OF INTEREST TO THE WOMEN WHAT HAPPENED TO JANE By Virginia Terhune Van de Water CHAPTER MI. (Copyright, 1916, Star Co.) "Mary won't get home till the half past ten train." Augustus Reeves re marked that night as he and his wife removed the supper dishes from the table. He had insisted upon helping her about her various household tasks —lndeed he had been more gentle and ingratiating than he had ever been since his marriage. And with each proffer of assistance or ex pression of concern for her com fort. the woman's distrust deepened. There must be some reason for this transformation. A man of his temperament and character would not change from a rough boor to a polite companion without some compelling motive. "Half past ten, you say?" she roused herself from her musings to repeat. "Yes, and I was just thinking there's no need for you to sit up for her, unless you want to. I'll stay up and let her in if you like. But you've been doing her work all day. and 1 guess you're tired, aren't you?" "A little," she acknowledged. "I think I will go to bed as soon as the dishes are washed. Jake's going for Mary, isn't he?" "Yes. But I don't like to go up and leave the back door unlocked, and I never have let any of the men have the key to the house, so I'll just wait down here till Mary comes." Jane spoke truly when she said she was tired. But it was not the housework that had wearied her for that had amounted to little. But she was worn out with the mental strain of the day. There had not been a moment since the scene of this morning during which she had not dwelt mentally on somo aspect of the mystery surrounding her. And the more she thought the more nervous did she become; and as her nervousness increased the more difficult it was to turn her thoughts from her haunting prob lem. It was a vicious circle that wore her out. At 9 o'clock she started to go upstairs, then paused in the door of the diningroom. A Suggestion to Reeve* "If you arc going to sit up and read until Mary comes," she sug gested to Augustus, "wouldn't you be more comfortable in the sitting room, where the light is better than it is in here?" "No." he said, flushing uneasily under her clear ga'/.e, "the sitting room sofa is not as comfortable as this one is, and I think I'll lie down and take a nap. You go on up to bed and to sleep. Mary will come in carefully, so as not to wake you. And I'll come up very quietly after I've locked up." The experience of the day had rendered Jane acutely sensitive to the very atmosphere about her. Her alert suspicions made her sure that Tier husband had some reason for wanting her to go to bed and to sleep some reason for preferring to wait In the diningroom rather than In the sittingroom. What was this reason? In an instant she had answered the question for herself. The sit CASCARETS" FOR COLDS; HEADACHES They Gently Clean the Liver and Bowels, and Stop Headache, Colds, Sour Stomach, Bad Breath. Enjoy Life! Take Cascarets and Wake Up Feeling Fit and Fine —Best Laxative for Men, Women, Children—Harmless—Never Gripe. Cascarets are a treat! They liven store and enjoy the nicest, gentlest your liver, clean your thirty feet of liver and bowel cleansing you ever ex bowels and sweeten your stomach. You perienced. Stop sick headaches, bilious eat one or two Cascarets like candy spells, indigestion, furred tongue, of before going to bed and in the morning fensive breath and constipation. Moth your head is clear, tongue Is clean, era should give cross, peevish, fever stomach sweet, breath right, cold gone ish, bilious children a whole Cascaret and you feel grand. , anytime. They are harmless and Get a 10 or 25-cent box at any drug never gripe or sicken. io CARETS WORK WHILE VOU SLEER r ~~ The New Labor Law The new Workmen's Compensation Act is now in ef fect. If you are an employer of labor you should be familiar with every phrase of this most important 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 quan tities. The Telegraph Printiag Co. PRINTING—BINDING—DESIGNING PHOTO-ENGRAVING HARRISBURG, PENNA. lUE.SDA* JiViiiNlNG, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 15, 1916. i tingroom was under the large chamber in Which she was going to bed. Any murmur of voices in there might be heard by her in her quiet room. Evidently Augustus wished to have a private conversation with I Mary upon her return a conversa tion he must have before he slept one which his wife must not sus pect. This idea occupied Janes per- , turbed mind as she undressed. | Even after she was in bed her senses were painfully keen, her understanding abnormally clear.' i But she forced her body to lie still as she made her plans. Mary would come in by the hack \ entrance, and go immediately into the diningroom. Augustus would meet her at the door to caution her ; to silence. Then, while his wife was : supposedly asleep, he would ques-. tion the woman about her journey. Jane must know about it, too. t But how? Why, it would be the easiest thing in the world! Over the din-1 ingroom was a large spare bed room. In it was a hot-air register connecting with the furnace pipe that supplied the diningroom with j lieat. In brushing and dusting this guest chamber. Jane had often j noticed that one could see through this register the morning sunlight ias it flooded the diningroom. But the register was always' ! closed, as the room was not needed nowadays. Well, then, Jane must go in there and open it. The weather had been so warm that the furnace | tire had been allowed to die out a ' fortnight ago. She lay still until she heard Au- i gustus go out to the barn to tell Jake that it was time he was starting for the train. He did not call the man for fear of waking his wife. she Hears Him Go And his wife, during the three minutes that he was out of the house ran swiftly into the spare bedroom, opened the register, and left the door slightly ajar. Then, as swiftly, she darted downstairs and ! opened the register in the dining room. She had seen her husband close this a week ago with the re mark that it would not be needed again this season. He had even moved the sidetable directly in i front of it. He would never think that anyone had disturbed it since then. She was back in bed before Au gustus returned from the barn. She heard Jake drive out of the yard, and, ten minutes later, she heard the incoming train whistle at the Milton station. She remembered how she had listened for the whistle of the down train on the morning of Ned Sanderson's departure last September. What an incongruous thought to have now! How different was this watching and listening to that! What would Ned think of her if he i know how deceitful she had be : come? She steeled herself against the shrinking from the task caused by this idea. She had been a good, trustful girl then. She was a iove : less wife now. That was the dif ; ferenee. Circumstances had done this. The fault was not hers. (To Bo Continued.) SAILOR DRESSES FOR YOUNG GIRLS Rich, Dark Shades of Cloth Will Develop This De sign Nicely By MAY~MANTON 8823 (With Basting Line and Added Stain Allowance) Girl's Sailor Dress, j 6 to u years. Girls always like a dress modelled after the sailor costume. This one is excep- i tionally pretty, taking very graceful and I becoming linrs and has a certain smart- ! ness of its own. Appropriately, it can be made from many different materials, but scrge and gabardine arc undoubted favorites, and here, dark blue is trimmed with ivory white. The combination is j always a pretty and becoming one, but ] of course it is possible to vary the design in many ways in spite of its simplicity. The sailor dress is by no means confined to the sailor colors and the dark or African browns and the rich greens are favorite colors of the season. The pat tern gives both the true basting line and seams, the frock is an easy one to cut out j and to make. For the I o year size will be needed, 4 yds. of material 27 in. wide, 3 yds. 36, jS-jyds. 44; with ? s yd. 27 in. wide for belt or trimming. The pattern No. SS23 is cut in size# Yom 6to 12 years. It will be mailed to <ny address by the Fashion Department if this paper, on receipt of ten cents. our dailyHreceipt (Irnnicc Mrringnrii Four navel oranges. One-half lemon. One-half cupful water. Two eupfuls sugar. Stale eakf. Two egg- whites. Two tablespoonfuls powdered sugar. , One tablespoonful compote juice. One-half <upful dried apriot or any ; canned fruit juice. Separate oranges into sections with out breaking the membranes. Make a syrup of the water, sugar, apricot and lemon Juice, boiling it for live minutes. Add the oranges, cover and cool. This Is orange ••ompote. Place orange sec tions on sliced stale cake, which should bp well moistened with compote juice. Make a meringue of the egg whites, I sugar and a. tablespoonful of the juice, j pile over the <'ake. brown slowly, al- j lowing ten minutes, and serve cold | with additional compote sauce. This compote may he used with boil- I ed rice, raspberry or lemon sherbet, or j as a cottage pudding sauce. It should : never bo served with cream or milk, j however, as the oranges and milk do not mix. Recent Deaths in Central Pennsylvania I'.li/.abetlitown. Mrs. Louis Leicht aged 29, died yesterday from periton itis. Her husband and two small children survive. Mt. I'nlon. John W. Black, one j of the best-known men of Hunting don county died at the home of his j daughter here of old age. He was | | growing weak for several months. Waynesboro.—Mrs. Katherine Vir ginia Bikle, widow of the late Major 'W. I. Bikle, died at the home of her j daughter, Mrs. Laura V. Shank, aged j 76 years. DIES IN* FRENCH HOSPITAL Special to the Telegraph Hagerstown, Md., Feb. 15. - Mrs.} Annie Hochery, of this city, wife of I Paul E. Rochery, a French reservist w-ho returned to France over a year J ago to re-enter the army, received j official confirmation of the death of 1 lier husband in a hospital at Epernay. j He was 03 years of age. A Fine Aid For Mother-to-be We are all greatly indebted to those who tell their experiences. And among P the many things which we read about and ■r «SM| are of Immediate Im- K f portance to the expec. tant mother. Is a splen did remedy orer the muscles deeply penetrating In ■r-V HjftrW Its influence. Motbci : I ™ 1 everywhere tell of its soothing effect, how it allays pains Incident to .. Stretching of cords, ligaments and mtucles. They tell of reatful comfort, of calm, peaceful nights, sn ab sence of those distresses pecnllar to the pe riod of expectancy, relief from morning Mcsness, no more of that apprehension with which so many young women's minds bo rome burdened. It Is a splendid help. Get a bottle of "Mother's Friend" from your nearest druggist. Ask your husband to get It for you. Then write to Bradfleld Reg ulator Co, 408 Lamar Bldg., Atlanta, Gs„ for a rery handsome and Instructive book. ■ It is filled with suggestive ideas of great help to sll women interested in the subject i of maternity. And best of all are some let- Write"tod moU ' erß * ca l lospuationj, MANAGING THE CITY | By Frederic J. Haskin [Continued from Editorial Page.] The city commission runs a nursery j ■ where young trees are raised, and j | every June the school children of j ! Heading go out in the hills and plant i j them. Thousands of trees are plant |cd every year, and by the tltne the j i school children of to-day are grand-j I fathers and grandmothers, the hills, j \ at the present rate, will again be beau- j tifully wooded. Heading was rich and easy picking for railroads and street railroads un- ; der the old form of government. The thirty-three city fathers used to give exclusive and perpetual franchises to those who could muster control, i throwing away forever the right to use streets and public spaces. Every i street car extension and every right j for track or siding granted by the I "•ommission is now limited to twenty-] | live years. Under the old system all city sup- ! : plies were bought by contracts made ' 'as a result of recommendations by committees of the council of thirty-two aldermen. The recommendation of the committee could be accepted, or i it could be rejected with a huge row in council, personal quarrels, vote swapping and petty politics as an i aftermath, with a good chance for no contract at all. Under the commis sion, all purchases for the city are ! made through a central purchasing office, for which one of the commis isioners is directly responsible to the ' whole commission and to the town, i The result is a better quality of sup- I plies at better prices, j A council of thirty-two members | was not the only cumbersome body | under the old form of government, j There was an Independent health I board, an independent park board and an independent water works com mission. These boards were usually composed of politicians selected as a j j reward for political service. When i i the clumsy council was not busy with internal quarrels it often spent its 1 time scrapping with the boards, till j the poor citizen was hopelessly be- : | wildered. j The commission government charter j [provides for a health otficer, a su-j | perintendent of parks and a superin- . tendent of water works. Each of these officers comes directly under one or j another of the commissioners, who is | held responsible by the voters for the work of his department. A compe j tent doctor with a competent assist- i ant is at the head of the health de- ! I partment and men specially qualified | have been chosen for the other posi | tions. The movie habit is just as strong in | Heading "as anywhere elsp and under, the commission every moving picture theater has been made a healthful I place for children. Markets and other establishments I that offer food for sale have been han dled like the theaters —inspected reg ularly and graded. Since the commission started op erations a new reservoir for the city water system has been put in. A new pipe line for augmenting the supply lias been laid and water rates have been reduced. Plans are being made I for a municipal slaughterhouse and a municipal hospital. A garbage in- j eineratlon plant, owned by the city but not used for several years by the old council, has been put to work, and rates for collection of garbage have thereby been reduced. The ! rates for public lighting have been ; cut 10 per cent. Muddy, unsanitary j alleys have been paved and hundreds of connections with sewers have been ; required. Viaducts across railroads ! tracks have been built and more than j ' TOO squares of asphalt, brick and ma- I ' cad am paving have been laid. | Such are the principal results of two years of commission government jin Heading. Reading Fair Co. Dates; Harry Orr Is President Special to the Telegraph Heading, Pa., Feb. 15.—At a meet ing of the directors of the Reading j Fair Company it was decided to hold 1 the next annual Berks county fair on Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday and Friday, \September 12, 13, H and 15. I The directoi's decided to allow horse men to have the free use of the track 1 and stables during the summer for j training purposes. The following officers were chosen: | ! President. W. Harry Orr; vice-presi- i 1 dent*. William M. Oroll, William A. j Sharp and Jonathan Mould; secretary, Jacob H. Heleherl: assistant secretary, David S. Brumbach. and treasurer, \ I Abner S. Deysher. Public Meeting at Penbrook in Protest of Water Rates Special to the Telegraph Penbrook, Po., Feb. 15. About i ! 75 taxpayers attended a public meet- I ing at the firehouse here in an effort to prevent the water company from' permanently fixing its increased rates ! to patrons. Harrison Clay, president ! of borough council, was elected chair- j man, and J. A. Miller secretary. I. B. Swartz, borough attorney, | gave the details of the situation. A j ' committee of three councilmen and 1 j two residents of the borough was ap j pointed to meet George W. Heisey, ! counsel for the committee. The com- I mlttee consists of M. J. Sehaeffer, O. M. Neurayer, W. H. Wolf, Edward ! Crumm and Borough Attorney Swartz. Social and Personal News of Towns Along West Shore Mrs. Frances Beard, of Reading. ! was the guest of Mrs. Edward Shees- ] ley at Hotel Iroquois, New Cumber- : land, yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wilt, of Pen- i | brook, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. 1 ' John I,antz, at New Cumberland, last j evening. Miss Mary Wright and Miss Flor j enec Carver, of New Cumberland, at i tended a valentine party at Lebanon | Valley College last night. WILL ENTERTAIN (JI'ILD New Cumberland, Pa., Feb. 15. —! j Miss Elizabeth Smaling will entertain ! I the Gtterbeln Guild of Trinity United Brethren Church at her home, corner of Fifth and Market streets, this even- , ing. At this meeting the thank offer- ; ing boxes will be opened. SCHOOL, TAKES SLEIGHRIDE New Cumberland, Pa., Feb. 15. | Elkwood grammar school took a slelghrlde to Mechanlcsburg this after j noon. WILL RETURN TO POST OFFICE Special to the Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa.. Feb. 15. John IN. Stlckell, assistant postmaster at Pen-Mar. who has been spending the ' winter with his family here, will re turn to the mountain this week and ! assume his duties in the post office at that place. CONSTIPATION' CORRECTED The quickest and most permanent I way of correcting constipation, bilious- I ness, stomach, liver and bowel trculde | Is to take Blackburn's Casealtoyal-Pills j l —better than castor oil. Tbyslc, tonic and purifier. 10c and 25c. Druggists.— j Credit Checks [ Issued By the Quality Piano Co. 1 32 W. King St, Lancaster, Pa., can now be redeemed at the warerooms of the Winter Piano Co. | 23 N. 4th St., Harrisburg, Pa. These vouchers are perfectly good and those holding them are very fortunate as they can now receive benefit from them without the trouble of making the long journey to Lancaster. Arrangements have been completed whereby full value together with all other inducements can be obtained right here in our Harrisburg warerooms. If you hold one of these vouchers bring it here at once and get it redeemed. New pianos from ■ $lB7 up. STORE OF>EIN NIGHTS WINTER PIANO CO. I 23 N. 4th St. Harrisburg, Pa. ■RaHHHBnHnHHBHHHnnK MENTAL DIFFERENCE BETWEEN MAN & WOMAN The Woman's Mind is Kot Her Only Weapon no Matter How Much She May Cultivate It —Jt is Necessary Al ways for a Woman to Remember the Importance of Being Beautiful. By Klin Wheeler Wilcox Copyright, 1915, Star Co. The mental difference between man and woman has been set forth in a little pamphlet by Asaph Lewis. She says of woman: "Her mind is higher, more refined. This is where the principle of selec tion shows itself most by endowing the weaker partner with that physical grace and refinement of organization, and her mental faculties are corre spondingly more refined. "Man, as we see every day, delights in competition, and this leads to ambi tion, which passes too readily into sel fishness. Woman, who has never en tered upon the competitive field, has not developed this selfish spirit. A woman is more prone to sympathy; she is more human than man. "Man cannot understand woman— the clumsy inability of a coarser nature to appreciate the feelings of the finer. The mental hide of a man through the different stages of evolution has been hardened, and he carries into his home those qualities of insensibility, self assertion and self-seeking which have elsewhere led to success in the strug gle for existence. This is the cause of so many unhappy homes to-day. Man, who is naturally coarse, cannot under stand woman, who is naturally refined. "I have obtained sufficient proof of this from the many homes I have had to visit. The more ignorant the man the more brutal is his treatment of his wife; the more educated the less brutal he is to his wife. The mental difference is easily noticed between the sexes." It has been the observation of this writer that men arc really more mod est and often moro humane than women. We have only to look in the ballrooms, public and private, in thea ters and opera houses, to see how im modest good, cultured, respectable women can be iu their dress. Husbands, fathers and brothers of these women suffer mortification of the spirit in seeing how their dear ones unnecessarily display their bodies to the public gaze. Woman should be educated and woman should have the franchise and woman should have a voice in the gov ernment in which she lives. But not because she is superior to man or more refined or more humane, but because she is a thinking, toiling human being like himself, and it is her right to be his comrade and co-worker in all things FOODS THEY BUILD OR DESTROY Amazing but Rarely Suspected Truths About the Things_ You Eat. (Copyright, 1916, by Alfred W. McCann.) Indispensable food minerals upon which life depends must be in tlie food that man eats in order that the hody or man may take them from that food. I j All food contains some of the build- | ing materials needed by the blood. Some foods contain all of them, except; where man ignorantly removes them. If by accident we should consume for a few months food deficient in some of these building materials we should gradually feel the effects upon our general health. It is not difficult to understand that if we are partial to a particular kind of food from j which a considerable portion of na-1 ture's building materials has been; abstracted we are bound to develop j disorder. When the laws under which nature i operates are suspended nature does j not operate normally. Man might as, well expect a jeweler to make a watch j without the materials from which the I wheels, springs, screws, and bearings | are made as to expect nature to make a drop of normal blood without the elements that enter into the composi tion of that blood. Nature will set up a warning for us before fatal damage has been done, in order that we may quickly set about the work of repair. But if we do not understand her warning, or! do not heed it, we head straight for destruction, unless in the mean time, some accidental change of diet pro vides the body with the offsetting ele ments necessary to the maintenance of its balance. Kood Is the most Important thing tn ! life because upon It all other things, depend, rood is digested ana awiuu- A Mrs. Lewis, iu a personal letter writes: "When I was writing my little book let I thought of Adelina Patti, Mary Garden, Marie Corelli, Mrs. Patrick Campbell and many others, and what education has done for women. Be fore woman was allowed to be edu cated she 'had only her physical at tractions, and when that was destroyed by the hand of time she was helpless. "But now woman is so advanced that the one who depends upon her physical attraction to carry her through is but the mere shallow woman. What woman, I ask you, to-day will stick little bits of court plaster on her face as an aid to her beauty? What kind of a man is he who admires such foolish ness? Is it possible that we can say such women are educated? Is that the kind of education they receive at college? "Women depend now upon their mentalities. To-day a woman knows that her intellectual attraction is the only attraction worthy the notice of a real man." Again the writer of this article must disagree with Mrs. Lewis. Much as I approve of education, culture, equal franchise and social and industrial equality of the sexes, the eternal femi nine appeals strongly to me, even when it exhibits itself in the coquetry of a bit of court plaster on the cheek or chin. The woman who ignores all the pretty little arts of beauty-making and who cares only to be clean and neat and never alluring has crossed over the line from real femininity to the masculine border line. It is necessary always for a woman to remember the tmportan-e of being beautiful, not only morally and men tally, but physically, just as it is im portant for a man to be strong, men tally. morally and physically, to be the complete man. The woman who cultivates beauty in her personality has much greater power in the world than the one who relies wholly upon her intellect. It la impossible to chauge the ideas of men on these subjects. The woman who undertakes to hold a man's regard by simply being his mental associate, ignoring all the arts and frivolities of dress and the care of her complexion, her hair and her figure, is more than likely to find her self superseded before middle age in the mind of the man of her choice by some other woman, mentally her inferior, but possessing physical charms. Mrs. Lewis needs to study both sexes a little more closely before she ex presses herself too emphatically on this subject. lated in obedience to a fixed law. If a man, woman or child maintains a state of normal health, without know ing anything about that law, good for tune , happy accident, and blind chance are the elusive forces which have temporarily or luckily barred the way against destruction. In the case of the army of the dead, augmented In the United States every year by nearly 400,000 little children under ten years of age, no happy ac cident has ever interfered. Surely it is evident that man should make an effort to locate the law upon which so much physical comfort de pends, understand It, and apply It as it was evidently intended to be ap plied. Each little drop of blood is an ex pression of that law. Anything that Interferes with the purity and charac ter of the blood is hostile to life. Be cause man leaves everything to chance and as a rule chooses to accept the idea that It is unnecessary to heed his diet, he sends a call Into the un known darkness and demands hun dreds of diseases to come forth from nothingness to assist him in misman aging the world in its said sum total of misery and pain. If we remove from our food one element that is necessary to life we introduce the beginning of disorder into the body. If two elements are removed the body may mnkn use of the other fourteen for n time, but soon the unnatural condition under which nature is thus forced to operate will assert itself and confusion must ensue. If three or four or five substances are removed from the building mate .liuls tlie inevitable collapse will take place a little sooner. If seven or eight elements are removed destruction be comes speedy. When all sixteen sub stances are removed starvation be gins at once. If we believe that God has eiabor ated these substances for man's bene fit it becomes a little short of sacrile gious to disregard them or to trille with them, because by so doing man serves notice upon his Maker that lis is independent of his Maker's designs. If, on the contrary man rejects God entirely from his consideration ol the scheme of the universe the extra ordinary phenomena which spring out of food nutrition, health, and Hie must sooner or later overpower liis spirit and cause him to bend a. rever ent knee, in the presence of the i ocles of life, too vast to bo compre hended by the human Intellect. In all events, whether he be a pro found believer or a scoffing atheist, he must see that the matter of break fast, dinner, and supper is not a mat ter to be left to accident or to an untrained kitchen drudge or to a food factory concerned chiefly in the profit - paying characteristics of its products. If he is pale or anemic, if his energy seems to be easily exhausted, if he feels little like undertaking the commonplace duties of the day, if lila children have lusterless eyes, pinched cheeks, undeveloped limbs, or ab normal tendencies, let hiin look to his food. If his children are bright, sturdy, and re3ist illness by not falling vic tims to disease which it is wrongfully assumed must come to all children, let him congratulate himself upon the lucky accident that has for a timo brought to them a supply of the food bullding materials necessary to their normal development and health. In congratulating himself let him understand the facta. An apple falls from the branch of an apple tree to the earth in obedience to a fixed law. If his children are well to-day as a result of the operation of a fixed law, concerning which ho knows nothing, it is necessary for him to leurn something of that law In order that for his children he may consider to morrow. If a child is temporarily well as the result of a happy accident let us keep that child well by understand ing the law by which health is con tinued. The sixteen food minerals are part of that law. The body derives these elements, let us repeat, from its food and from no other source. It therefore follows that these elements must be In the food that man cats in order that the body of man may take them from thai food. We shall now try to determine what business these substances carry on in the body and why they are necessary and how many of them aro artificially removed from our most familiar foods without our knowledge and what happens after they are re moved and thus through our simple study of the facts locate the law that will keep us well. Beautiful Hair Tinting Absolutely and Positively Harm less "Brownatone" Instantly Changes the Hair to Any Shade of Brown (or Black if Pre ferred.) Nothing so robs a woman of her good I looks and attractiveness as gray, streaked or faded hair. And there is no more reason or sense in mFjKSJgm tolerating un attractive VkflgW|gM|.'>bn hair than there la in w-"" wearing un .fy/M. JJr JFp-i' becoming i Kowns. Near ly all of the V more noted lljifc nlzed tli | S * ■ fact, and so 4&-j ,"S wear their * v.?Jk iiair not only In the style, but also the color, most becoming. The one hair stain that stands su preme Is "Brownatone." It is simply and easy to use. Just comb or brush it into your hair. It can not be de tected. will npt rub or wash oft. act* Instantly, and ts absolutely harmless. "Brownatone" will give any shadi desired from golden brown to black. Your druggist sells "Brownatone" or will get it for you, and It Is worth your while to insist upon having this preparation and not something else, A sample and a booklet will be mailed i you upon receipt of 10 cents .and j your orders will be filled direct from bur laboratories if you prefer. Two sizes—2sc and SI.OO. Two shades—One for Golden or Me* ditun Brown, the other for Darß Brown or Black. Insist on "Brownatone" at youl hairdresser's. Prepared only by the Kenton Phar. macal O 672 E. Pike St., Covington, Sold and guaranteed In Ilarrlsbura bv Clark's Medicine Stores, 300 Market St. —306 Broad St. i ■ ~ Try Telegraph Want Ads 13
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers