10 OF INTEREST TO THE WOMEN | "THEIR MARRIED LIFE" j Copyright by International News Serrle* "We're going: to serve dinner in al i very al fresco manner, whatever that I i is,'' said Anne Redding, BeHghtedlv i flying around in a blue gown and a ; dainty white apron tied about her 1 waist. «ut you do like us, don't you, dear," turning suddenly to Helen. "I i am just crazy about it. all." i Helen and Warren had been v in- 1 vited to partake of « very informal 1 etyle of dinner at the new apart- , ment that Anne and Frances had , taken. Helen was seated on a huge. couch that was pushed into one corner of the room. She was lazily ' watching preparations. Warren was smoking and looking around with a slightly amused expression. "Makes me think of a doll's house," he remarked. "No remarks, please." said Fran ces, coming into the room and stand ing for a moment beneath the elec tric lights in the middle of the room. Her hair was a glory of color and Helen sighed rapturously. "Frances, if 1 had a single wish I would wish most of all for red hair." Everyone laughed, and then in the silence that followed , the bell rang. "I'll go." said Anne, "X do wish everyone would com® so that we can serve dinner while the things are good. The Bells breezed in. and almost immediately the bell rang again and Frances, who went to open the door this time, appeared a moment later: with Ned Burns. Helen felt her heart contract and all the blood re cede from her face. The next min ute it was back again, and she felt the color push its way up to the roots of her hair. It was the first time that she had seen him since that unpleasant evening when War ren was in Norfolk. "Are you surprised?" Frances said gayly to Helen. "Ned just begged lo come, so I had to let him." And then Frances went off to meet Dr. Marshall, who came in and looked at her with his heart in his eyes. Helen never knew just what she said to Ned. She certainly sum moned all her faculties to aid her nnd tried to carry off the situation gracefully. Warren, for a wonder, did not sulk, but sat up like a Tro jan and talked shop to Ned strenu ously. Once in a while Ned would look at Helen in a way that made her Indignant. He had no business to look at her that way. It was al most as If she had given htm a right to think of her. which she hadn't. Again the bell rang and Anne ran out, her face mischievous. Helen thought she had gone to meet Jack Parmelee, but she hadn't, for the next minute Avery Atwood came into the room. Helen knew from Anne's expression that she had ar ranged for a surprise for Frances, and as Babbie looked guilty and knowing, Helen decided that the two must have planned it together, for Anne hadn't had time to know Mr. Atwood well. It was certainly an evening of surprise*. Frances, coming out of the bedroom beyond rather sudden ly. met Atwood face to face and her eyes widened and then froze hard. Helen hated to see that expression on her face. The next minute, how ever. she was the conventional woman of the world greeting a | guest, and one could have gathered nothing from her expression. Was It necessary for men and; women to mask their real feelings I < "CASCARETS" FOR LIVER AHD BOWELS Enjoy Life! Stop Headaches, Sour Stomach, Biliousness, Bad Breath, Bad Colds, Constipation. They're a Treat! Cascarets is Best Laxative for Men, Women, Children —20 Million Boxes Sold Last Year. Straighten up! Remove the liver and cleansing you ever experienced? Tou bowel poison which is keeping your w '" wake up feeling fit and fine. Cas- | h„d toy. your toe, co.t.a, hr...h JSKJrSISSi KS offensive, and stomach sour. Don't stay ] y that you hardly realize vou have bilious sick, headachy, constipated taken a cathartic. Mother's should! and full of cold. V. hy don't you get a give cross, sick, bilious or feverish box of Cascarets from the drug store children a whole Cascaret anv time and eat one or two to-night and en- they act thoroughly and are harm- Joy the nicest gentlest liver and bowel less. 010 CENTSj WORK WHILE YOU SLEER Stock Transfer Ledger The Pennsylvania Stock Transfer Tax Law (Act of June !' |> 4, 1915) which is now In effect requires all corporations in the State, |! j ;, no matter how large they may be to keep a Stock Transfer Ledger JI ; | We are prepared to supply these Ledgers promptly at a very nominal ' ! j ,] | price. ! i ij| || The Telegraph Printing Co i| Printing—Binding—Designing—Photo Engraving IIAItRISBURG, PA. ' i*—....... 1 J TUESDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 22, 1916. in this great game of life? Wasn't any one natural? Helen thought these things as she sat on the couch and looked at the little play enacted before her. How strange It was. Frances had arranged Ned Burns as a surprise for her, Helen, and in turn Anne Rnd Babbie had contrived j a surprise for Frances. Helen won dered how it would all coine out. Dinner came next, and Anne and Frances made entrancing waitresses. They served chicken a la King from a chafing dish, heaping generous portions on pieces of golden toast. Salad with Russian dressing and tiny sandwiches. Ice cream, cake and coffee completed the meal, and when every one had eaten all they possibly could. Anne suggested that they all go to the movies. "You see there Is really nothing else to do," she said gaily. "We are sandwiched in so tightly in this tiny place that we can't even breathe, and it would be fun to all go together." Helen picked up her own things and Warren's and carried them out into the tiny kitchenette, which was at the other end of the hall. There was a tiny room off the hall that Frances called the den, and as Helen passed she could not help overhearing voices from within. She thrilled involuntarily, for the voices were Avery Atwood's and the low, sweet tones of Frances herself. Helen heard her say, softly: "I wish you would not go Into that subject again. I was trying so hard to forget you. What made you come?" And then the deeper voice of the man: "Because I couldn't help it. Frances." And there was longing in that one remark that made Helen's heart beat suffocatingly as she hurried past, like a thief in the night. She hoped Frances would not know that she had overheard, but what could be the relationship be- . tween them. Alas, for any prospec tive romance between Frances and Dr. Marshall. Any girl who could speak like that to another man had no idea of falling in love with a matter-of-fact physician. Every thing was certainly tangled up, again. Helen was so excited about Frances and her affair that she had forgotten about Ned Burns. Somehow she felt her relationship with Ned Burns as something sor did. If she had cared about him, it might have been different, but Hel en knew that she was wrapped up body and soul in' Warren and no one else. In the bustle of getting outdoor things on, she hadn't time to think of anything more, and she did not realize that she was the last to leave the apartment until she hur ried " out of the bedroom after a search for her glove which had dropped behind tli e dressing table. She snapped out the light and hur ried across the livingroom. Warren should have waited for ] her. The door stood open Into the 1 outer hall, and around the bend she could hear the laughter of the | others. Suddenly a voice said quite close to her, "Just r minute, Helen," and Ned Burns laid his hand on her arm. She pulled away with flam ing cheeks and it was Mke this that she emerged from the dark ness and met the inquiring look in Warren's eyes as he waited outside. Another instalment of this inter esting series will appear soon. MEN'S BATH ROBE IN GOOD DESIGN Velveteens and Corduroys Are I'sed as Well as Fancy Woolens By MAY MANTON 8859 ( With Basting Line and Added Seuin Allowance ) Men's Bath Robe, Small 36 or 38, Medium 40 or 42, Large 44 isr 46 breast. Here is a garment that can be used ather for a lounging robe or for a bath •obe. It is absolutely loose and ample, thoroughly comfortable and satisfactory, withal, it is very simple and can easiiv :>e made at home. In the picture, the material is plaid flannel and the trimming 9 broadcloth in plain color, but this robe would be handsome made from the blan ket flannel, from terry cloth, or from velveteen of corduroy, for all these ma :erials are lik<«l for garments of the sort. Velveteens and corduroys are especially R-ell 6uited to the lounging robe, but ail ire appropriate both for that use and for the bath robe. For the medium size will be needed, 5J4 yds. of material 36 in. wide, 4 V.j yds. 44, : yds. 54 in. wide, with yd. 44 in. wide for collar and cuffs. The pattern Xo. 8859 is cut in three i sizes: 36 or 38, 40 or 42, 44 or 46 in. breast measure. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper on rec« ipt of ten cents. Germans Are Suspected of Secret Wireless on Summit of Mountain Concord, N. H„ Feb. 22.—A report of the recent movements in the White [ Mountains of a party of Germans, who were formerly under government sur veillance, was sent last night by United States Marshal Charles J. O'Neill from his office in this city to United States Attorney Fred M. Brown at Somers worth. The report is based on information that the people whose actions have been viewed with suspicion are en gaged in secret wireless operations from mountain tops. Their headquar ters is at Glen, which is a village in Jackson county, and affords approach to Mount Washington. It Is on the Maine border and the altitude Is such that Portland harbor Is in plain view. Sportsmen who returned from a camp at Glen report that Secret Serv ice officials have been Working around Glen and Intervale getting tnforma toln as to the goings and comings of certain strangers, unmistakably Ger mans. Marshal O'Neill when Interviewed admitted that he had received letters suggesting that the Glen camp was be ! ing used as a base for a wireless ! station. Continue Argument on "Hardscrabble" Case to March 28 Argument on the appeals and excep tions to the report of the viewers on j the condemnation of "Hardscrabble," ! which was scheduled for hearing to day by the Dauphin courity courts, was continued until March 28. The appeal of the barbers who j prosecuted Charles Williams, proprie tor of the Union station shop for vio lating the Sunday "blue laws" by keep ! ing open on Sunday, was heard this 1 afternoon. Argument was also heard this after ! noon on the injunction procedings [brought by W. F. Martin and J. J. Lynch against the city to restrain the municipal building inspector from tearing down a wall which he declared not in conformity with the building regulations. ; Today And A Generation Hence The flight of time makes us think of the future. The baby of today reflects what greatness may bo ' Iff acquired when ho yS?* //' grows up. And any (t\\ /"*£■ Influence that bring:: 7/W relief to the expectant mother Is the first an j it. greatest of obligation?. • „ 7 {/ There is a splendk. j Sjr si remedy known as l "Mother's Friend" that has been a safeguard, »»i|l a helpful dally iofir JsjUF » • ence, to a host c LBT women. Applied exter *V y Ik® nallr to the moic!; 1 they become pllan, they stretch without undue pain, there is a: absence of distress, the nerves are soothe by taking away the burden of leaving all to | just natural conditions. | There is In "Mother's Friend" the direct and Immediate help that all expectant moth cri require. Used by their own band, gulee:] by their own minds, they learn at once thq blessed relief from morning sickness result ing from undue stretching. They experience daily calm and nightly rest. It is Indeed "Mother's Friend." (let a bottle today oi any druggist. Then write Bradfleld Regulator Co., 410 I.amar Dldg., Atlanta, Ga., for one of tho most entertaining and valuable little books ever presented. It is worth. writing i tur « GEORGE AGNEVfcHAMBERLAIN caPY&S&SfT JBQT TJfE CENTU/3Y CO. SYNOPSIS occupied a large room that overlooked CHAPTER I—Alan Wayne is sent 1 away from Red Hill, his home, by his uncle, J. Y„ as ,a moral failure. Clem runs after >»lm in a tangle of shorl skirts to bid him good-by. CHAPTER 11—Captain Wayne tells j Alan of the failing of the Waynes, j Clem drinks Alan's health on his birthday. CHAPTER lll—Judge Healey buys a picture for Alix liaising. Tho judge defends Alan in his business with his employers. CHAPTER IV—Alan and Alix meet at sea, homeward bound, and start a flirtation, which becomes serious. CHAPTER V—At home, Nance Ster ling asks Alan to go away from Alix. Alix is taken to task by Gerry, her husband, for her conduct with Alan and defies him. CHAPTER Vl—Gerry, as he thinks, sees Alix and Alan eloping, drops ev<--«-thiug, and goes to Pernambuco. CHAPTER V\l—Alix leaves Alan on the train and goes home to find that Ger ry has disappeared. CHAPTER VIII— Gerry leaves Pernam pueo and goes to Piranhas. On a canoa trip he meets a native girl. "There." said the judge with a sigh of relief, "that's something. It takes a steady nerve to draw a bank ac count in full. You must take the news "upstairs. I'm off. I'll follow up the clue tomorrow." There was a new look of content mingled with the worry In Mrs. Lan sing's face that made the .nidge say as he held out his hand In farewell, "Things better?" Mrs. Lansing understood him. "Yes," she auswered. and added, "we have been crying together." Mrs. Lansing and Alix had never given themselves to each other. There had been no warfare between them t>ut equally there had never been un derstanding. To Mrs. Lansing's In herent calm, Alix' scintillation had been repellent and Alix before Gerry's mother had felt much the same re straint as before Gerry's old butler. There had been strength in Mrs. Lansing's calm. She had been waiting •nd now the 'waiting was over. Alix had given herself tearful and almost wordless into arms that were more than ready and had then poured out her heart In a broken tale that would have confounded any court of justice but which between women was clearer than logic. At the end Mrs. Lansing said noth ing. Instead she petted Alix, carried her off to bed and kept her there for three days. In her waiting hours Alix added spasmodic bits to her confes sion—sage reflections after the event, dreamy "I wonders" that speculated in the past and in the measure of her emotions. Mrs. Lansing sat and listened and sewed. Her soft brown hair just touched with gray, her calm face with Its half-hidden strength, her steady eyes, turned now on Alix. now on her work, brought peace into tho room and held It there in spite of the disquieting lack of news of Gerry. When she spoke at last it was to say half-shyly, "You are stronger than I had thought. I believe every woman at the actual moment of surrender feels an impulse of shame and fear. During that moment desire lets go of her. It's the last chance that fate holds out. The women who fail to take the chance—lt seems to me they fail through weakness of spirit and not of flesh. "More women are ruined by circum stance than by desire. Women decide to burn their hrldges heblnd them and then they think they've burned them. All the circumstances were against you. There wasn't a loophole in the net. Fate gave you your moment and you tore your way out." On the fourth day Alix got up but on the fifth she stayed in bed. Mrs. Lansing found her pale and fright ened. She had been crying. "Alix." she whispered, kneeling be side the bed. "what is it?" Alix told her amid sobs. "Oh, my dear," said Mrs. Lansing, throwing her arms around her, "don't cry. Don t worry. The strength will come with the need. In the end you'll be glad. So will Gerry. So will all of us." "It isn't thnt." said Alls, faintly. "Oh, It isn't that. I'm just thinking and thinking how terrible it would have been if I had run away—really run away. I keep imagining how awful It would have been. It is night mare." "Call It n»pMmflre If you like, sweet heart, but Just remember that you are awake." "Yes," said Alix softly. "I am awake now. I want to watch the Hill come to life and dress up for the sum mer. It will amuse me. It's long since I have watched for the first buds and the first swallows. I won't mind the melting snow and the mud. It's so long since I've seen clean country mud. I want to smell it." "You don't know how bleak the Hill can be before the spring comes," ob jected Mrs. Lansing. "Will It be any bleaket- with me there than when you were alone?" asked Alix. Mrs. Lansing came over to her and kissed her. "No, dear," she said. i LiS tke note] d'Eurone Gerrw the quay. Even if there had been n better hotel in town he would not have moved. ' He was not lonely. He wandered | Interested through all the straggling i ! city. When he was too hizy to go to the city he sat in the precarious bal cony of his room and watched the city come to him. Almost a month had passed since he landed on his Lethean shore, and it had served him well. The world j seemed to have time-servers in small regard. He began to think of his moth er. He strolled over to the cable sta tion. The oifices were undergoing re pairs. The ground floor was unfur nished save for a table and one chair. In the chnlr sat a chocolate-colored employee with a long bamboo ou the i floor beside him. Gerry's curiosity was aroused. He went in and wrote his message to nis mother—just a few words telling her he was all right. The chocolate gentleman folded the mes eagei slipped 't into the split end of ' the bamboo and stuck it up through a hole in the ceiling to tile floor above. I Gerry smiled and then laughed at the i gravity with which his smile was re ceived. The man looked at hitn in astonishment.' These English were all mnd and discourteous. What was | there to laugh at in a man at work? Gerry went out and rambled over the city. Night came on. He was restless. He wished he had not sent the message. It was forming itself into a link. He dined badly at a res taurant and then wandered balk to the quay. Arriving steamers were posted j on a blackboard under a street lamp. The mail from New York was due to morrow. The consul's papers would be full of the latest New l'ork society scandal—his scandal. He went to his j room and sat on the balcony watching j the varied craft preparing to drift out | on the tide. Suddenly he got up and went down to the quay. A long, raking craft was taking on j its meager provisions. Gerry engaged Its captain in a pantomime parley. The boat was bound for Penedo to take on cotton. Gerry decided to go to Penedo. Two of the crew went back with him to get his baggage. The hotel was closed. Gerry was the only guest and he had his key. He had paid his : weekly bill that day. so there was no need to wake up anyone. In half an hour he and his belongings were stowed on the deck of tho .Tosephina and she was drifting slowly down to the bar. Four days later they were off the I mouth of the San Francisco. They j doubled in and tacked their way up j to Penedo. There was no life in Pen | edo. It was desolate and lonely com ; pared with the Hotel d'Europe and the i lively quay; so when a funny little stern-wheeler started up the river on | its weekly trip to Piranhas, Gerry j went with It. Piranhas was a town of mud plas tered against a barren cliff. It made no pretense to being alive. Here a dead man could live in peace with his surroundings. From fifteen miles up , the river came the rumble of the mighty Paulo Affonso .alls, singing a i perpetual requiem. Gerry established himself in a hovel of an inn that even in this far retreat did not dare call j itself hotel. The only industry in Piranhas was The wnshing of clothes and the women did.that. Fish were caught In great quantities but fishing was not an in dustry. Here man fished only when . he was hungry. i Gerry chartered a ponderous canoe. At first he had a man to paddle him up and down and sometimes across the wide half-mile of water. But be fore long he learned to handle the j tiling himself. The heavy work soon . trimmed his splendid muscles into shape. He supplied the hostelry with ■ a variety of fish. One morning he awoke earlier than usual. The wave of life was running i high in Ills veins. He sprang up and, j still in his pajamas, hurried out for his morning swim. The break of day was gloriously chilly. A cool breeze, . hurrying up from the sea. was stead- I ! lly banking up the mist that hung over , j the river. Gerry sprang into his canoe ■ | and pushed off. He drove its heavy . j length up stream, not in the teeth of the current, for no man could do that, . i but skirting the shore, seizing on the ( help of every eddy and keeping an eye out for the green swirling mound that i meant a pinnacle of rock just short I of the surface. He went farther up the river than ever before. His mus . cles were keyed to the struggle. He i passed the last jutting bend that the I boatmen on the river conld master and i found himself In a bay protected by a ■ spit of sand, rock-tipped and foam tossed where it reached the river's I channel. From this point the river was a chaos of jagged rocks that fought the mighty tide hurled from , the falls still miles above. Gerry ran the canoe upon the shore and stripped. He stepped on to the I spit of sand. In that moment just to live was enough. A sharp cry broke on his astonished ears. (To be continued.) I MARRIED AT HAGERBTOWN Special to the Telegraph | Hlain, Pa„ b'eb. 22. Miss Nellie I Murray, daughter of Ira Murray, and 1 William Welbley, both of Madison ! township, went to Ilajferstown, Md., ' I and were married. Mother and Daughter By 101 In Wheeler Wilcox 1 i Copyright, 1915, Star Company. j 1 What a lovely sight is a young mother with her baby daughter! How , charming are the love and tenderness , expressed in the mother's face as she watches her little girl toddling about . the room when she first begins to j i walk! How sweet Is her sympathy for every childish trouDle. Then how interested ! and anxious she is that her daughter i, should enjoy the best advantages pos- i sible, and how proud she becomes when i the young girl receives credit marks ! at. school. But as this child develops Into wo-1 manhood how rarely does the mother! keep the same close sympathy, the 1 , same tender understanding, the same sweet patience, in the association with her. Tlie Mother's Fault When a woman fails to win the first | place in her daughter's heart as friend. ; counsellor and sympathizer, it is no' j one's fault but her own. I make this j assertion without reservation or ex- j ception. Of course, 'here will be a I clamor of protest from "devoted i mothers," but 1 know what the average ! I idea of devotion on a mother's part is, i and 1 call it by other names. To make a slave of yourself for your < j child, to try to save your daughter I ' from' mental labor, to try to dress her ) better than other girls and to tax your! ! strength and purse in order to give her i \ luxuries, is not devotion. It is unwise I ambition and folly on your part. It 1 is sewing the seeds of selfishness and j indolence in a receptive young mind, j | that has come into being through no j ] wish of its own. Having brought the girl into the \ \ world, it is your duty to study her as i you would some plant were you a horti | culturist, and to be patient, loving and gentle with her faults and sympathetic with her requirements. ; It is your life work to make a noble ! and worthy woman of her and to lead j her by the power of unfailing love and ' j cheerfulness to be your pride and com-1 j fort and joy. j You can only do this by controlling i yourself in her presence, by setting her an example of dignity and patience and all-embracing love: by eliminat | ing all bitterness, all gloom, all earp , ing criticism from your heart, and by j bestowing upon her nine words of ap preciation for every one of fault-flnd i ing. | You must wfh her respect before she can be asked tp respect you. You must be lovable before you expect her to give you more than the duty regard which so many children are obliged to make serve for filial affection. You must be sweet and responsive j and sympathetic before she can con- I fide in you, and you must be tactful J and merry and wise in your methods of ; teaching her to be industrious, un- New Treatment for Croup and Colds Relieves by Inhalation and Absorption, No Stomach Doting. Plenty of fresh air in the bedroom and a good application of Viok's "Vap-O-Kub" Salve over the throat and chest is the best defense againßt ail cold troubles. The medicated vapors, released by the body heat, loosen the phlegm, clear the air passages and soothe the inflamed mem brane. In addition, Vick's is absorbed through the skin. 25c, 50c, or SI.OO. VrcKSttx-ssSALVE I REMARKABLE LETTER IlecelveU ItrKardliiß Peterson'* Oint ment— PleiiKe Publish Thin l.etter. March 22, 1915. Peterson Bros.— Dear Sirs:—l was afflicted with a very severe sore on my leg for seven years. I am a teamster at the Ameri can Agricultural Chemical Co. at West I Park. I tried all medicines and salves, I hut without success. I tried doctors and all others, hut they all failed to | cure me. 1 couldn't sleep for inanv nights from pain. Doctors after treat ing- me for some time said I could not | live for any more than two vears. I Finally Peterson Ointment was recom mended to me and by its use the sore j was entirely healed. I gladly recom mend Peterson's Ointment as a wonder- I ful healing agent and sincerely urge everyone afflicted as I was to begin using It at once. Thankfully yours, WILLIAM HAASE, West Park, Ohio. Care P. G. Reitz. Box 199. ! Peterson says: "I am proud of the above letter and have hundreds of oth | ers that tell of wonderful cures of Eczen.a. Piles and Skin diseases." : Peterson's Ointment is 25 cents at all | druggists. :: TO END CATARRHAL;: ;• DEAFNESS AND HEAD ;; •J NOISES :: I" If you have Catarrhal Deafness 1 • '' or head noises go to your drug- ■ » " gist and get 1 ounce of Parmint '• ■' (double strength), and add to it ' ' * >4 pint of hot water and -1 ounces ■ ' of granulated sugar. Take 1 ■ ' i , tablespoonful four times a day. ' 1 , , This will often bring quick re- " ' , , lief from the distressing head 1 ' , , noises. Clogged nostrils should ' ' j , , open, breathing become easy and ! ' i., the mucus stop dropping' into , , , tbf> throat. It is easy to prepare, ! ' ;, , costs little and Is pleasant to , , I■ , iiihf. Any one who lias Catar- , , i , rhal Deafness or head noises , , i . should give tills prescription a . . ;■ > trial. , , HOW TO BE SLIM If you are too fat and want . to reduce your weight IE or 20 , j pounds, don't starve and weaken your system, or thlnlc you must always be laughed at on account » of your fat. but go to any good druggist, and get a box of Oil of Korein cansules, taka one after each meal and one before retir ing at night. Weigh yourself once a week and note what a pleasant and re liable method this is for remov ing superfluous fat from any part I , of the body. ~ It costs little, Is absolutely ! harmless and I am sure a week's j i trial should convince anyone that , it is unnecessary to be burdened , with even a single pound of un sightly fat. selfish and thoughtful of you and others. The (iicat Mistake The girl who is reminded of her disagreeable inheritance from ances tors naturally does not feel herself responsible for her faults. Yet she is —for the divine inheritance is there, and if she is taught to cultivate that, no earthly traits can dominate or con- • trol her. It is this truth, madam, which you should impress upon your daughter's mind from the cradle lo womanhood. You should say to her: "You are God's creation, sent to earth to beautify and bless it with your sweet ness. I know you will be all that I want, you to he." The child used to love and praise feels the force of a merited reproof while it falls dead upon the ears of one accustomed to continual fault finding and nagging and ill-temper. Madam, if you are a mother, ask ; yourself what kind of memories you are building for the daughter to whom you gave birth. ,lt is not too late to begin and create a new impres sion of yourself. Simply because you are her mother cannot make her love I and reverence your memory unless you are worthy of both sentiments. if you have let your child slip too i far away from you to bring her back, j and if you have cultivated weeds in stead of fiowers, in her heart, at least 1 take the blame upon yourself and do not assume the air of a martyr 1 before the world. You were the architect of your daughter's character—before her birth and afterwards. You could liavo I made her anything you wished her to |be had love and patience been your I tool. 1 God' and a wise mother can over come heredity and environment and defy the devil and fate in educating a girl's heart. God always does His part by implanting the divine nature, but it is the mother's work to develop it. tEVEN IF YOU HAD A NECK At Long At TMt Feilsw, And Had SORE THROAT ' lOOWN rONSI LINE WOUUB QUICKLY WtUtVE IT. A quick, safe, soothing, healing, antiseptic relict ► for Soro Throat, briefly describes TONSIUNE. A small bottle of Tonsilina lasts longer than most any case of Sors Throat. TONSIUNE relieves Soro Mouth and Hoarsenesa and prevents Quinsy. , i 26c. aad 50c. Hospital Size SI.OO. All Drufglsts. THE TONSILINf COMPANY, . . . CanKn, Ohio. L i 1,11111 ■» H\ JR. Ask The 8 Jiwfc Merchants I For Whom I I |lB We Work As To Our i Ability We will gladly furnish you with the list, but here's a ' good plan: Notice the clean est windows— WE "DID" THEM. ; Harrisburg Window I Cleaning Co. OFFICIfi—BOB EAST ST. Bell Phone 031-J A— T EDUCATIONAL School of Commerce 1 Troup Building 15 So. Market Sq. Day and Night School 22d Year Commercial and Stenographic Courses i Bell Phone IDIG-J • Harrisburg Business College Day and Night Bookkeeping. Shorthand, Civil Service TlilrUetli Year J 320 Market St. Harrisburg, Pa. Tfce : OFFICE TRAINING SCHOOL • Kaufman BMg. 4 S. Market Sq. • Training That Secure* : Salary Increasing Positions ' j In the Office ' Call or s*nd to-day for Interesting ■ nooklet. "Tue Art of Gettlna Along la ' the World." Bell phone 694-R. Efficiency INCREASE the profits of your business by. , aiding: your skilled help , ers to make the best use ■ of their time. Use the proper blanks, blank books, stationery aiul ad vertising matter. Get the right kind of designing, engraving, printing and binding at the right prices from The Telegraph Printing Co. Federal Square Highest Prices Paid For Rags Metal of descriptions, rubber boots and shoes, auto tires, paper stock, books, magazines. Specially Interested la , Merchant Tailor Clips. Drop postal, or 1 call Bell phone 1047-M. Wagon will stop at your door. Keystone Iron and Metal Co. | —«SV BROAD STUIObX