Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, February 23, 1916, Page 11, Image 11

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    OF INTEREST T
| WHAT HAPPENED TO JANE
!j
By Virginia Terhune Van de \Vater
. CHAPTER 17VI
(Copyright, 1916. Star Company)
It was still raining when darkness;
fell. Jane had remained upstairs all
day. She had not gone regularly to i
bed, but. after putting on a wrap-'
per, lay down in the small room and
> overed herself warmly. Her head i
ached too severely for her to read,
rind her nervousness would not al-!
low her to sleep. The day dragged j
drearily away, yet she dreaded the
approach of night.
At the noon dinner hour her hus- !
band had come upstairs to ask her I
if she did not want something to eat. j
She told him she did not, and that J
rest and quiet would be the best'
things for her. , '
"I don't see what alls you," Au- ,i
gustus had remarked. "If you'd 1
caught cold you'd be hoarse, it seems
to me."
"Perhaps I would." she aeknow!. .;
edged, "but I think I'll be all right
by evening." 1
She was not all right by evening, j 1
This morning she had longed to be
alone; now, as the shadows settled
in the corners of her room, she had 1
a strange shrinking from solitude.
She was frightened unspeakably
frightened. If she could only sleep :
and forget the horror that had 1
claimed her for its own!
She wondered if this was the way!
people felt when they were going!
crazy. What was that awful con- j
versation she had heard last night? 1
Oh, yes—it had been about a poor
iittle child.
Then, feverishly, she would strive
to forget the sentences she had just ;;
recalled. Over and over again she
would go through the mental process
until her brain seemed 011 lire.
She realized that for some nights
she had not slept for more than two i
or three hours and that last night she
had not once lost consciousness. No !
wonder she felt unlike herself.
Fear Enters In
And now she began to be afraid of
herself. She started convulsively at
a knock of the door leading from the 1
large bedroom. The only entrance to :
this small room was through the bed- \
chamber that she and Augustus «har- 1
ed —the bedroom that she hated. 1
"Come in!" She hoped she spoke 1
naturally. ~ |
The door was opened slowly, and;
in the dim light Jane discerned Mary,;
bearing a small tray. Ii
"I've brought you a cup of tea," :
the woman said in a dull monotone, j 1
Somehow it made the listener feel j
that the speaker had been drugged
t>r self-hypnotized into a numbed con
dition. And yet—there was a pecu- \
liar sound to the voice that alarmed
the young wife. It was as if there
was a menace lurking somewhere —a 1
menace held in check by this strange I
creature standing before iter.
"Let's have some light, please," :
Jatie suggested, sitting up.
Mary proceeded to iight the candle '
on the bureau.
"The glare from the. light might
make your head worse." she ex
plained briefly. "You'd better try to ;
drink this tea."
"Thank you!" Jane swallowed with
S Why those Pains? "
* = *
M Here is a testimonial unsolicited
K M
18 be adverti«ed on every street IUIH
M corner. The man or woman
that has rheumatism and fails t J®! w
Minpnj jilSili'l to keep and use Sloan's Lini-
Ml! jj meat ia like a drowning man
wii ii I I refusing a rope."— A.J. Van
H I ■ Dyke, Lakewttd, N. J.
I J Sloan's fjy
|y y i
SORE'/\usdpU
f ~
The New Labor Law
The new Workmen's Compensation Act is now in ef
fect. If you are an employer of labor you Ishould 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 Printing Co.
PRINTING—BINDING—DESIGNING
PHOTO-ENGRAVING
HARRISBURG, PENNA.
I _ _ _
vjgjg|pfe) BBOW
• —NOW!
D. B . 07? ei/'ery drop —^
WEDNESDAY EVENING, ' TELEGRAPH
Lan effort. "It is kind of you to bring
1 this up. Mary," she said.
"I'm sorry you're sick," Mary re
joined. "1 guess you had a bad night,
didn't you? Did any noises disturb
I you ?"
Jane did not look up. She felt the
i black eyes fixed upon her and she
dreaded the suspicion that she fancied
gleamed them.
"Oh, when I once get to sleep
nothing disturbs jne," she evaded
"And you must have come in very
softly."
"I did."
That was all, except that the wo
man stood watching her employer's
wife. Jane's hand shook so that, the
cup she held rattled against her teeth
as she drained the contents. She
laughed apologetically.
"It's funny," she said with an effort
to speak as if amused, "to see the way
my hand shakes."
"No, it's not funny," Mary contra
dicted, still in that dull tone, "It's
natural."
Did Slic Suspect?
What did she suspect?* How much
did this weird being know of what
was in the mind of the other? Jane
forced herself to glace at. Mary, but
she could not see the keen eyes, for
the housekeeper stood with her back
to the light. As she moved the candle
flame cast huge and fantastic shadows
of her on the wall.
"I'm coming down to supper," .Tane
announced impulsively, sitting up 011
the side of the bed. She was all at
once afraid of this little room with
the shadows in it. She was still more
afraid of the big room beyond into
whose dark depths she could now
look.
Mary picked up the tray from the
table by the bed and started for the
door. Here she stopped.
"All right," she said,"if you think
it's going to be any easier for you
down there than up here ln the
dark—why. come on doWn. Shall I
leave the candle?"
"Oh, ves, please do," Jane replied
quickly.' "I'm tired of being up here,"
she added by way of explanation.
As soon as she was alone she lighted
the lamp. She also shut the door of
communication with the other room.
She found it hard to unbutton her
wrapper and hook her dress, lor her
hands trembled all the time.
When at last she was dressed she
set her teeth and opened the door
into the large chamber. She was
afraid to go across that dark space
without a iight of some kind. She
did not put out the lamp, but left
it burning on the bureau. Then,
picking up the candle, she hurried
through the big bedroom, staring
timidly at the gloom all about her —
a wavering gloom • that seemed to
threaten her.
She remembered that when she
had come here to live she had won
dered if the first Mrs. Reeves had
died in this room and if her ghost
might ever visit the place.
Hut to-night it was not the first
Mrs. Reeves' ghost that Jane was
afraid of.
(To Be Continued.)
FLOUNCED SKIRT
FOR SUMMER WEAR
The Daintiest of Thin Frocks
Will Bo Made in This
Fashion
By MAY MANTON
SS6I ( With Basting Line and Added
Seam Allowance) Hounced Skirt, 24
to 3.2 waist.
This is one of ihe prettiest skirts ol
I the season for the dance and for all even
i ing occasions, it is very simple too, con
sisting of only three straight flounces that
are arranged over a plain skirt on indi
cated lines. The pattern gives the seami
and the basting line and it is necessarj
only to sew on this basting line and follow
directions carefully to be sure of success
In one view, the flounces are of lace ovei
i a foundation of satin; in another, they ar«
i made of marquisette with bands of saiir
and they arc appropriate for every ma
terial that is thin enough to be gathered,
The skirt is a charming one, not alone foi
evening occasions, but also for the
designed for dressy afternoon occasions
, and indeed for any occasion that allows
1 of the use of thin material.
For the medium size will he needtd,
! 2J4 yds. of material 36 or 44. in. wide for
; the skirt, 8?i yds. of flouncing 20 in. wide.
I ° r SJ-i yds. of material 36 in. wide,
yd«. 44 in. wide for the flounces.
The pattern No. 8861 is cut in sizes
I fro.n 24 to 32 in. waist measure. It will
be mailed to any address by the Fashion
Department of this paper, on receipt of
ten ccnti
Brother Thought Dead Many
Years Found in Indiana
Special to the Telegraph
Columbia, Pa., Feb. 23. Michael
; Melbert, of New Castle, Intl., Is hero
i visiting his brother, Peter Melbert,
' and a sister, Mrs. Mary Schickling.
The latter is critically ill, and it was
on that account that Mr. Melbert
came Kast. Thirty-seven years ago,
Mr. Melbert left these parts for the
j West, and having lost track of the
I members of his family supposed them
all dead. Last Sunday, Mrs. .Tames K.
: Swartz, at whose home Mr. Melbert's
1 .sister lives, sent a telegram to New
j Castle, having acted on a suggestion
made by her mother, -who was in a
j delirium, that her brother was still
alive and living in Indiana. After
j considerable difficulty, the supposed
address was obtained and in response
to the message, the brother appeared.
Mr. Melbert is a prosperous retired
j farmer and is 73 years old.
VISIT
National Cash Register Show. 103
Market street, Harrlsburg, Pa.; prices
$45 to $960. Sold on easy monthly
payments. Costs nothing to investi
gate. N. R. Black, sales agent.—Ad
vertisement.
ANNUAL MKETINC
The annual meeting of the board
of directors and actiye members of the
Children's Industrial Home, will be
held at the Y. M. C. A. Friday morning,
■at 10 o'clock. (jtßcers will be elected
| and reports presented.
INJVUY CAUSES DEATH
Special to the Telegraph
Marietta, Pa., Feb. 23. William
I Little. 78 years old, died last evening
I from injuries received when ho fell on
! Christmas Day, 1914, and injured the
remaining portion of his left leg that
I he partly lost in an accident at Corn-
I wall about 20 years ago.
WHY WOMEN
WRITE LETTERS
To Lydia E. Pinkham Medi
cine Co.
Women who are well often ask "Are
the letters which the Lydia E. Pinkham
Medicine Co. are continually publishing,
genuine?" "Are they truthful?"
" Why do women write such letters? "
In answer we say that never have we
published a fictitious letter or name.
Never, knowingly, have we published
nn untruthful letter, or one without the
full and written consent of the woman
who wrote it.
The reason that thousands of women
from all parts of the country write such
grateful letters to the Lydia E. Pink
ham Medicine Co. Is that Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound has brought
health and happiness into their lives,
once burdened with pain and suffering.
It has relieved women from some of
the worst forma of female ills, from dis
placements, inflammation, ulceration,
irregularities, nervousness, weakness,
stomach troubles and from the blues.
It is impossible for any woman who
is well and who
has never suffered SI |(f
to realize how these If}/ A
poor, suffering wo- f■_ %ji \ J
men feel when re- I lK 11
stored to health; II y II
their keen desire to r\ V | y-p J k
help other women Vv)\ ffi&jtKey///
who are suffering as
1 they did.
GEORGE A6NEWOUMBEM.AIN
COPY&ZG-ffT JWTfiE C&N3VJ3Y. CO.
SYNOPSIS
CHAPTKR I—Alan Wayne is sent j
away from Red Hill, his home, by his |
| uncle, J. Y., as a moral failure. Clem
runs after him in a tangle of short j
skirts to bid him good-by.
CHAPTKR II —Captain Wayne tells \
I Alan of the failing of the Waynes,
ii'lem drinks Alan's health on his
I birthday.
CHAPTER llT—Judge Healey buys
a picture for Alix Lansing. The judge
defends Alan In his business with his :
i employers.
CHAPTER IV—Alan and Alix meet
at sea, homeward bound, and start a
flirtation, which becomes serious. I
CHAPTER V—At home, dance Ster- j
ling asks Alan to go away from Alix. i
Alix is taken to task by Gerry, her
i husband, for her conduct with Alan
! and defies him.
CHAPTER VI —Gerry, as he thinks,
\ sees Alix and Alan eloping, drops
everything, and goes to Pernambnco.
CHAPTER VYl—Alix leaves Alan on
the train and goes home to find that Ger
ry has disappeared.
CHAPTER Vlll—Gerrv leaves Pernam- '■
buco and goes to Piranhas. On a canoe
trip he meets a native giri.
CHAPTER IX—The judge fails to trace
Qerry. A baby is born to Alix.
Almost at the end of the tongue of
sand stood a girl. Her liair was blow
ing around her slim shoulders. Over j
one of them she gazed, startled, at
Gerry. He drew back horribly con- !
fused and mumbling apologies that she
could not have understood even if she
could have heard them. Then she
plunged with a clean long dive into the j
river. But before she plunged she i
laughed. Gerry heard the laugh. With
an answering cry he hurled himself
into the water and swam as he had
never swum before.
The girl had farther to go across the
litlle bay, but she could beat Gerry
swimming and she did. Only she failed
to use her head and. when she found
bottom, started to wade. Wading is
slow work in water waist high. Gerry
stuck to his long powerful stroke. As
the girl reached the'bank the strong
fingers of his right hand closed on her
bare ankle.
Gerry's cablegram to liis mother was
forwarded to Red Hill on the very day •
that the judge had gone to tell them j
that no trace could be found of the
missing man. The judge was more
down-hearted than ever over Gerry's
disappearance and when he found the
two women radiating happiness and
excitement his heart sank lower still.
"I haven't any good news," he said
ruefully before he alighted.
"Tease him." said Alix in a low
tone to Mrs. Lansing.
But Mrs. I.ansing had found new
lines in the judge's tired face and she
whispered back. "I can't." She put the
cablegram In the judge's hand.
"What's this?" he said and read it. j
Then he gave a War-whoop, caught I
Alis around the waisi and kissed her. j
The Firs were gay that night—gay '
"with the joy of happy people happily j
planning. In a month, say at the most,
two months. Gerry could be here, j
Spring would have coiue. The Hill I
would be decked out in full regalia of J
leaf and blossom. It would be in full |
commission to meet him. They looked j
at Alis and Alix seemed to look at
herself. He would come into his own j
as never before.
!' The judge undertook the cabling, i
He cabled Gerry and the message was
(reported undelivered. Then he cabled !
the American consul. There followed
a long series of messages; first quick
aod hopeful, then lagging hut not
j doubtful, then a wearying silence of
weeks, ending with the inevitable
blow. Gerry had been traced to the ,
i San Francisco river. The envoy sent
: on his track by the Judge's orders
had reached Piranhas to find the little
town in apathetic wonder over the dis
, covery of Gerry's canoe stranded three
; miles down the river. The paddle was j
still in the canoe and a suit of pyja
mas. No further trace of Gerry had
( been found. His body had not been re- 1
covered. The people said it yas not 1
unusual. He had undoubtedly been at
tacked by tiger fish. In that case his
: bones would have been stripped of
flesh. It was impossible to drag the
great river.
The judge hid in his heart the har
rowing details. To Mrs. Lansing he
told the central fact. She was struck
dumb with grief and then she thought
l of Alix. Almost hastily they decided
| that it was not a time to tell Alix and
during long months they put her off
with false news of the search. They
carried it farther and farther into the
wilds of the subcontinent. The coun
try was so vast, there was no telling
when the messenger would finally
come np with Gerry.
Alix bore the strain with wonder
ful patience. The truth was that her
thoughts were not on Gerry. Some
thing greater than Gerry was claiming
all her faith—all her strength of body
and soul. She did not talk. She was
holding that final communion with her
Innermost self with which a woman
dedicates her body to pain and sacrl
-1 flee. Alix was not afraid. In those
days the spirit of the race—her race
of pioneers—shone from her steady
eyes and even put courage in those
I about her.
Only when the ordeal WHS over aud
an heir to the uouhc ot' Lansing had
raised his lusty voice in apparent rage
at having been born to so small a
kingdom, did the frail Alix of other
days come back. As she lay, pale and
( thin, but with the glorious light of
supreme achievement in her eyes, Mrs.
Lansing went on her knees beside the
bed and sobbed, "Oh, Alix, T love you
so, I love you sol"
Alix smiled. Slowly she reached one
hand over and placed it in Mrs. Lan
sing's. "You are crying because you
, are a granny now," she said, softly,
playfully.
Then came the day when Alix was
strong—strong enough. Mrs. I.ansing
told her in a choked voice what, they
knew and what everyone believed.
She cried softly in Alix' arms.
"Poor mother!" said Alix, her lips
against the wet cheek. "How strong
, you've been! How you hid it from
me! What a burden to carry in your
heart, and siniie. But listen, dear
mummy. You are all wrong. Perhaps
I would not have known it if you
had told me—then—but I know it now.
' Gerry is not dead. There is no river
j that can drown Gerry."
"My dear." said Mrs. Lansing, fright
ened, "you must not think that. It's
always the best swimmers that risk
the most."
"It isn't that he can swim," said
Alix. Her eyes turned slowly till they
| rested on her son. Iler bosom swelled
at the memory of the travail—the ter
rible travail that she had borne, not
for the child alone, nor for Gerry
alone, but for them both. "Swimming
has nothing to do with it. Somehow
I know that Gerry la all right, some
where on this little world. Only, dear,"
and here her voice faltered and her
eyes shone with tear«. "this little
world seems mighty big when hearts
are far apart."
Alix clung to her belief. So strong
was her faith that Mrs. I.ansing be
came infected, but the judge held out
against them. "My heart is with you,"
he said, at the end of months, "but
my bead won't turn. A naked man
even in Soulh America would have
: caused remark. Why shouldn't he
have come back for his clothes, for his
money? After all, he wasn't a fugi
tive from justice. He was a man
wandering over the earth in pursuit of
a mere whim and a whim doesn't last
! forever."
Alix interrupted him. "Judge, I
have never been angry with you. We
all owe you too much. But If you
ever say 'was' about Gerry again—"
She stopped and bit her lip but her
eyes spoke for her.
I "My girl." said the judge and
i only his color showed that he was
! hurt, "don't be angry with It
; shall be as you say. I've only been
trying to save you from years of
weary waiting. If yon have the cour
age to wait for sorrow, I shall wait
too."
Alix kissed him. "There," she said,
| "I'm sorry I was rough."
"You! rough!" laughed the judge.
J Then he jumped up. "I'm forgetting
I my duties. 1 have a guest of my very
| own at Maple House and I must go to
j him."
A few weeks before. Hon. Percy
! Collingeford had looked up the judge,
j It was .as much a pleasure to the
j young man as a duty he owed to his
I father,- whose friend the judge had
been for many years.
I Collingeford was no stranger to
| America but he knew far more about
dodging arroyos in New Mexico on a
cow pony than he did about dodging
1 the open trenches and debris of Fifth
avenue on the trail of a tea-party. He
was an Englishman, a younger son
with enough money to put him above
the remittance class, and he was pos
sessed of far more intelligence than
he had been born with, for, from his
youth up. he had sought out experi
ence in many places. He came back
from the Klondike with more money
I than he needed for his passage but
only a few kindred spirits knew that
he had made it bammeriug the piano
| 'ln The Fallen Star of Hope. He had
i the English gentleman's common
, creed: ride straight, shoot straight, tub
often and talk the king's English. That
creed fulfilled, nothing else seemed
to worry him.
He was dining with the judge at
the club one night when the name of
Wayne—Alan Wayne—floated over oc
casionally from a neighboring table.
Later as tbey sat over their coffee and
cigars Collingeford said abruptly, "I
know a chap named Wayne."
"So?" said the judge.
"Heard those people mention Alan
Wayne," explained Collingeford. "I
wonder if it was the same one—Ten
Percent Wayne of Africa."
"That's the one," said the judge
and watched Collingeford's face.
"Hum." said Collingeford. "When I
saw Wayne he was in shirt sleeves
and a battered sun helmet. There are
some men that won't shake hands
with him, but I'm not one of them."
It was then that the judge decided
to take Collingeford to Maple House
for over Sunday.
(To be continued.)
KNC.AGEMKNT ANNOUNCED
Special to the Telegraph
Elizabethtown. Pa.. Feb. 23. The
'engagement of Miss Ray Treichler to
4 William Klein has been announced.
CUTTING SOCIAL TAPE
By Frederic J. Haskin
[Continued from editorial Page.]
;to meet informally and become real
friends instead of knowing each oilier
merely as manikins in the official
j punch and judy show.
| The tendency to stay awhile and
I talk, instead of merely sending: the
| footman in with a card, has led to the
revival of the testable, which had long;
been discarded by official society.
Following the White House precedent
| of really serving something: to eat in
stead of merely a nibble and a napkin. .
these teatables are being more and!
more generously laden.
"Tlie "regular feed" is also a promi-1
jnent feature this season of the com
ing out parties of the numerous Wash
ington debutantes. Kach official per-1
son who comes to Washington seems
1 to bring about five persons of the fein- j
; inine gender, most of whom are more
j or less burdened with social ambition.!
| Naturally, this heavy importation of |
j feminine loveliness causes a chronic j
stringency in the man market. The j
j lirst requisite of social success for a i
: debutante In Washington is a follow->
jing of males who own dress suits and |
can dance. As a result, the Washing- '
j ton young man is one of the most
, fussed over, overfed and overappre-1
ciated individuals in the country, llcj
j has become quite a distinct genus, who |
must be seen to be appreciated—and
'is not always appreciated then. This
| is evidenced by the fact that the wives
!«>f some foreign diplomats have prac
tically given up formal entertaining I
(because of their inability to appreciate
| the unconventional hilarity of the
young men who swarmed their draw
ing rooms and could not always be
j identified by means of the invitation
list.
| Most of these volunteer society men
I are college boys, young fellows in the
'government employ, students for mili
tary examinations and others of a
i carefree and happy-go-lucky status
who are naturally inclined to regard
| society as their oyster.
NEW NOTION IT K M
The Eureka Notion Company 'is
| the name of a now ITarrisburg firm
| which will shortly start business at
{lOlO North Third street. This eom-
I pany will do a wholesale business. The
j officers are: President, E. 1.. Boak;
I vice-president, E. B. Seidle; treasurer,
jH. J. Forr.walt; secretary, Thomas J.
George; assistant treasurer, A. W.
I Dechant.
■ A I
■ Remember Sentane! g||
BK Physic, Liver Toner, I
Blood Purifier
I The Sentinel Remedies Co.^B
(Incorporated; UM
CO6 Union Cent. Bldg.;
QUICK RELIEF FROM
CONSTIPATION
Get Dr. Edwards'
Olive Tablets
I That is the joyful cry of thousands
i since Dr. Edwards produced Olive Tab-
I lets, the substitute for calomel.
Dr. Edwards, a practicing pbvsician
'for 17 years and calomel's old-time
enemy, discovered the formula for
I Olive Tablets while treating patients
for chronic constipation and torpid
' ! livers.
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do not
contain calomel, but a healing, sooth
-1 ins vegetable laxative.
No griping is the "keynote" of these
little sugar-coated, olive-colored tab
lets. They cause the bowels and liver
to act normally. Tlicy never force
them to unnatural action.
! If you havo a "dark brown mouth"
f now and then —a bad breath—a dull,
tired feeling—sick headache—torpid
liver and are constipated, you'll lind
quick, sure and only pleasant results
from one or two little Dr. Edwards'
Olive Tablets at bedtime.
Thousands take one or two every
I night just to keep right. Try them.
I 10c and -5c per box. All druggists.
, The Olive Tablet Company, Colum
-1 bus, O.—Advertisement.
FEW FOLKS IMF
GRAY HAIR NOW
' I
Druggist Says Ladies Are Using
Recipe of Sage Tea and
Sulphur.
i Hair that loses its color and luster,
■ | or when it fades, turns gray, dull and
' | lifeless, is caused by a lack of sulphur
1 ! in the hair. Our grandmother made
1 up a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur
, to keep her locks dark and beautiful,
and thousands of women and men who
value that even color, that beautiful
[ dark shade of hair which is so at
, tractive, use only this old-time recipe.
( Nowadays we get this famous mix
ture by asking at any drug store for a
1 50-cent bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and
Sulphur Compound," which darkens
j j the hair so naturally, so evenly, that
i nobody can possibly tell it lias been
1 ( applted. Besides, it takes off dandruff,
stops scalp itching and falling hair.
You just dampen a sponge or soft
brush with it and draw this through
your hair, taking one small strand
at a time.. By morning the gray hair
disappears; but what delights the
ladies with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur
is that, besides beafttifully darkening
' the hair afler a few applications, it
( also brings back the gloss and luster
and gives it an appearance of
abundance.—Adv.
a friend to
tender skins
Any soap will clean your skin—
a bar of laundry soap will do if you
do not care what becomes of your
complexion. But you know that
laundry soapcontaius liarsli, drying
alkali that would ruin your skin and
hair, so you never think of it
for your toilet.
Many ill-made toilet soaps contain
this same injurious alkali. Kesinol
Soap contains absolutely no free
alkali, and to it is added the sooth
ing, healing Kesinol medication,
which doctors have used for over 20
years in treating skin troubles. Thus
it comforts tender skin®, and helps
nature clear the complexion and
keep the hair rich, lustrous and fr;c
from dandruff. Sold by all druggists.
Rrsir.ol Shaving »S7/W* aho coniait's t7ie Res
ittcl v;tdilation? waking it most soothing to
Pimples Disappear 1
There is one remedy that seldom
falls to clear away all pimples, black
heads and skin eruptions and that
makes the skin soft, clear and healthy.
Any druggist can supply you with
zemo, which generally overcomes all
skin diseases. Acne, eczema, itch,
pimples, rashes, black heads in most
i cases give way to zeino. Frequently,
minor blemishes disappear overnight.
| Itching usually stops instantly. Zemo
is safe, clean, easy to use and de
! pendable. It costs only 2." ie; an extra
! large bottle, 51.00. It will not slain,
, is not greasy or sticky and is positive
ly safe for tender, sensitive skins.
• Zemo. Cleveland.
TTThe^INET
From sources of informa
tion available it look,s as if
April 1 will conic without a
new agreement between
I operators and miners.
Whether this will precipitate
a strike is a difficult ques
tion to answer. Perhaps
an automatic cessation of
work until an agreement is
reached. Jn any event the
cost of any concessions will
have to be paid by the con
sumer.
Scarcity of labor owing to
the war and shortage of cars
to transport coal to the mar
ket have made the situation
bad enough, let alone threats
of a strike. ,
Buy coal now while there
is plenty of it available.
Thousands of tons now
| stored in our yards.
H. M. KELLEY & CO.
1 North Tlilrd Street
Tenth nnd State Street*
When
Planning
Your Building
I don't consider reducing
the cost of using inferior
lumber.
Even when this is not
seen, the lumber should
be sound and good qual
ity.
"Cheap" lumber is re
sponsible for many of the
unsightly cracks that ap
pear on the walls.
United Ice & Coal Co.
I'ornter and Condeii St».
RUSH!!
Our Quick Delivery
Anything, anywhere, any time.
That's the way we deliver goods—
with the greatest possible rapidity.
Order anything by mail or tele
phone or messenger and tell us
when you want it and we will have
it there when you say.
No extra charge for this service.
FORNEY'S DRUG STORE
31 N. Second St.
i
EDUCATIONAL
School of Commerce
Troup Building 15 So. Market Sq.
Day and Night School
22(1 Vear
Commercial and Stenographic Course*
Bell I'lioue l'Jl(i-J
Harrisburg Business College
Day and Night
Bookkeeping. Shorthand, Civil Scrtfc*
Thirtieth Year
329 Market St. llarrUburg, Pa.
The
OFFICE TRAINING SCHOOL
Kaufman Bldg. 4 8. Market So.
Training That Stcures
Salary Increasing Positions
In the Office
Call or stnd to-day for IntereatlßK
nooklet. "The Art of Gettlna Aloua la
1 ike world." Bell idiom l)t>it, "- 4
11