16 3&2o(V)en Beauty and the Beast By DOHOTHV DIX see," said the Stenographer, "that the artistic sense of my sex has at last asserted Itself. Heretofore men have been the real Beauty E»v- Brs, and have refused to pay any at tention to a girl unless she was long on pulchritude, whereas women were tickled to death to receive attentions from a man, no matter what sort of a looker he was. "And the loss of her complexion and figure has been held to he suffi cient to justify a man in side-stepping his wife, while a woman was ex pected to be faithful to her husband erven if he did get to he bald-headed and weigh a ton. But all that's go ing to be changed, for the artistic Bide of women natures has been cul tivated and they are going in for beauty, too. In proof whereof is the case reported from California by the newspapers, in which a girl broke off her engagement Ispcause her ■weetheart fattaned up." "With the matrimonial market in the depressed condition It is now, it's no time 10 look a gift fiance in the belt," replied the Bookkeeper, warn tngly; "a girl is lucky to get a hus band in these da?'s, no matter whether be is built on the Early Gothic or the bay-window style of architecture." "That's the way women used to look at the matter," agreed the Stenographer; "They've been more liberal about the living picture busi ness than men ,have. If a man was agreeable and intelligent, we haven't turned him down on his personal ap pearance. as men do a woman. "Just think. If a fat. puffy, red faced woman, with no eyebrows and b bald spot the size of a soup plate on top of her head should go to a ball. Bhe would paper the wall for a thou sand years before any man ever ask fcd her to dance, and if any hostess forced a gentleman to engage in a conversation with her. he would do It with the air of an Early Christian martyr. "But you can see women everv dav gurgling with delight over the "com panionship of such a looking man. The lack of hair doesn't bar a man from society, but the reputation of having a bald spot would be a bigger handicap for a woman than the worst asperations on her character. If a man has gray matter inside of his skull, what he has on the outside doesn'* count. But if a -woman lacks the looks, she might have all the vir tues of the beatitudes and no man would ever get near enough to her to find it out." "An ugly woman sure does make BANQUET OF MOTHERS' CLASS Special to The Telegraph Lemoyne, Pa., Oct. 15.—Last eve ring the annual banquet of the Moth ers' class of the United Evangelical Funda.v school was held in the church. More than 150 persons attended. The program included scvipture reading by Mrs. Jennie Crowl, president of the class; address, by the Rev. H. S. Har ris, of Harrisburg, fbrmer pastor of Jhe church: a short talk by Wilson Blothower, assistant teacher: vocal polo, Margarette Baker; recitation. Margaret Erb; address, the Rev. H. r. Searle, pastor of the church. SENIOR CLASS MEETS Special to The Telegraph Lemoyne, Pa., Oct. 15 Last night )he regular monthly meeting of the Benior class of High scholo was held tt the home of Walter S. Slothower, the president in Hummel avenue. I M FOUR OE SHOP AGENCY I temEroupoN^! WORLD FAMOUS EMBRCHD* |j To indicate you are a regular reader you must present ONE Coupon like this one, with 68 cents. > *T'HE WORLD FAMOUS EMBROIDERY OUTFIT b 1 anteed to be the bed collection and biggest bargain m pattern. ev« oflefed. It consist* of mow than 450 of tbe very Latest designs, fa any one of which you would gladly P«y 10 cents, best hardwood em. broidery hoops, set of highest grade needle, (assorted ores), gold-tipped bodkm. highly polished bone stiletto and fascinating booklet of instroc , firing all the fancy stitches ao dearly illustrated aad explained that any ichool gid can readily become expert. SEVERAL TRANSFERS FROM EACH DESIGN ONLY SAFE METHOD—— , Afl old-fashioned method, using wato, benzine or injurious fluids are aude and out-of-dste. This m 'he only ufa method. Otheis often injure expensive materials. N. B. Out of Town Readers -will add 7 cents extra far postage and expense of mailing, FRIDAY EVENING. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 15, 1915 ] me cross-eyed," said the Bookkeeper. "None of your dames with the fixed face for mine:" "You're in the chorus strong." re turned the Stenographer, 'and that's what makes being a woman the hard est job that any human being ever tackled. No matter what a woman does she's got to add the beauty frill to it. If a man wants to hire a male | | clerk or stenographer or bookkeeper all he asks is that he knows how to !do the work. He may be ugly enough to stop the clock and it doesn't cut ' any ice with his Job, but a woman i has got to be a good-looker as well I as a good worker. "And that isn't all. Even the wo | men who do the big things have to i carry a side line of beauty. When a J woman writes a big book or makes a : big scientific discovery the newspaper • accounts always say that she's very I handsome and an elegant dresser. "Isn't that enough to jar you? i What difference does her looks make? I Who cares whether Edison looks like | | a matinee hero or a farmer, or wheth ! er Mr. Taft has got a straight-front I figure or not? But if they were wo-1 | men we would expect them to have peachy complexions and peraxlded locks in addition to making Inventions | and being ex-Presidents." "Men don't have to do the living picture act," asserted the Bookkeep : er comfortably. "And that's where they're in luck," replied the Stenographer. "Talk about getting the right to vote, the great est right that women could get would be the right to look as ugly as God made them." "If women take to passing up good chances of marriage because the man Isn't a parlor ornament, they are going to lose out," said the Book keeper. "Right-fl." explained the Stenog rapher. "The supply of hen's teeth and beautiful men is about on a par. Furthermore, a husband who is a star performer in the good looks class is about the worst hoodoo that any woman can acquire. He's in for | a lifetime of hearing people wonder why such a handsome man ever hap pened to tie up with such a homely woman. More, she can never let up on handing him hot air, for the min ute she quits fanning him with flat tery, some other woman will begin." "When you marry"—began the Bookkeeper. "When I marry," interrupted the Stenographer, 'mv husband will be the prize winner in an Ugly Man's Club. Then I won't have to stand for any wividious Comparisons." ORATORICAL CONTEST Special to The Telegraph Lemoyne, Pa., Oct. 15.—Plans for the annual Silver Medal Oratorical contest to be held in the United Evan gelical church next Friday evening have been completed by the Young People's Missionary Society of the church. Those entering the contest to ' date are: Walter Slothower, the Misses Iva McLane, Margaret Erb, Stella Bent* and Ralph Crowl. FIRE DRILL RECORD Special to The Telegraph Lemoyne. Pa., Oct. 15.—A new fire drill record was established by the Lemoyne school pupils in the fire drill yesterday. Three hundred and thirty ! pupils cleared the building in slightly more than a minute. This passes last year's record. ONE OF THE NEWJjORED SKIRTS A Smart Model with a Box-Plait it Every Gere. By MAY MANTON 8755 Six Gored Skirt. 24 to 36 waist. Here is a n<*v six gored skirt. It !• perfectly smooth over the hips and flares with abundance and grace about the ankles. It is an excellent model for large figures as well as for slight ones. It is good for the street and also for the house and it can be utilized for wool suitings and for silk fabrics, and, it shows, in fact a thoroughly useful and satis factory design. It is so simple that it can be made without the least little bit of difficulty too and the lower edge can be underfaced, as it is here, or banded or finished in any way that may please the individual. There are six ?;ores and each gore is arranged to orm a box-plait. The closing may be made at the left of the front «r at the left of the back: the finish, either at the raised or at the natural waist line. For the medium size will be needed 7r£ yds. of material 27 in. wide, 6*4 yds. 36, 4 yds. 44, yds. 54 if material has figure or nap; for plain material without up and down will be needed SJ-4 yds. 36 in. wide. The skirt is 3 yds. and 16 in. wide at the lower edge. The pattern No. 8755 is cut in size# from_ 24 to 36 inches waist measure. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper, oa receipt of tea cent*. Bowman's sell May Manton Patterns. THE PANAMA CANAL AT WORK By Frederic J. Haskin rContinued from Editorial Page.] canal, by which the water is raised and lowered in each stase, are repre sented upon the control board by little steel boxes eight or ten feet high, set with panes of glass. There Is a light back of these miniature windows and a curtain that moves up and down as the culvert opens and shuts. This cur tain is actuated by an electric current generated by the culvert valves in the same way as the miniature gates. Thus the width of lighted glass shown by each of these culvert gates indicates exactly how wide open the culvert valve is and how much water is going through. An upright gauge with a moving needle always shows the exact depth of the water in each lock. There is also an indicator designed to show the position of the forcing miter, which is intended to lock the great gates when closed. It has never been found necessary to use this, however, as the pressure of water, forcing the flat surfaces of the gates together, prevents the escape of a single drop. Anyone who has watched the lock gates at work must be fully convinced that they are capable of taking care of any emergency. In case, however, that they should fail, there is a great emer gency gate at each end which may be operated from the control board just as the others are. This emergency gate consists in a system of steel leaves hung in a frame, which may be quickly swung across the mouth of the lock and dropped into position. At Gatun locks, recently, these emergency gates were swung into position and allowed to hold the head of water, while the regular gates were being cleaned and repainted. But there has never been any opportunity to use them in the prevention of an accident. The greatest apparent danger in the operation of the canal is that the gates might be opened in the wrong se quence and a rush of water started which might damage both the locks and ships passing through. This is prevented by an elaborate system of Interlocking bars which makes it im possible to work the gates and culverts except in a predetermined sequence. There ate about two and a fourth Miles of these interlocking bars. After listening to a description of the com plicated way in which they operate the layman Is entirely willing to trust without understanding them. The most impressive ihing about passing through the ioeks is the ease with which the thing is accomplished. There is no fuss nor excitement. Very gently the ocean steamer slides behind FRAIL, SICKLY CHILD Father Tells How Boy Was Re stored to Health and Strength. We have alwavs told the people of llarrisburg that Vinol is a wonderful body builder for ailing children. Here is more proof of the fact: .1. L. Albury of Miami, Flo., says: —"Our little boy was puny and cross from the time he was born, and we hardly knew how to handle him. When he was three years old he was weak and so cross we could hardly live with him, and we could not get him to cat anything. A friend asked us to try Vinol. We did so and you should see the change It has made in him. He Is now a good-natured, healthy young ster, ready to eat at any time, and we cannot praise Vinol enough." Vinol is especially efficient in build in up puny, weak, ailing children, because of the real cod liver extrac tives, peptonate of iron and beef pep tone which It contains, and as it is without oil or grease children love to take it. Vinol is for sale in Harrlsburg by I Ceorge A. Gorgas, Druggist; Ken nedy's Medicine Store, 321 Market street: C. F. Kramer, Third and Broad •treets; KltzmllleiPharmacy,. 1323 iJtrry street, Harrisburg, Fa. —Adv. Get Your Fall SUIT I fNOW I v * f : Let Us Tog Out Your Whole Family | We Can Do it and SAVE You a Handsome Sum on Same j§| Our entire first floor of No. 29 is stocked with men s gar- || ments—entire second floor No. 29 ladies' section. Values [ft PLUS style without extravagance and you can have f| your hill charged if you wish at cash prices. To-morrow We Are Going to Specialize I On Men's Suits and Overcoats at 1 $lO, sls, S2O and $251 BOYS' SUITS and OVERCOATS J | At $1.98, $4, $4.50 and $6 j I Ladies* Special Suits at , CSET S 1 sls, $lB, S2O, $25 ana S3O j | Ladies' Coats, Special at 1 | $3.75 to $50.00 I S No publicity, embarrassment or any kind of red tape to our Credit System if you want to use it. 1 —• - I ii B 1 Home | Gately & Fitzgerald Supply Co. I Famil ? 1 | Furnishers 29-31-33 and 35 S. 2nd St. || Clothiers | The Different Kind Of A Credit Store. lliiiiiiiliii the concrete walls, set with giant lampposts. Lines are thrown out fore and aft, caught by gangs of blacks, and the connections with the electrical towing engines are made. Then, 1 islowly and majestically, the great iron 1 gates swing in behind the ship, there ( is a low rumble of rushing water which becomes louder as- the surface breaks into foam and bubbles. Almost im- l perceptibly, yet swiftly, the ship is , lifted. Then the gates before it swing open, the great chain drops and the 1 first step is accomplished. ' Tn addition to the operator in the control house and the blacks who manage the lines, only one other man : is necessary to the operation of the locks. He walks along beside the ship j with a detachable telephone, which he 1 occasionally connects at a lamppost, and communicates to the control house the exact position of the ship. This. ; of course, is shown by the control 1 board, too. and the check is merely a provision for safety. 1 The power which operates the locks, 1 lighfs the Canal Zone and does all of 11 its other electrical -work is generated J from the head of water formed by | Gatun dam, which holds the Chagres | < river in check and creates Gatun Lake, 1 the greatest artificial body of water i in the world. Gatun Dam Gatun dam is one of the greatest, ! and perhaps the least impressive, en- I gi'r.eering feats of the canal. In ap- j < rearance it is a low, semicircular hill, < covered with grass. No one would ] ever suspect tho mighty concrete, i structure that is sheathed in the j smooth, well-kept turf which covers il every inch of the dam, except, of!; course, the spillway. This great steel j waterfall is arranged in a number of I gates, and when all of them are open a splendid torrent of water, whipped j into pure foam, races through and i plunges into the bed of the Chagres | river. The mist from this artificial cataract flings a hundred feet into the I air and is visible for miles across the I lake. A few hundred feet below the spill way, at the foot, of 'he giant • dam, | stands Gatun power house. Here the I rushing torrent of the Chagres s'rlkes the turbines of the great generators through a penstock that is 5 feet 3 inches in diameter, developing 3,600 horsepower of electricity. Should these great generators, for any reason, quit working, the canal would not be out of commission for a moment. A steam generator plant is maintained at Miraflores for just this emergency. There will never be any lack of power on the Canal Zone. i GRAMMAR SCHOOL PROGRAM | Special to The Telegraph Lemoyne, Pa.. Oct. 15.—This after noon the first program of the season was presented by the Lemoyne "A" Grammar school Literary Society. DRAWN AS JTRORS Special to The Telegraph MarysvlUe, Pa., Oct. 15.—Milton O. Sheaffer was drawn as a traverse juror and Samuel S. Leiby, Jamxss Halabach, George R. Naylor and | Chester Fortenbaugli as grand jurors t for the next term of court. ' , WHEN YOU MOVE .Moving day has been, generally speaking, transferred from May 1 to October 1, and thousands of families the country over are now facing that ordeal. Moving is certainly a trial, but like many other trials it can be made to yield good fruits if approached in the right spirit. For one thing it gives one a chance to overhaul one's posses sions and get rid of useless things. Take the kitchen, for example. Look over the cooking utensils and see how many have been kept that have long outlived their usefulness, and are merely taking up room. Never move trash. If possihle take the occasion of moving to start with a consistent outfit. Say you decide on enameled ware, which is inexpensive but of almost unlimited usefulness. Get a set of saucepans, a couple of pitchers, a water pail, a small frying pan and all the etceteras you can af ford. In the same way do not move worn out or half worn-out carpets. Collect them together and send to one of the many places that make old carpets into new rugs. These wear very well. It lakes four yards of old carpet to make one yard of new rug. Don't move a lot of old magazines] on the theory that you will look them j over "some day." You never will, and j it is much better to send them to a hos.- uitai or to the Salvation Army at once. Have all bedding cleaned before mov- | ing. When lookinir it over remember j your neighbors and the cold weather ' that so soon will be upon us, and see j if it would not be better to hand on a j worn but still warm quilt, rather than ! pack it away in the new quarters as | it has been packed away in the old. | As to the inevitable accumulation of I undesirable bric-a-brac only one bit of' advice—harden your heart and don't j move it. POSLAM SOOTHES j AND HEALS MANY i SKIN TROUBLES I By all means try Poslam. If you need ! I any remedy to better your skin's con-, | dition. It merits use whenever the skin is | disordered, for its healing powers are | unusually efficacious. Relief is quick, i Itchiiig: is allayed. Inflamed skin is ' soothed. Improvement may be noted ! dally. Poslam for the treatment of i Eczema, Acne, Itch and stubborn skin affections, is a most helpful healing: I agent: reduces pimples, rashes, undue j redness, relieves tired, chafing feet. As to soaps for the skin—lf ordinary j kinds irritate, try Poslam Soap, medi- j cated with Poslam. 1 For samples, send 4c stamps to Emer. | Rency Laboratories. 32 West 25th St.. ew York City. Sold by all Druggists. ■ —Advertisement THI'S FAR AND XO FARTHER The oldest languages known at the present time are the Sumerian, Baby lonian (or Accadian) and the Egyp tian. The earliest known inscriptions belong to about the fifth millennium B. C., but it is reasonable to assume that these were antedated by many different languages which had a great antiquity. The script of the Sumerian. Babylonian (or Accadian) and Assy rian was the cuneiform. Chaldean, the language used generally as the diplo matic language aboutthe time of Bel shazzar, is what we now know as the Aramaic language. Archeology has thrown no light on the subject of the confusion of tongues. Abraham very probably spoke the Aramaic, the lan guage of Aram. In Canaan his de scendants apparently used the lan guage fatniliar to them, but archeol ogy has thrown no light upon the sub ject. Nothing has been discovered i which can be determined as antedilu \ian. Babylonian legends mention several cities as existing before the flood, and Arabic tradition says Haran was the first city that was rebuilt after the deluge, but archeology has offered no certain data as yet on the subject. —The Christian Herald. NEW Istr ipolis | | YORK Low Rate Excursion JSgfSee Broadway; Pennsyl- III) RJ vania Station; Central Park; V• V V jjC Riverside Drive; Grant's - ■ Tomb; Metropolitan Art Gal- ~ , K lery; Public Library; Brook- l; o . u m lyn Bridges, and the Big . * n P mm ™ Aquarium. Sunday, October 31 SPECIAL TRAIN LEAVES Harrisburg 6.45 A. M. Lancaster 6.43 A. M. St ev I ton 5.51 A, M. Christiana 7.12 A. M. Middletown 8.00 A. M. Parkesburg 7.20 A. M. Kliznbethtown .... 6.1S A. M. Coatesvllle 7.59 A. M. Florin 6.19 A. M. Downlngtown 7.38 A. M. Alt. Joy 6.23 A. M. Returning, leaves New York 6.50 P. M. See Flyers! Consult Ticket Agents PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD STEEIAVORKER INJURED Special to The T.clegrapli I Lewistown, Pa., Oct. IS. Frank Clemens, a young man of Yeagertown, suffered severe injury at the Standard Steel Works, when his left foot was badly crushed under the wheel of a truck loaded with a half ton of metal. HUNTERS AFTER TURKEYS Special to The Telegraph Lewistown, Pa., Oct. 15. Mifflin county woods are alive with turkey, hunters claim, every train bringing people from Harrisburg, Philadelphia and other points, to spend a day or more in the wooded districts. Turkeys are reported very plentiful. HO RUCK'S The Original MALTED MILK Unless you say "HORLIOK'S* you may got a Substitute,