the very latest b any one of which you wonld gladly pay 10 cents, best hardwood em. bodkin, highly polished bone stiletto and fascinating boolrfefofhstruc^ lion* giving all die fancy stitches so dearly illustrated and that any school girl can readily become expert. SEVERAL TRANSFERS FROM EACH DESIGN ONLY SAFE METHOD All old-fashioned methods using water, benzine or injurious fliAfo are crude and out-of-date. This is the ooly safe method Others often' injure expensive materials. N. B. Out of Town Readers will add 7 extra for * postage and expense of «Mffi«*g 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers