10 A Hint to Mothers of Growing Children A Mild Laxative at Regular! A vital point upon which all schools of medicine seem to agree is that nor- Br mat regularity of the bowels is an essential to good health. The im- r _ portance of this is impressed partlcu- \ -Jjtt larly mother* children. A very valuable remedy that should be kept in every home for use as occa- V sion arises is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pep- |pF - «' sin. a compound of simple laxative herbs that lias been prescribed by Dr. w W. H. Caldwell. of Monti.cllo, 111., for | 0^ more than twenty-five years, and Jr j : i' : - which can now be obtained In any ■ well stocked drug store for fifty cents a bottle. . • - a; : j In a recent letter to Tlr. Caldwell, • Mrs. H. C. Turner, 844 Main St.. Buf- _s. ..£%■*. .... iJ 1 5 l rw 1 r'«Mwfn? ri "'c 1 bo T l , lght . a bottle ROLAND LEE TURNER oI Dr. Caldwell s Syrup Pepsin for my l>aby, Roland Lee Turner, and ftnd it s j n should be in every home. A trial works just like you said It would. It bottle free of charge, can be obtained is line .or the stomach and bowels. by writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 454 A bottle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pep- Washington St., Monticello, 111. WOMEN'S INTERESTS WHAT HAPPENED TO JANE By Virginia Terhune Van de Water CHAPTER XXXV. (Copyright, 1915, by Star Company) In the silence following' upon Au gustus Reeves' summons to his house keeper, Jane fancied she could hear the beating of her own heart. She felt as if something momentous were about to happen. Alary came sullenly, but as she saw the open chest by which her employer and his wife stood, the color receded from her face and lips. "Did you want me?" she mur mured. "Yes!" Reeves said harshly. "Where are those two best dresses?" "What two best dresses?" she evaded. "The black silk and the velvet dress. The two handsomest ones In the whole lot." "I don't know where they are." she said quickly. "How should T know?" "None of your impudence!" the man threatened. "How should you know, eh? Who else should know? Haven't you put away these clothes every Spring for the last ten years? AVho else has the handling of the keys but you?" "You have!" She looked at him de fiantly, her eyes flashing. Evidently her Indian temper had .risen to strengthen her courage. "Is that all you want to know?" "Yes, but I want to know that!" he exclaimed. "Where are those things?" "I told you I don't know," she re peated, "and I don't." He stepped towards her, his chin thrust forward and his brows drawn down in the manner with which she was already familiar, but which Jane hail hover seen until now. The ex pression of his face struck the wife like R blow. It transformed the com monplace farmer into a brute. \ "Oh!" she ejaculated, her voice fraught with horror. The sound recalled the man to his senses and to some regard for appear ances. He swallowed hard and tried to speak naturally. "You can BO back to the kitchen," he said to Mary. "I'll see you later about this. Here, Jane, help me put these things away. Leave out that red ."ilk. I want you to make it over for yourself." The wife said nothing until -;he and her husband were in the big bedroom sh • was learning to hate. Hero lie tinfcsti-ned the wrappings from about tho gown he had brought down and shook it out for her Inspection. "How's that?" he asked, looking at li?r OOOC-OOCKHXH?r>aOOOoaOQOOOCK>Q.>u ■ This Establishment Has Enjoyed a Reputation For Good Printing for almost a century. While the volume of business has been steadily increasing the quality of work is far above the average. Who does your printing ? The Telegraph Printing Co. Printing—Binding—Designing—Photo Engraving HARRISBURG, PA. TUESDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JANUARY 18, 1916. "Augustus," the wife said timidly, "really I don t think you should blame Mary for the disappearance of those dresses. She has always been perfectly honest, hasn't she?" Ilis face darkened. "Yes—she's been honest. But she's responsible for what's in that trunk." "But," the wife ventured, "you've had a woman here occasionally to clean. Couldn't she have taken those things—if you are really sure they are gone? What could Mary do with them, anyway? She could never wear them without you seeing them. I don't believe she knows anything about them." "And I am sure she does," he growled angrily. "You don't know a thing about it. I do." "But you've always trusted Mary. "Vou told me long ago that she was careful about all your belongings. Your house shows that. You would not doubt her now—just because" "You don't know what you're talk ins about!" he interrupted her. "And I don't want you to speak of it again —hear? I'll settle this matter with Mary myself. You keep out of it." She dared say no more. She lis tened with a sinking heart as he walked heavily downstairs and through the lower hall in the direc tion of the kitchen. He had closed the bedroom door behind him. All her life Jane had believed that she scorned eavesdrop pers. Yet something which she could not explain nor resist made her creep down the stairs at the end of Ave min utes of almost intolerable suspense. And all the time there was a fear of something too intangible to grapple haunting her. She was afraid even here in the broad light of day. She must know what was happening down stairs. She must know. She paused abruptly in the lower hall as the sound of weeping in the kitchen was borne to her ears. It was on this very spot that she had listened to the altercation between her husband and his housekeeper on her first evening in this house. Now .she could catch some of the words, punctuated by sobs. "You promised that some day I could have them all—said that when the time came they would all be for me if" The rest of the sentence was In audible, so bitterly was the speaker crying. Jane turned to go upstairs again, her sense of honor coming suddenly to the front to shame her eavesdrop ping—when another sentence arrested her. "I sold them, while you were In New York with her—that's what. I took them into the city one day and got money for them. 1 had to have it. He was sick—there were doctors to be. paid—and you'd said you wouldn't give me the money—no. not though I'd as bad as sold soul and body"— But Jane heard no more. Seized by a sudden panic, she put her hands over her ears and rushed noiselessly upstairs. Nor did she stop until she was again in her room, with the door tightly shut. (To Be Continued) Bringing Lip Father : By McManus ' " HERE comes the I COUNT DEL CHANGE - L HFS A PES,T- HE NEVER OTb THROUGH L/" QUEST'ON S MR I I'VE FOKCOTTEN- Y/A'b >T <4fOß \ HE.LPEO WASHINGTON CROSSED KOV HIM ~ OELnWARE XJ L OVER - IT[j P'^ "t" '' strange- I I THOUGHT S -V I oortr voo fTr i\ A ■ J VTAST THINK y ,HCi - YOU'LL | >roU ** YOUKNOW AtiOOT I TO" HACKING 5 DROVE THF _— 4 ' " i ——-~ o *•' ' \ [ HA! HA! -I [ j THINK TOO S PIANO TRANSPORTED UP MOUNTAIN BY BURROS Not long ago the proprietor of a mountain resort in southern Califor nia decided to purchase a piano for the entertainment of his guests, says the November Popular Mechanics Mag azine in an illustrated article. Access to his alpine place i§ gained only by following a long and exceedingly nar row trail which hugs the sides of the mountains and occasionally overlooks an uninviting precipice. Freight is al ways carried up the trail on the backs of pack animals, and these, most often, are sure-footed burros. It devolved upon two of these little beasts to trans port the piano up the mountain, which THIS SUIT SHOWS NEWEST FEATURES Beautiful and Smart Street Costume of Fawn Cloth With Fur Trimmings By MAY MANTON 8871 (With Basting Line. and Added Seam Allowance) Bloused Coat, 34 to 42 bust. 8851 (With Bastuig Line and Added Seam Allowance) Two-Piece Skirt, 24 to 34 waist. This is a suit that shows the very newest and most interesting features of the sea son. In the picture, it is made of fawr colored broadcloth with trimming o: blue fox fur. It is a very beautiful cos tume and a very smart one, and it alsc may be added that it is a very simple on< and easy to make, for the coat consist! of only a blouse to which the circulai peplum is attached. The skirt is mad« in two pieces and is semi-circular ir shaping. No garments could be easiei to handle and it would be impossible tc find anything smarter or handsomer ir effect. As a matter of course, the costume could be copied in a great many different materials, in velvet or in velveteen, in sill and in satin and in the satin-cloth as wel as in plain broadcloth and also in th< rough-finished suiting materials that art such favorites with the younger con tingent. For the medium size will be needed foi the coat, 4 yds. of material 36 in. wide yds. 44, 3 yds. 54, with yds. o: fur banding. It can be buttoned Uf closely as it is here or rolled open to forn deep revers. For the skirt will be needed 3*4 yds. of material 36 in. wide, yds either 44 or 54 in. wide. The coat pattern No. 8871 is cut ir sizes from 34 to 42 in. bust measure the skirt pattern No. 8851 is cut in size; from 24 to 34 in. waist measure They will be mailed to any address b\ the Fashion Department of this paper cm receij* of ten cents for each. OLD WIVES FOR NEW By Dorothy Dlx Is a woman of flfty-flve too old to interest her fift.y-flve-year-old husband.' A dentist of New York City says that she is. He has forsaken his wife for a little peaches-and-cream girl, and he excuses himself by asserting that his wife is too old for him, yet they are both the same age. Of course in cases of errant fancy one excuse is about as good as another, and any old reason goes for a man wandering from his own fire-side, but, in reality, the question of whether a middle-aged woman is older than a middle-aged man is one purely of tem perament. The record in the family Bible has nothing to do with the case, for there are both men and women who are senile in the cradle, and children at seventy. It cannot be denied that the general impression prevails that a woman is older and less attractive at a given age than a man is. Perhaps this was true in the past, when women bore many children, had few domestic conven iences, worked like galley slaves in their homes, and when they had little education and no outside Interest to keep their minds stimulated. Under such conditions women faded early and became atrophied both in soul and body. But such is not the case in these days, when life has been made soft and easy for most women, when the care of their persons has become a re ligion with them, and when the aver age woman reads more, travels more and studies more than her husband does because she has more time and opportunity. As men get along toward middle life they are apt to slump. They grow careless about their personal appear ance. They hate to dress up. They narrow down to a few interests anil have little concern about any subjects other than their business, the stock market and politics. Worse still, in only too many cases, they become ego tists who will talk of nothing but them selves. As a woman approaches middle life she is in such deadly fear of being shelved that she puts forth every effort to make herself agreeable and attrac tive. She dresses as well as she pos sibly can, she joins study clubs, she keeps up with every movement and can talk on any subject. More than that, she cultivates tact aud adapta bility. and studiously seeks to make herself agreeable, for well she knows that the feminine Tommie Tucker must sing for her supper. The truth is age has gone out of fashion with women. Nobody knows how old Ann is, but the one certain thing is that she is as young as her husband. they did with the assistance of several mountaineers. The heavy instrument was securely strapped to a pair of long timbers, the burros were placed at either end, and the planks lashed to the packsaddles. The men guided the animals and steadied the load. The burros negotiated the mountain safely aud delivered the piano uninjured. SnSensTomn For Infants and Children. K Mothers Know That H lifii Ge ™i»« tot™ ||=|l Always / ( wg (JicStomadisandUowdsof -p. . / A/ f\P Bears the XJOI fs v PromotesDigcsttonJCtecifiJ- SiffHBLtUTO f jf - |r^ HQ i: nessandßest.Contalnsneither /(\IT So J Opium .Morphine norMiumL I nt /V\. LT Not Narcotic. CLM Ifi RKIJX o/OldDrXiML'njJWm 1 AJL/ H p js&j?' \ iif i Hi SIJVMc I I/I . ■; s£&*. > ft .Jfv n HI :: MmJM- | II 1 11 * " Ml ggk.. i )1 r» II alii l: Aperfeet Remedy for Consltyfr ; f\ T Ml* l| S R HI tlon,SourStomach.Dlarrhoca I V |V www i~Q!i | Worms,Convalsions-feverish I lif 'Sal ness and Loss OF Sleep. I JU Law ||t/n|f ■ facsimile Signature of V/ ■U I UV UI W | • || Thirty Ycsrs ISBCJSTOBU Exact Copy of Wrapper. TM , otNTAUn COMMNr . Ncw tc „ eiTv . BREAKS A COLD IN A FEW HOURS "Pape's Cold Compound" is the Surest, Quickest Relief Known—lt's Fine! Relief conies instantly. A dose taken every two hours until three doses are taken will end grippe misery and break up a severe cold, either in the head, chest, body or limbs. It promptly opens clogged-up nos trils and air passages in the head. COMMONWEAL HAS WORKING MEETING Hears Lecture on "The Philip pines" and Begins Regular Class Work Those members or the Commonweal Club of the V. W. C, A. tvno could not be present a) last evening's regu lar meeting, missed a real treat. Owing to illness the talk by Dr. Ruth Deeter on "Social Hygiene" was un avoidably postponed and the Rev. William B. Cooke kindly consented to address the club on "The Philippines." The Rev. Mr. Cooke made his home in that part of the country for many years and is able to give personal ex periences in a most interesting way. He told in brief the geography, his tory and characteristics of this land and people and what the American invasion meant to them. He stated emphatically that he thinks they are still unable to govern themselves and expressed the hope that Uncle Sam will continue his hold on these Islands until something better can be done. Mr. Cooke answered many questions at the close of his talk and the time was all too short for the interest aroused. At 8 o'clock the members separated and went into the class preferred. Both the current events led by Mrs. Guiles Flowers and the "Bible In Modern Thought" led by the Rev. Henry W. A. Hanson were well at tended and most, helpful. The next meeting of the Common weal Club will be held January 31 when the subject, for discussion will be "Women's Compensation." DUTIES OP WOMANHOOD TAUGHT IX HIGH SCHOOL About ten years ago, when a high school for girls was opened in a rarn- I shackle building located on the border lof the East Side, in New York City, the first step was taken in the develop- I nient of educational Ideals and methods which at that time were nothing less l than revolutionary. In the meantime I this institution, because it meets a real I educational need, hat grown wonder -1 fully. It is now known as the Wash ington Irving High School. It is , housed in Its own school building, I which is one of the largest and best equipped in the world. It is a true jhigh school, with the usual curricula, I but it has one feature that distin i guislies it from most institutions of its kind. Its special work is that of I training girls to take their proper place I in life as women, and all other fea ! tures, academic and otherwise, are sub ordinated to this. Several interesting I views illustrating the work of this j school appear in the November Popu lar Mechanics Magazine. TO ILLUSTRATE LECTURES In illustrating a lecture in which ar |mor plate and armor-piercing projec tiles were discussed not long ago at the British Institution of Mechanical Engineers, an interesting employment was made of motion pictures. A num ber of drawings in which a shell was shown leaving a gun. hitting a plate of armor, the cap then breaking into pieces, the projectile passing through the metal protection and subsequently i detonating, were filmed. The pictures , when projected on a screen showed I graphically what original photographs i could not have portrayed. The draw lings had been carefully executed and the resulting effect was good.—From [the Port LAB MECHANICS MAGAZINE. stops nasty discharge or nose run ning, relieves sick headache, dullness, l'everishness, sore throat, sneezing, soreness and stiffness. Don't stay stuffed up! Quit blowing and snufling! Ease your throbbing head! Nothing else in the werld gives such prompt relief as "Pape's Cold compound" which costs only 25 cents at any drug store. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, causes no in convenience. Be sure you get the genuine. Don't accept something else "just as good." Insist on getting "Pape's Cold Compound," if you want to stop your cold quickly.—Advertise ment. - . MS LE.HOYNE PROPERTY VALUATION Special to the Telegraph Lemoyne, Pa., Jan. 18. J. O. Erb assessor of Demoyne, gives the valuation of property or the borough as $450,960, for 1916, an increase of $01,965 over last year. BLACKHEADS UNO PIMPLES! FACE large, Hard and Red. In Blotches. Caused Itching and Burning, Lost Rest at Night. HEALED BYCUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT "My trouble, ■which was blackheads and pimples, was severest la the face. The pimples were large, hard and red and were §in blotches and caused much disfigurement. They also caused much itching anil burning and my face became irritated by scratching and I lost my rest at night on account of the trouble. "At last I got Cutieura Soap and Ointment. I. used the Cutieura Soap and Oint ment both morning and evening, applying the Ointment first, then In about five min utes I washed my face with Cutieura Soap ' and in three weeks I was healed." (Signed) B. J. Strickler, 670 Princess St., York, Pa.. Aug. 12, IS i 5. Sample Each Free by Mail With 32-p. Skin Book on request. Ad dress post-card "Cutlrar*, Dept. T, B«*- ton." Sold throughout the world. HOW TO REDUCE YOUR WEIGHT A SIMPLE. SAFE AND RELIABLE WAV People who are over-burdened with superfluous fat. know only too well the discomfort and ridicule that over-stout people have to bear. If you are carrying around five or ten pounds of unhealthy fat you are unnecessarily weakening your vital or gans and are carrying a burden whicM destroys the beauty of your figure. There Is no need of anyone suffering from superfluous fat. If you want to reduce your weight in a simple, safo and reliable way. without starvation diet or tiresome exercise, spend as much time as you can In the open air, breathe deeply and get from any sr-od drusrclNt a box of oil of korein .-apsuies; take one after each meal and one before retiring at night. * Weigh yourself once a week so as to know just how fast you are losinir weight and don't leave off the treat ment or even skip a single dose until you are down to normal. Oil of korein Is absolutely harmless is pleasant to take, helps digestion ami is designed to consume the excessive fatty tissue l>y Inerenslng the oxygen rarrytng power of the blood. Even a few days' treatment should Khow a no ticeable reduction In weight, footsteps become lighter, your work seem easlot and a lighter and more buoyant feelinir take possession of your whole being. Every person who suffers from super fluous fat should give this treatment a trial there is nothing better.—Adver tisement. Try Telegraph Want Ads