8 WOMEN'S IN TERES TS WHAT HAPPENED TO JANE By Virginia Terhune Van de Water CHAPTER XXXVI. (Copyright, 1915, Star Company'* The question repeated Itself to Jane ; Reeves. Her husband had forbidden i lier speaking of the dresses. She j might have found it easy to obey him I had it not been for the broken sen- t tences she had overheard. Why had Maty needed money? [ Who was the person that was ill and i for whom she must have it ? Why i would not Augustus give it to her? | And had he really told Mary that i sometime she was to have the gowns ' which he now wanted his wife to j have? Jane had never tried to persuade I herself that she could love this man j who was her husband. She had hoped j that she would be able to tolerate j him. To this end, she had tried to ; think of his virtues, rather than of! his faults, since she had settled in his | home. If she did not do this she was con- i vinced she could not live under the I same roof with him. Two virtues she had believed he i possessed were honesty and a certain j kind of justice. She was sure that he h;id not kept back his employe's I wages or salary. And his sense of! justice' should prevent his accusing j the woman of that of which she was j not guilty. For Mary had not been guilty. That , was plain from the few words Jane \ had heard her utter. The woman had •. spoken defiantly, as if her employer I werje to blame for her not having j money with which to pay the phvst- ; •ian of some person in whom she was nterested. t'ould Reeves have prom-I sed to sive her his dead wife's clothes ' in lieu of money he owed her? But no, he would not do such a mean thing as that! Even Jane, with I no affection to make her charitable j in her judgment of him. was sure that j he would not do that. Perhaps Mary j had so much excited that she ] had said in self-defense what was not: true. Perhaps he had never even told j her she could have any of those; dresses. But Augustus had not denied her statement. Would he not have done so tempestuously if he could'.' Yet she had heard only a little of the conversation. Jane reflected. Therefore she should not judge. She i would not try to think of it. To make such a resolution was , easier than to carry it out. When an hour later. Reeves called from the j lower hall that it was almost dinner ' time, she started guiltily, appreciating j that she had been sitting brooding on j that which she had determined to j banish from her mind. She remem bered also that Reeves wished her to establish the habit of going into ! kitchen and diningroom a few minutes 1 before each meal "to see that every- i thing was ail right." That her doing this was the most j hollow- of shams both she and the 1 housekeeper knew. The housekeeperj never consulted the wife and the wife i never ventured a suggestion to her. j This noon Jane was conscious of more i trepidation than usual as she started , to go through the foolish form. Yet. i when she entered the kitchen and i glanced at the woman working there. I swift pity took the place of timidity. I For Mary Baird looked older than j she had looked two hours ago. Her face bore the marks of recent and vio- I lent weeping, and she had a hunted Learn the Truth Ajjjflfi About Yourself is To best treat a disease you jfc iw££££««. | should know its origin. TA } To obtain the very best results from treat- I j« i ! . ment of any of these diseases —Rheumatism, IWj I ~~j Catarrh, Malaria. Scrofula, Slczema, Poisoned Ejs ! »■«*«»«*■ ; Blood, chronic skin eruptions—you should ac frtre,Jl.ooftTß<*tte. i quaint yourself with their origin. This will j not only show you that they are typical blood j® »*.. «*Cr'fctite. ! diseases, but will warn you against loading Hp j j your system with harmful drugs that have a Eg ' TKSWrryCCinCQO 1 tendency to undermine the general health. Kg! j mJZZZZ. I want every one who has failed to find relief in other medicines to send the coupon M i | SOBH i 'oday and learn more about the disease they are afflicted with, and the remedy that will | j* """jj'iui'jp surely give desired results. This Coupon Puts You On The Road To Health For your benefit we have prepared a booklet cov- A ering the particular trouble you have, fully treating on the blood and its peculiarities. It will be of great | interest to you to learn the facts about blood dis i pases and the best methods of treating them. This same booklet acquaints you with the Standard Blood ; Remedy—S. S. S.. and gives you a glimpse of ils j history dating back over a period of fifty years of j successful existence. To further show you the mer | its of S. S. S. as the best blood remedy, we will ; send to each person mailing the attached coupon one of these booklets, and the artistic calendr r I mentioned in coupon below. Thousands owe their : good health today to the virtues of this medicine. I This offer will not appear again, and your health w I might not permit an indefinite delay, so fill out and send the coupon today. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. y Use this coupon today. { Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga. Gentlemen: I am anxious to learn more about (check the disea.se) I Rheumatism—Catarrh—Scrofula—Malaria—Blood Poison—Eczema— ] Skin Diseases, and will be interested in the booklet I have checked : above. Will also be glad to receive one of the 191S calendars con- || taining picture of an historical event. Name Ij Street I! City State |j % I — D. B . OT? eVerg- cfrop A Try Telegraph Want Ads Try Telegraph Want Ads \\ EDN ESDA V EVE XING, I expression in her eyes. An impulse I which she did not pause to analyze j moved Jane to speak in a tone that i was so gentle as to make the house i keeper start in surprise. "Mary." she said, "let me help you ! please! You're tired, 1 know. You i see," lowering her voice so that Au gustus should 'not hear it if he came i into the diningroom, "only a -woman I understands another woman." | She had not meant to say this, and i was startled at the change that swept | over the pale and haggard counten ! ance before her. The thin lips ! twitched, the black eyes filled with I tears. I "There isn't anything you can do." • Mary muttered, "but it's nice of you tto offer. I didn't think you would ; now." "You see you don't know me yet." I Jane told her with a smile. "I mean I what I say. Mary. If at any time I i can do anything for you. let me do it. i won't you ?" i There was silence while Mary bent ; over the loaf of bread she was cut i tine. When she replied she did not look up from her task. I "It's not likely I'll forget that," she I said with an effort. "But you wouldn't i be let to help me. though I guess you ! mean it." j Augustus' step was heard in the , diningroom and Mary hurried away | with the bread plate, leaving the | young wife more puzzled than ever. Added to her perplexity now was j the disagreeable consciousness that • she had seemed to sympathize or side with a servant against her hus band. If not, Mary would never have • dared tell her that she would not be I allowed to help her. Yet—this was an unhappy woman— and who should be good to her if j another woman should not ? So strong was the revulsion of sen j timent following upon this short con ! versation that Jane felt that any cer ; tainty was better than the present 1 mystery. She was afraid of her hus j band's displeasure, but she must ask him a single question—one which she hoped would set her mind and doubts at rest. It was when Mary was at her din ner in the kitchen, and Augustus and Jane were left alone, eating their des , sert, that the wife summoned courage | to speak of that which was tormenting 1 her. | "Augustus," she asked In a low I voice—"why did Mary take those i dresses?" He grew a shade paler, the wife thought. Vet this may have been only her imagination. "Who said she took them?" he demanded. "You told me you knew she did," 1 Jane reminded him. He made a sorry attempt to laugh. I "Well, to tell the truth," he stam | me red. "I told her once that she could | sell one or two old dresses that were 1 put away—just as a reward for her i faithfulness, you know—and she made j a blunder and took two I meant to i keep. Hut she's sorry and feels so ■ bad about it that I forgave Iter all j right." "And now." his face and voice liard i ening. "1 forbid you to talk of the j matter again. Understand? I told I you so beiure, hut remember that this j time I it. It's my affair, anil lit's none of your business!'' (To Be Continued) MAKES NICE SUIT FOR YOUNG BOYSj Loose and Easy in Fit and Not! at All Difficult For Mother to Make By MAY MAN TON M6o With Basting Line and A dded Seam Allowance) Boy's Blouse, ta to 16 years. 8351 Boy's Straight Trousers, 4 to 12 years. Seek Owner of Auto Found Humming on Road at Wilmington in this morning's mail Prothonotary Harry F. Holler got a postcard from A. K. Taylor. Wilmington, Del., to the effect that somewhere out along the road to Richardson park, a suburb of Wilmington, an empty touring car was stranded. The engine was hum ming merrily. Xo trace *>f the one time occupants was visible. All this was Saturday evening. January 15. At first Prothonotary Holler puzzled a lot as to why HE should get this tip from Mr. Taylor. Then he read the postscript. The license tag number of the deserted car was 82,393 and Taylor wanted to know the name ot tite owner. Figuring that the. inquir er evidently wanted information of the State Highway Department, De puty Prothonotary Erb called up there and learned that the name of the owner <>f tag No. 82.393 is J. Raymond Donohue. 4524 Spruce street. Phila delphia. Maryland "Dry Bill" Is Before Legislature Special to the Tele£raph Annapolis. Md.. Jan. 19. —State Sen ator Speicher. of Garrett, introduced the Anti-Saloon I.eague's State-wide prohibition bill yesterday. The meas ure immediately was referred to the temperance committee. It will be op !posed by a powerful lobby. The bill provides for a vote | throughout the State on the liquor traffic question. It is not offered as an amendment .to the Constitution, j however, but is a legislative measure with a referendum clause. Itl'BßlJn OX FORD ARK II | Pounds Seized by British From the Frederick VIII at Kirkwall Special to the Telegraph I.ondon. Jan. 19. —One hundred and twenty-five parcel post packages con taining sheet rubber, weighing an ! aggregate of 1,375 younds, consigned Ito Gothenburg, were taken from the I Danish liner Frederick VIII at Kirk j wall. The Frederick VIII sailed from New Yorfc December S. She was taken into Kirkwall December 17. and reached Copenhagen December 22. Fourteen belated members of the Ford peace party were on board here on this trip. The British authorities also seized rubber found on the Oscar 11, which carried the vanguard of the peace pil grims. CHARTER FOR BAKIXO CO. Harrisburg's new modern baking firm, the Standard Baking company, was chartered yesterday by the State with a capital of SIOO,OOO. The com pany will occ upy a modern building at Tenth and Market streets. Mrs. Alary 1.. Graupner, head of the Graupner ' Brewing company, is treasurer and i principal stockholder of the new cotn- I pany. Max and William R. Graupner jare the other Incorporators. MRS. BKXJ. RICKKRT BIRIK1) Special to the Telegraph Tower City, Pa., Jan. 19. —Mrs. Ben jamin Rickert, who for several years had made her home with her daugh ter, Mrs. Fred Hellinan, died at 10 o'clock on Saturday night. Tiiis after noon at 1 o'clock funeral services were held at the home of Mr. Hellinan and burial was made at Williamstown. Mrs. Rickert was 78 years old and is survived by two children. THE VALUE OF TRUTH Truthin businessis just as important as truth in every-day life; truth creates confidence, establishes good-will and builds a reliability that will not be wrecked by the storms of competition. Through three generations people have learned to place reliance on the advertised words of Scott's Emulsion, because they are untarnished, unex aggerated truisms about a household remedy of real and actual worth. The popularity of Scott's Emulsion is increasing as intelligence advances, because in these days of adulterations it continues to guarantee pure cod liver oil medicinally perfected with glycerine and hypophosphites to build strength, im prove the blood and strengthen the lungs. It is free from alcohol or opiates—a whole some food-tonic, truthfully advertised. Scott * Bownc. Bloom 6cU. N. Ji 15-20 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Goose Kept House in Old Fido's Kennel How she came to do such a funny thing and how v /fa'/ happy she made all the Barnyard residents is told to little boys and girls in the fourth great Punky Dunk book 1 ' Given Free With Sunday's M\ I PHILADELPHIA 4f| PUBLIC dttb LEDGER U I 11'w\ January 23d M ®i\ Thirty-two pages of text and beautiful illustration, in ty^xl/lffjl lltr readv-to-fold book form, tell this wonderful tale of the j' A/, jjjjj l! "Wise Mamma Goose." Like all Punky Dunk books, it is v^f 1 /!/ t a your children will treasure in the playroom. vI I Order the newsdealer to leave the / / / Public Ledger regularly so that your Jir 'fa II FOODS THEY BUILD OR DESTROY Amazing but Rarely Suspected Truths About the Things You Eat. (Copyright, 1916, by Alfred W. McCaun.) fe 4 CHAPTER 8 . The little girl who caught cold { easily was fed on a mixture of re- | fined "innocent" foods, the true na- j ture of which was not suspected by her doctor. I You have heard of the little girl I who caught cold easily and whose I mother lor that reason kept her home , from school on rainy days. She went. one day to a little party given at a neighbor's home. Spread before the! children was 8 great frosted cake with | lighted candles, ice cream bricks, red,! white, green and grown; candies of! seven different hues, and various j goodies that rivaled each other in a! riot of color to catch the attention of j greedy little eyes. The little merrymakers were trans- j ported with the rainbow sweets be fore them. Chatter and laughter and, song filled the entire afternoon. At . the end of the happy day the tired I little girl was tucked away in her warm little bed by a little mother who j was happy, too. That night the child fretted a bit | and talked in her sleep. The next | day she did not feel well and was not! permitted to go to school. Toward the evening a siight fever developed, which her mother called an "upset." The fever continued another day and! then the doctor was called. He felt her pulse, looked at her' tongue, and asked what she had been! eating. When told about the party he smiled and said: "She has prob-j ably been eating too much." He gave i her some medicine, and in .i few days i she was apparently well again. The doctor had not taken into con- j sidcration the fact that the milk of' which that icc cream had been made was raw milk. He did not know that a microscopical examination of it j would have revealed 90,000.000 or ganisms to the cubic centimeter,' which is much less than o teaspoon ful. He did not know that many of those ■ organisms were of a pathogenic or disease-producing type. He did not know that the ice cream ! was stiffened with • bodifler made of; commercial gelatine better and more; truthfully classified as carpenter's i glue, which the Bureau of Chemistry ! at Washington has shown to contain! as many as 6,000,000.000 brganisms j to the gram, of which there are twen- I ty-nlne in a single ounce. He did not know that among those ' organisms were many deadly forms of! bacterial life. He did not know that that glue j contained sulphites, copper, and; arsenic. He did not know that it was ori- j ginally intended as wall paper siz ing or for use in the paper box fac tory or the furniture shop, but that through the cupidity of the commer cial food manufacturer it had been appropriated for use in confectionery, ice cream and cake. He did not know that those col ored Candies were made chiefly of. glucose, sweetened with some 10 or 15 . per cent, of sugar, and a trace of! sacchari lie. He did not know the destructive action of glucose and refined sugars' when excessively consumed. He did not know that on such a; diet bees arid white mice are quickly killed, although it has been generally supposed that glucose and sugar in any quantity are good foods for the ichild. I He had read soric hing of the high caloric value of sugar and glucose, but liad not stopped to consider the fact that alcohol and gasoline are also of the high calorie type. He did not know that "high calorie" is a mean ingless, even if a scientific, phrase. He did not know that the flavors used in that ice cream and candy were derived from ethers and were purely artificial. He did not know that their colors were certified coal tar dyes originally intended for the ribbon factory, anil so lie charged Helen's illness to "over eating," but he did not place much importance upon the kind of food which -tie had overeaten. j But we are to discuss this thing sensibly, frankly, fully. We are to j learn why our little girl caught cold Iso easily; why it was difficult to cure (those colds and why she had periodi : cal "upsets." I Of what did her breakfast consist? 'There was, of course, the usual coffee and the usual rolls and toast, with one iof the many popular breakfast foods I served with milk produced by cows ! fed on brewer's grain, beet pulp, dis j tillery waste, cottonseed meal, and I gluten feed, a by-product of the glu j cose factory. Is this not the break | fast of millions, you ask? We shall ! answer that. Of what did the child's breakfast food consist? Breakfast foods made of wheat, corn, barley, r.nd rice must !"keep"; they must "iook nice." By i what process are these two require- I ments fulfilled? The facts that fol ilow will answer th<"-*> questions, and |if the answer cuts deep Into hearts jthat have b->en pierced already let the later wounds inspire atonement. We have gathered together for the sake !of the child. At noon, ns th" fa'b;. r did not come home for his lunch, the mother fried the potatoes left from the las', night's meal and added a bit of bologna or ' cheese. The bologna was made, of • raw "bull be-f" or raw "old cow" produced in an uninspected estab ' iishment, of whivh there are tliou !sands in the I'niied States. There arc ! more than 400 of I'ieri in the State :of N'ew Jersey atom . . The plain facts about these places j will be related in detail as we go ! along, but. now is the time to sc what i'she ate ft>r lunch. mi s wtm,i iminxt; iiomi; , Hallam, Pa.. Jan. 19.—William J. '.Miller, aged "8. died last night from ] heart failure while driving homo from a visit to his son. ile is survived by I two daughters and a number of grand ! children. He was a retired farmer and I gardennr. (ill'S SKKVIOK .MEDAI. One of thp 30,000 gold service med als for Spanish-American War duty which were awarded to former volun teers in the New York National Guard l'.us been presented U> Francis P. McOinnis, 1 n2l North ('am ron street. Adjutant General l.oui - W. Statexhury, I New Vork.su*!' th»; medal to .Mellimits. / OUi Ot THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT———*—% \LESTER PIANOS I G. DAY, 1319 Derry Streeet. Both JANUARY 19, 1916. ! VERBEKE RESIGNS 1 FROM JURY BOARD | Council Named Him to Suc- I coed Halberl as Assistant Fire Chief Blent of finance an l Dauphin County lire chief, was elect- II ed yesterday by Council to succeed Ed ward Halbert as Fire Chief Kindler's | assistant. Halbert resigned to-day, al ; though Verbeke's appointment was not 1 intended to become effective until Feb ruary 1. Verbeke's place as clerk lo the jury commissioners will be filled I to-morrow, according to President Ed i ward Dapp, as the new man must , I Serve at the drawing of the February ; | common pleas jury on Friday tnorn :; ing. President Dapp declined to dis- Icuss who Verbeke's possible successor might be. Among the candidates men- I tioned are A. S. Hamman, Royalton, a '•local newspaper man; Assistant City 'Clerk Ross R, Seaman and Harry : i Riley, a former clerk in the City High way Department. ■ i To-ila.v's Realty Transfers.—A. 11. Keider to Samuel S. Shank. London derry township. $450; Sarah E. Rohr- I i cr's trustee to Marj B. Early, Sus i; quehanna township, $1; Dauphin De , i posit Trust Company to F. B. Al , j dinger. 1 ♦>uo Market street, $1; Wil ,! liain 11. Fry to Edna R. Nye. 1000 Hemlock street, $2,050. , ! Caldwell Does First Escort Duty.— ! Sheriff W. W. Caldwell to-day escorted i nine prisoners to the Eastern Peniten ' I 1 ■. » ,i ♦ . .„i Dandruff causes .i feverish irritation ,I of the scalp, the hair roots shrink, ■ | loosen and then tho hair conies out ! fast. To stop falling hair at once and ! rid the scaUi of every particle of dan -1 druff, get a. 25-cent bottle of Danderine j at any dru, store, pour a little in your hand anil rub it into the scalp. After .! a few applications the hair stops com , i ing out and you can't find any dan | druff. —Adv. PARALYSIS^# DR. CHASE'S Special Blood and Nerve Tablets Write for Proof and Booklet i Dr. Ck*w.JM N. 10th SI. Philadelphia. ' nil _ 80-SAN-KO'B PILE REMEDY Gives instant rellat In ltchln*. ; ® Bleedincor Protruding Pile*. Mo ! The Dr. Boaanko Co. Philadelphia. Pa. tiary. It was the new sheriff's first two to three years; William Todd, three to five years; Hezekiah Warring eighteen months to three years; Pat*' rick J. Ferguson, two to four years; Jevett (lowland, ciehteen months ti» three years; Otis Young, fifteen months to three years; George Robinson, ono to two years; Seymour Reed, one to two years, and Hampton Washington, two to three years. 'Hodge Succeeds Speece. David Hodge, Twelfth ward, was appointed to-day to succeed llyde M. Speece us constable of the Twelfth ward. Speein resigned to accept a position as plain clothes man on the city police force. Probate Elizabeth Mcssner's \\ ill. • The will of Mrs. Elizabeth Messiur, Lykens, was probated to-day by Deputy Register C. W. liubeildall and letters on the estate were issued to Hiram Messner, the dead woman's son. official duty of this kind. The pris oners, all of whom were sentenced last week during January criminal court, included Charles Prensey, alias Craig, ■Li— ■ - ■ 1 New Home Treatment For Banishing Hairs (Beauty Topics) With the aid of a delatonc paste, it is an easy matter for any woman to I remove every trace of hair or flints from face, neck and arms. Knouuli of the powdered delatone and water is mixed into a thick paste and spread on the hairy surface for about 2 min utes, then rubbed off and the skin washed. This completely removes tho hair, but to avoid disappointment, get ithe delatone in an original package. - I Advertisement. NUXATED IRON I Increases strength W|T|T|l rundown people 2UU J I per cent, in ten daya i 3 jwj in many instances. 1 * Hfm S IOO forfeit if It ilnnra fails as per full ex- J-J L J planation In larga mil article soon to ap pear in this paper. I Ask your doctor or I druggist about It. Croll Keller, G. A. Gorgas always carry it In stock. Xi-rchnnlM and Miner* Trans. Co. FLORIDA TRIPS "BY SKA" BALTIMORE: TO One Way Itouml Trip S2O JACKSONVILLE S;ir> 1.500 MILKS—7-DAV TBI P. 915.00 SAVANNAH 826.20 Including meals and stateroom berth. Through tickets to all points. Fin® steamers. Best service. Staterooms <le luxe. Uaths. Wireless telegraph. Au tomobiles carried. Steamer Tuesday and Friday, 7 I'. M. Send for booklet. \V. 1». TI Mi \ Kit, (i. V. A., Ilal to.. Mil. Jf CHAS. 11. MAUK Wi THE UNDERTAKER Slilb anil Kclkrr Street* Largest establishment. Best facilities. Near to you as your phone. Will go anywhere at your rail. Motor service. No funeral too small. Norn- too expen sive. Chapels, rooms, vault, etc., used without charge.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers