OF INTEREST T WHAT HAPPENED TO JANE By Virginia Terhune Van de Water CHAPTER lA\ (Copyright, 1916, Star Co.) j The following day it rained. As Jane awoke in the gray dawn after an hour's troubled sleep she lieurd | the drops on the tin roof of the veranda under her window. If any thing could have added to the dreari ness of existence, she reflected It was this sound. She had lain awake most of the night. She had not spoken when Augustus came up to bed. He had undressed quietly, and, to her sur prise, had fallen asleep soon after lying down. How could a man with such a •soul and with such cruelty in his! heart dare to sleep? She moved j carefully away from him and lay on j the outer edge of the great bed, | shivering all through the night, al though the covers were piled thick j over her. She had listened when Mary came I upstairs very late, and again and! again she had thought she heard the j measured footfall as of some one i walking up and down the house keeper's room. Jane tried to think connectedly | of all that she had overheard, but certain sentences would start up out of the dark before her burning eyes and she would shudder anew. At last morning had come. She dared not get up too early for fear j of awakening Augustus. It made I her feel ill to think of talking to! him just now. Yet when she did at last arise he slept on until she was dressed. As she started to leave the room she called him. "Augustus," she said. "I'm going ! downstairs now. I think you forgot: 10 set the alarm last night, as it isj past the time it usually goes off." "No," he said, sleepily, yawning • and stretching, "I did not forget it, j but I did not want to wind it for! fear of waking you. You were I having such a good sleep." She did not reply. Yesterday her j deception had seemed to her a | wrong in which she was determined ] to indulge. Now, compared with | other sins she knew existed, it seemed almost innocent. On her way down the hall she i went into the spare bedroom and; dosed the register she had left open j last night. When she reached the dinlngvoom she closed the registe! here, too. She thought that she had ; thus removed the only signs of her' last night's experience. She Shows the Strain But her face , showed that she had been through many phases of men- i tal suffering. As she entered the: kitchen Mary greeted her with a ' grave "good morning," then glanced j at (he heavy eyes. "Don't you feel well?" the house- j keeper asked, throwing oft her; lethargy with an effort. "Have you a headache?" "Yes," Jane admitted, "I have." "Didn't you sleep well?" "I had fearful dreams," Jane re plied. ' As there seemed to be • nothing 1 for her to do in here she went back j to the dinlngroom to wait in dull | misery for her husband to come 1 j downstairs. Even Reeves noticed her pallor, j : "What's the matter?" he asked ! "You look terribly peaked." Loose? || out for Pyorrhea! v When you find a tooth that gives back and forth * CVCn USt 3 tt ' C> MC yOUr cnt ' st at X™ He will find conditions which you might 7i'"p overlook. He will find a gum recession, '■j\W evcn l^ou Kh slight, where the gums have fjse^me'ou'ic^daiy" I ''' Y ou that you have the dread disease pyorrhea. From pyorrhea come by far the "But Stnrtct dots mtrt. It cleanses greater part of all tooth troubles. the teeth delightfully. It gives them Unless treated and checked, it will a whiteness distinctive of Senreco result not only ir. the shrinking and alone. Its flavor is entirely pleasing, malformation of your gums and of and it leaves in the mouth a won rhe bony structure into which your derful sense of coolness and whole teeth are set, but in the loss of the someness. teeth themselves. Start the Senreco treatment A specific for pyorrhea has been ££? (Si discovered recently by dental sci- every tube. A two-ounce tube |IL encc, and is now offered for daily for 25c is sufficient for 6 weeks' « J treatment in Senreco Tooth Paste. t^ ,men . t - Get Senreco j ' JK . , t . of your druggist today; or send W/\ oenreco combats the germ of the 4c in stamps or coin for sample / disease. Its regular use insures your tll ' ,e ai >d folder. Address The ' teeth .saios. the attack or funher &££' =? progress of pyorrhea. Cincinnati, Ohio. 1 Oven fo == —J RUHL'S BREAD 1 A Quality in every loaf' * brings wa^oa || Workman's Compensation ij Act Blanks We are prepared to ship promptly any or all of the blanks !! <| made necessary by the Workmen's Compensation Act which took !! iJ effect January 1. Let us hear from you promptly as the law re- j! ]! quires that you should now have these blanks In your possession. j The Telegraph Printing Co. jj Printing—Binding'—Designing—Photo Engraving | HAKRISBURG, PA. MONDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 21, 1916. "I have a headache and I'm cold." she said, with a shiver. "Well, you had a good night's sleep," Augustus affirmed, and she did not contradict him. j "It's a cold rain, isn't it?" she re marked, gazing out of the window, down which the drops were cours ing. "Yes," Reeves agreed, "it is. I guess I'll have Jake start a little fire in the furnace. By the way, when he does be sure to see that the reg isters are open. I shut them all the other day." "Very well," she heard herself say. "I've got to go to town this week," Reeves observed, "but I've decided to go to-morrow instead of attempt ing it to-day. Mary was putting the hot biscuits on the table close by Jane and the wife felt her sudden start. She un derstood it, but Augustus appeared not to notice it. "I've got to see my lawyer," he went on, unconcernedly. "I ought to have seen him before this, but I neglected it." Mary stood still for an instant, then turned and went back into the kitchen. Jane said nothing. How cruel this man was! And this was the husband she had promised _ to "Dove, honor and obey!" What right had any one to allow a girl to do what she had done? How could she endure life now that she knew what he was? He was a hypocrite, a wicked, inhuman creature. Augustus Is Cross "Jane!" she started guiltily at the note of impatience in her hus band's voice. "I beg your pardon!" she ex claimed. "Did you speak to me before?" "Three times'." he sai(J crossly. "What's the matter with you? What were you thinking of?" "I—l—don't feel well, Augustus," she said. "Perhaps I've caught cold. If you don't mind I'll go back upstairs. She told herself that she could not stay in his presence another minute. She must be alone, away from this man and this woman. And yet she was so sorry for Mary that her heart ached for her. "Drink a cup of cofTee, and then go upstairs and lie down," Reeves advised. "For the land's sake don't get sick. Keep warm to-day and you'll be all right. Yes, 1 guess you've caught cold. This is what we used to call the blossom storm," ho added, walking to the window and looking out a t the weather vane on the barn. "Wind's due east. too. Well, the harder it storms to-day, the more likely it is to be clear to-morrow." When Jane had drunk her coffee and left the table, she spoke timidly. "August." she ventured, "If you don't mind, I think I'll lie down in the little room the dressing room —instead of our room to-day. It's warmer, and Mary won't have to go in there to straighten up. And I think, that as I have a cold, I'd better sleep there to-night, too." "All right," August assented absent-mindedly. Evidently his thoughts were al ready on other matters than his wife's ailments. (To Bei Continued.) JUST THE THING FOR SPORTS GIRL Middy Blouses and Bloomers Give Ease and Grace of Movement BSO9 Middy Blouse for Misses and Small Women, i6and 18 years. 8856 {With Basting Line and Added Seam Allowance) Plaited Bloomers < for Misses and Small Women, 16 and I 18 years. There is no better costume for exercisi | than the middy blouse with bloomers j This blouse is a new one, with patel pockets and smocking in place of gather i and is altogether charming at the sami time that it is essentially practical. Thi j bloomers are plaited, ample and room)' and are closed at the side. Here, thi ; blouse is made of crfipe de chine and tin ; bloomers are made of serge, andthe blousi of a thinner material is much in demanc this season, but the model will be fount j appropriate for the linens and the simpl* washable materials and for serge quite a j well as for the crgpe. If the smocking i j not liked, simple shirrings can be usee j in its stead, also the blouse can be mad' j longer and worn with or without a belt. I For the 16 year size the blouse wil require 3% vds. of material 36 in. wide, ; j yds. 44 with yd. 36 in. wide for thi j collar, cuffs and belt; for the bloomer! will be needed, yds. of material 3C in. wide, I % yds. 44 or 54 in. wide. The pattern for the blouse No. 88o< j and the pattern for the bloomers No \ 8856 are both cut in sizes for 16 and if 1 > years. They will be mailed to any ad dress by the Fashion Department of this j paper, on receipt of ten cents for each. ; Sunday and Stough End New Jersey Campaigns Special to the Telegraph Philadelphia, Feb. 21.—"Billy" Bun- j day and Dr. Henry W. Stough last I night concluded their seven weeks'] campaigns in New Jersey. There were 16,728 converts in Tren- j ton. who yesterday made up a thank offering of $.11,981.03. At Atlantic City Dr. Stough won 4,674 converts and received as a thank offering $4,350. Both evangelists will begin new campaigns in other cities within a week. TIIE UPSTAIRS TRAY This is the time of year when in ' any large family or boarding house 1 some one member is sure to be laid up with a. cold which means a day or « two in bed. The upstairs tray in such j household is always a problem. The | ordinary tray with the regulation | dishes is not only very heavy for who- 1 ever has to carry it upstairs, but the | dishes are very liable to be broken, j A woman who conducts a very sue- i cessful bonrdinghouse meets this situ- j ation with an enameled ware service. ; The tray is white enameled ware, as j are also the cups, saticers, plates and ! individual tea or coffee pots. This j makes an attractive service, it. is light ( and the danger of breakage is elimi- J nated. A set purchased over three i years ago and which has seen much , use is perfectly good to-day. To the | invalid it means much to have the j food arrive in dainty form, and not in nicked or cracked china, which is; generally considered good enough to • run the risks of upstairs service. C. E. Boosters Hike to Penbrook For Rally Christian Endeavor "boosters" were j on a "hike" to Penbrook last evening) where they boosted the big hill rally 1 to be held in the Penbrook UnitSd j Brethren Church on Thursday even-1 ing, and the State C. E. convention to ' be held in this city In July. The "fly- j ing boosters" gave talks on raising money for the convention, the excel- j lent program anticipated and the, many delegates who are expected to j [attend. The convention "booster song" j j was sung and Miss Dcah Hangen sang j ; a solo entitled, "X Want to See Jesus, | j Don't You?" Several yards of con-| : ventlon stickers and songs were dis i tributed to endeavorers. i Charles S. Urich, vice-president of the Hill district of the Harrisburg C. E. Union, chaperoned the "boosters." Among the party were C. A. Corn man, Miss Leah Hangen, Catherine 1 ! Bolton, and C. S. Uricli, of the Park I Street United Evangelical C. E. so ! clety; Miss Agnes D. Sanderson, W. S. Slaymaker, John N. Finley, L. E, : Bowman, of Immanuel Presbyterian ;C. E. society and E. S. Schilling, of Harris Street United Evangelical C. E. j Society. The attendance at each society visit ed was very encouraging: and much en- 1 thuslasm was shown by the Endeavor- J ers. The following societies were j visited: United Brethren, Penbrook; j Lutheran, Penbrook; Church of God, Penbrook, and the State Street United Brethren, this city. _ You Get What You Want if—, By Beatrice Fairfax "You get what you want," says one of the sanest, strongest men I know. You do "get what you want" —if yoti want it enough! The very first step toward getting what you want in the world is be lieving that you can get it. Sneering idly or bitterly, "Oh, yes, that's all very well to say, but some people are born lucky, or rich, or good-looking, or clever, and others start with big liandi caps," is exactly the sort of thing that is going to prove a handicap and pre vent you from getting what you want in the world. You have to believe in your own ability and In the fairness of life. And you have to be willing to work—to work single-heartedly, and even des perately, to reach your goal. The one great reason why so few of us do get what we want in the world is because we are not quite sure what it Is; or, being sure, we have not quite the backbone to plug away in order to get it; or, being willing to work, we still are weak enough to per mit ourselves to be torn from our la bors and tempted Into all sorts of re laxation. Easy to Make Excuses It is so easy to be "sidetracked." It is so easy to be tempted into tak ing some little relaxation or pleasure and persuading ourselves that as a re sult of It you will work all the better. There are plenty of old maxims that seemingly justify such a course—"Ail work and no play makes Jack a dull boy," for Instance. That is quite true, to be Sure, but too much play leavened with only a little work makes Jack a failure is equally true. The people who succeed are the peo ple who are fairly single-minded, who have an honest purpose in life and who propose to accomplish it, and, what is more, to accomplish It legitimately and through their own earnest, untiring ef fort. You cannot become a power in the legal profession If you give one-quar ter of your time to studying the law, one-quarter to going about socially In order to rest from your labors, one quarter to planning what you are going to do when you get around to It, and the rest of your time to swinging along before idle winds that blow you where they list. If you are going to be a power In the legal world, you have to study and work and strive constantly for growth in knowledge and power. You have to make everything else subservient to your desire to be a great lawyer. You have to make even your relaxations healthy out-door ones that shall renew your growth Instead of stunting It. You have to really want to be a great lawyer, and not to desire to be a popular society man who is also prominent In the legal profession. In any walk of life, in any profession, in any position where you are placed, suc cess or failure lies largely In which you MANY ACCIDENTS BEING REPORTED New System Showing Exactly What Is the Situation in Regard to Mishaps The development of the system of reports of industrial accidents re quired by the Workmen's Compensa tion act is commencing to show how many accidents occur on the railroads, in the mines and in the mills, factor ies, stores and other establishments throughout Pennsylvania. The re porting system under the compensa tion act became effective on January 1 and in the first month 13,465 acci denas, 129 of them fatal, were re ported to the Department of Labor and Industry's bureau of statistics. ! In the first sixteen days of Febru ary reports of 13,027 accidents, of which 92 were fatal, exclusive of fa talities In several mines. On some days in February 1000 accidents were reported a day, the highest number on [one day being 1190. During 1915 there were only 61,- 540 accidents reported from the "indus tries of the State, but that was under the old system. The first 47 days of this year there have been 221 fatalities ! reported. The increase in reports, which has been attributed to the requirements of the compensation law, is being care fully followed by the safety authori ties of the State and studies of the [ causes and location of the accidents will be made with a view to recom mending safeguards. OUR DAILY RECEIPT \pplp Marmalade Wash and cut half a peck of tart apples in quarters, place in a kettle and bolls until the apples are soft. Rid) through a sieve and return pulp to the Kettle. 801 l uncovered over a slow fire twenty minutes; then measure, and add to each pint of the apple pulp one pint of sugar and two tables.ioonfuls of lemon juice. Cook ten minutes. Clip This Coupon NOW! Free! ||ll 8« Present this Coupon toyottr grocer before Feb. 25 *ncl receive aPi W"* i | |w one full-size cake ofSWEETHEARTToiIet Soap abtolutely free. ||k| (Q f | This offer is limited to one coupon to a family and the correct name and ra L CJa 1 ty . address of the party receiving this aoap must be signed in full to the following: §|ijjj R| I a SWEEiyjLART SOAP * Ct^°e jl|pl Free! Ipgjj IJ | I Gro«rj Tear off the top end of the carton (the part JH §li 8-eO An* nf the'aboTe'con. v 4 M Jf% I DfF O'S 00 dittone render this coupon VOID. .111 J'l 1,, hM r* lr»Jfcl I HARRISBUKG TEIjEGRAPH, FEB. 21. 1916 fSS*S£L work to acquire. Taking It Out io Talk I know a stenographer who has liter ary ability. From 9to 5 each day she works hard for the S2O a week salary her position as secretary brings- She needs that salary and she works hard to get It. On Sundays and holidays and dunr,;; the evenings she talks a great deal about the short stories she means to write. But she does not write them. Instead she lets kind friends take her to danceß and off on motor trips. "1 need the relaxation," says she. "1 have to have a little enjoyment in or der to go on with my work. If I were only more fortunately placed I am sure I should make a success as a .wri ter." "Making a success as a writer" or as anything else depends not at all on how you are placed, and entirely on what you choose to do. The joy of working is just as restful as the joy of playing—particularly when It Is working at something other than your regular daily task. Relaxation lies not necessarily in resting, but more often In merely doing something different. And if the girl who thinks she wants; to be a writer really did want It—j want It more than to have a good time —she probably would be a writer. But. j she isn't quite capable of a single hearted purpose or of a firm determina tion. She excuses her desire for a little dissipation and enjoyment in terms of, "needing the change and rest." A per fectly good excuse, and one she and her friends accept. And since what she really wants is a good time, that Is I what she gets. People are too easily sorry for them-' selves. Too easily do they excuse their own weaknesses and feel very sympa thetic for themselves because life is j not made smooth and easy for them, j They forget that most of the people ! who have accomplished big things In | the world have done them when work- j Ing in the face of tremendous dlffi-1 culty. It is opposition which increases the strong man's determination to succeed. He finds the very fight worth making. But the weakling excuses himself for failure because success would have meant a fight. The most desperate ill health was not an insurmountable barrier to Rob ert Louis Stevenson; blindness did not hamper Milton. To none of the big souls in the world is any physical handicap a barrier to success. Any human being who wants any thing firmly and surely and strongly enough will get it —because they will go after it and fight for It. "You get what you want," but only if you want it with a force and determination that will nlake you sacrifice pleasure and all the lesser inclinations for your own great purpose. Penna. Representative Is Boosting One-Cent Drop Letter Postage Rate Washington. D. C., Feb. 21. —"There can be no sound argument against granting a one-cent rate on local de livery letters," said Representative William W. Griest, of Pennsylvania, a prominent member of the House pos tal committee, to-day in answer to a query as to whether the postage rate on letters was equitable.* "In recent years there has been a growing de mand for legislation to reduce the let ter postage rate because of the fact that more than $70,000,000 profit is derived from this class of mail. The public desire for some modification of the rate is increasingly insistent and the records of the past few weeks show the introduction in the House and the Senate of a large number of bills pro posing a one-cent drop-letter postage rate. "At this time I am not prepared to espouse the feasibility of a Hat rate of one cent for all letters," said Mr. Griest, "but I do favor an immediato return to the people of a reasonable share of the exorbitant profit on first class mail. The cost of handling local delivery letters on an average in a city or town having letter carriers service will figure less than one-sixth of a cent, for which service two cents is charged. "The history of postal rale reduc tions shows it has always facilitated letter correspondence with an increase in business and revenue. Our postal service is not supposed to be a money making institution, and when any fea ture of it earns an exorbitant profit of several hundred per cent, there should be an adjustment so that the public can share in the earnings. The time is opportune for a reduction in the drop-letter rate and it is my purpose to do what I can to have Congress enact the necessary legislation during the present session." Mr. Griest is one of the pioneer advocates of the one-cent drop-letter movement and is understood to have introduced the first bill in Congress providing for the reduction. HUB BACKACHE AWAY ■ "St. IAMBS OIL" Rub Lumbago, Pain and Soreness from Your Lame Back-Instant Relief! Doesn't Blister-Get a Small Trial Bottle-Wonderful Liniment When your back is sore and lame or lumbago, sciatica or rheumatism has you stiffened up, don't suffer! Get a small trial bottle of old, honest "St. Jacobs OH" at any drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub it right on your aching back, and by the time you count fifty, the soreness and lameness is gone. OFTEN A "PINT" IS NOT A PINT City Sealer Reel Explains How Matron Loses by Using Glass Jar APPLIES TO OIL CAN, TOO Dealer Xot Entirely to Blame; Suggests Plan For Remedy ing Evil How the average matron often I cheats herself when buying syrup, ! vinegar, etc., in glass jars was pointed ' out to-day by City Sealer Harry D. Reel. Frequently the receptacle does not | hold the amount of the commodity ! asked or paid for, the sealer explained, j and the consumer suffers accordingly. I And as a rule the storekeeper can hardly be censured because he is no 1 more certain of the real size of the I vessel he is tilling than Is the cus i tomer. ! City Sealer Reel's advice for solving I the problem is simple. | "If a. pint is desired, use a quart I jar: if a quart is to be purchased, use I a two-quart jar; if two quarts are ! wished, use a gallon jar," is his sug | gestion. When a Pint's Xot a Pint "While it is realized," said Mr. Reel, "that the jars are a great convenience. It is suggested that the consumer use receptacles that hold a greater quan tity than the amount to be purchased. It should be borne In mind that these jars are 'containers.' not 'measures,' and will often vary considerably in size. Rome hold more than others, although in a majority of cases a 'pint' j jar will not hold a full pint, a so-called I 'quart' jar falls way short of holding ! a quart, and so on up the scale. | "What is true of the glass jar is j equally true of the 'gallon' oil can. Many of these cans will not hold a full gallon. Hie Solution "As a rule," explained City Sealer Reel, "the grocer or other dealer draws ' the oil. molasses, vinegar, etc., by J means of an automatic pump or gauge. | These machines release a pint, quart, I gallon or other amount for which they are set. The exact amount is drawn, and if the receptacle is too small the overflow returns to the hogs head, cask or barrel, as the case may be. "Consequently," concluded the sealer, "the dealer can scarcely be blamed, as he has no way of determining the 1 exact quantity he is giving; but, if the container furnished would hold more than the quantity ordered, it is more than likely that the dealer would see that his measures, pumps, gauges, etc., operate properly—and draw the proper | amounts." Nautralized Germans Give Valuable Assistance in Search For Spy, Lincoln Special to the Telegraph New York, Feb. 21. —The capture here Saturday night of Ignatius T. T. Lincoln, former member of the British parliament and self-styled German spy, after his escaped from the cus tody of a United States deputy mar ] sliai in Brooklyn, January 15, was ! brought about, through the assistance j given to special agents of th ■> govern i inont by several naturalized citizens of Don't stay crippled! This soothing 1 , penetrating liniment needs to be used only once. It takes the pain right out ard ends the misery. It is magical, yet absolutely harmless and doesn't burn the skin. Nothing else stops lumbago, sci at'ca, backache or rheumatism so promptly. It never disappoints! In use for over sixty years. A CHILD DOESN'T LAUGH AND PLAY IF CONSTIPATED Look, Mother! Is tongue coated, breath feverish and stomach sour? "California Syrup of Figs" car't harm tender stomach, liver, bowels. A laxative to-day saves a sick child to-morrow. Children simply will not take the time from play to empty th*tr bowels, which become clogged up with waste, liver gets sluggish; stomach sour. Look at the tongue, mother! IC coated, or your child is listless, cross, feverish, breath bad, restless, doesn't eat heartily, full of cold or has soru throat or any other children's ailment, give a teaspoonful of "California I Syrup of Figs," then don't worry, be i cause it is perfectly harmless, and in ! a few hours all this constipation I poison, sour bile and fermenting waste will gently move out of the bowels and you have a well, playful child again. A thorough "inside cleans ing' is ofttimes all that is necessary. It should be the first treatment given In any sickness. Beware of counterfeit fig syrups. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs," which has full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly I printed on the bottle. Look carefully and see that it is made by the "Cali fornia Fig Syrup Company." German birth, it -was learned authori tatively last, night. Lincoln, kept under close guard in Raymond street jail, Brooklyn, -was not I allowed to-day to speak with anyone, i while investigators of tlie Department | of Justice carried on a diligent search of his trunks and questioned numer- I ous persons with whom he is known to ! have communicated during the inter-* | val between his escape and his re* I arrest. While officiate cf the Department od Justice and United States District At torney Melville J. Francis, of Brook lyn, declined to divulge the information obtained from the examination of Lin coln's effects, it was learned that nothing was found to implicate other* In his escape or in harboring him since then. It. was said that Lincoln was planning to leave New York when arrested, but. when caught he had only about SSO In cash. 11