10 KINGAN'S Sliced Bacon with Eggs A Satisfying Breakfast Dish, Served In The Best Families All Kingan'i Products Art U. S. ■' Government Inspected At All Good Dealers. In Air-Tight Boxes. A*k your Grocer or Butcher for lvlagsin product*. 11 Kingan Provision Co. \ 421-425 South Second Street HtRRISBI RG. PA. '•BUY IT BY NAME" C l =3E= 1 3 DOI.I.ARS FROM A MID-HOIE | use on short notice, laying It down like A farmer in a certain Southern State \ a carpet at the sound of a motor horn is raising: a unique crop from a mud- | in distress. For the nominal considera hole in front of his farm. The soft tion of sl—silver or paper, no checks spot is impassable for autos for sev- ! accepted—the car in question can shoot cral days after a rain, under ordinary by instead of bogging to the hubs. Then conditions, but the farmer frets cars the farmer's son gathers up the magic across and ekes out the egsr-money carpet and stores it against the pass by renting strips of canvas to the mo- I ing of the next transcontinental tour torist. lie keeps his canvas ready for Ist. flow to Operations These Three Women Tell How They Escaped the Dreadful Ordeal of Surgical Operations. Hospitals are great and necessary institutions, but they should be the last resort for women who suffer with ills peculiar to their sex. Many letters on file in the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., prove that a great number of women after they have been recommended to submit to an operation have been made well >by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Here are three such letters. All sick women should read them. Marinette, Wis.—"l went to the doctor and , || he told me I must have an operation for a female is trouble, and I hated to have it done as I had liceii H H.i| married only a short time. I would have terrible pains and my hands and feet were cold all the I I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Cem . .Jagg-ii ;! pound and was cured, and I feel better in every I •*. ; j way. I give you permission to publish ray name i I , il beeause I am so thankful that I feel well again." 1 — Mrs. Fp.ed Bf.hkke, Marinette, "Wis. Rjilß Detroit,Mich. —"When I first took Lydia E. ■■ Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I was so rim down with female troubles that I could not do anything, and our doctor said I would have to undergo an operation. I could hardly walk without help so when I read about the Vegetable Compound and what it had done for others I thought I would try it. I got a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and a package of Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanative Wash and used them according to directions. They helped me and today lam able to do all my work and I am well." —Mrs. Thos. Dwyer, 989 Milwaukee Ave., East, Detroit, Mich. Bellevue, Pa.—" I suffered more than tongue can tell with terrible bearing down pains and inflammation. I tried several doctors and they all told me the same story, that I never could get well without an operation and I just dreaded the thought of that. I also tried a good many other medicines that were recommended to me and none of them helped me until a friend advised me to give Lydia E. rink ham's Vegetable Compound a trial. The first bottle helped, I kept taking it and now I don't know what it is to be sick any more and I am picking up in weight. lam 20 years old and weigh 145 pounds. It will be the greatest pleasure to me if I can have the oppor tunity to recommend it to any other suffering woman."—Miss Ire:<e Froblicher, 1923 Manhattan St., North Side, Bellevue, Pa. If you would like special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co. (confidential ),Liynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read ana answered by a woman and held in strict confidence, < » CLIP THIS COUPON FOR L The American Government V < ' AND The Panama Canal * > , By FREDERIC J. HASKIJf. < 1 The Books That Show Uncle Sam at Work. t The Harrisburg Telegraph HOW TO GET THESE TWO BOOIC3 FOR »8 CENTS Cut C 1 this coupon from this paper, present It at our office with 9* | , cents, to cover the cost of production and distribution, and the #• ' | »et is yours. Fifteen cents extra by mail. ' SOME FACTS ABOUT THESE BOOKS Both are the same .J size and bound exactly alike in heavy cloth. Each has about ■» , *OO pages printed on fine book paper. Both are profuatty liius- \ trated with official etchings, drawings and maps. 2 tTO OUR HEADERS —We are distributing these patriotic I books solely because of their great educational merit and our I belief that they should be in every American home. £ FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH ' FEBRUARY 25, 19IC> WOMEN'S INTERESTS WHAT HAPPENED TO JANE j By Virginia Terhune Van de Water CHAPTER IA'II I Copyright. 1910, Star Company. The dreary supper was over and j Mary was clearing the dishes away, j •lane did not know how she had been I able to listen to and answer her hus-' band's occasional remarks. He was not in a pleasant mood this evening, yet he had not been cross to her. The | main object of his resentment at the I "present moment seemed to be tho ! weather. "It,® up a steady pour alii day," he mumbled, pushing: his chair' back with a ban* when lie had taken I his last swallow of coffee. "Just hear; that wind, will you!" "Ves—it's very strong," Jane re ( joined. "What are you shivering about?" he | ! asked brusquely. "Are you cold still?" | "A little," »he said, "and somehow •the rattling of t'-e windows and the; howling of the wind makes one feel! | cold, don't you think so?" She would not confess that it wan i ; her mental state that produced the .recurrent attacks of chilliness. lie, ! must not suspect this. "Well. I'm going to town to-mor row even if it rains pitchforks," Au-| sustus declared. "There are some things that shouldn't be put off, and ;my errand in town is one of them." i His wife was watching him, and she' [saw his keen glance at Mary, who was! now folding the supper cloth. The i woman did not raise her eyes, hut the i | fingers holding the cloth were clenched Iso that th« blood was driven from their tips, and they looked like bits of old ivory. "I'm one of the kind who makes up my mind and sticks to it,* he remark ed threateningly. "1 see that Jake brought the paper from the village this evening." Jane observed. "Is there any news?" She must change the subject or she might betray her knowledge of what was in her husband's mind. "Here you can see for yourself." he replied, tossing the paper to her, "I've j read all of it I want." He Rushes Off He rose, yawned, stretched and j went out into the hall, returning with , his raincoat on. "I'm just going out ito he sure Jake understands >out ; | having the horse for that early train," j Ihe said. "1 want to catch the 6.45." j "Incongruously, she remembered that Edward Sanderson used some-' jtlmes to take the t>.45 train back to i town on Monday mornings. It was odd that she should recall this now in the midst of the wild thoughts that had possessed her for the past twenty- ! four hours. Yet when she remein-1 bered his face and the look in his eyes l she was conscious of a moment's caim, its if she had come out of a vast \ ; turmoil into a quiet place. Then, as j phis place was not for her, she turned! 1 from it. She must try to read. She, j held the evening newspaper, although] she did not grasp the meaning of a single line on the sheet before her. She was listening to Mary's light move j rnents in the kitchen. She never rat jtled dishes in washing and putting jthem away, as many people did. J RUSSIAN STYLES ARE PREVAILING Child's Coat Will Be Just as Pretty in Spring Materials as Winter Ones By MAY MANTON 8852 (With Basting Line and Added Seam Alltrwancti) Child's Coat, 4 to 8 years. Here is a new coat for little girl*. It gives the Russian etfect that is so popular and it can be made to cover the frock or a little shorter. It is exceedingly fashion able, it is eminently becoming, and withal, it is absolutely simple. There are only the shoulder and under-arm seams to oe sewed, the belt holding the fulness. The pockets, of the patch sort, are applied over the coat on indicated lines. The collar can lie buttoned up about the throat or rolled open, as occasion requires. The deep cuffs make an especial appeal. On the figure, velveteen is trimmed with fur. In the small view is a suggestion for the use of cloth, such as chinchilla with simple stitched edges. TWO XK\V LIGHTHOUSES Cape St. Elias, on an inaccessible is land just off the coast of Alaska, has been a menace to navigation because of the adjacent high rocks. Its dan gers will be overcome by a high power lighthouse now being erected. The building is a strong concrete tower with the best illuminating apparatus known to the l.ighthouse Service. It includes a three-mile mantle light of 100,000 candlepower which will be clearly visible for a distance of fifteen and a half nautical miles. A lighthouse of similar im portance is being built upon Xavassa Rock, lying between Cuba and Haiti. Its tower will be 150 feet high and its light will he visible for twenty-four miles. It lies in the paths of vessels going front .Now York to the Panama 1 Canal and will safeguard a passage j which is coming into rapidly incrcas- I ill* ÜbU. 1 She glided instead of walking. Jane mused. Were all Indians—or people with Indian blood—as soft-footed as Mary? What self-control the woman had! She must be in an agony of wrath and suspense, although her face —as she waited on the table to-night— had been an expressionless mask. Yet how she must be suffering! ! "Well, that's settled!" Augustus an nounced, coming back into the house, shaking the wet from his coat. "It's a fierce storm. But I'm going to town just the same, Mary!" raising his voice, "I want breakfast at 6 o'clock. There was no. reply. Augustus frowned and strode to the kitchen door. "Did you hear me?" he demanded. "1 heard you," Mary said curtly. The frown was still on his face when he threw himself into a chair. "I'm tired," he said, yawning ngain and glancing at the clock. This kind ]of weather alwavs makes me sleepy. As we've all got to get tip early, we'd best go to bed soon. I'm going up at 9 o'clock." | "Very well." Jane rejoined. She was determined not to go into those upper roome alone. If Augustus re mained down here until midnight, she. too, would remain. Yet until now she had always been so glad to go up | without him. Strange that she should prefer the I presence even of this man to her nerv ous fears. For she hated him—hated him! She knew that now. All day she hed been hating him—wishing that she could pet away where she might never see him again! Mary Is Apathetic Mary came into the dining room, her bedroom lamp in her hand Jane looked up In surprise. "Are you going upstairs already?" she questioned kindly. She was very sorry for this poor victim of another's sin. "You got your work done quick ly." "Yes—when I have a thing to do I like to get it done quickly," Mary said. Still that dull, colorless voice! Au gustus scowled again, started as if to make some remark as the door cloßed behind the woman, then thought bet ter of it and remained silent. Jane continued to pretend to read [until the clock struck 9 and Augustus laid down the seed catalogue he had been studying. "Well, I'm going to bed," he growl ed. "And you'd better go, too." "Yes," she agreed; "I will." She followed him upstairs and into the great bedroom. "Good night!" she said here. "You know I told you I'd like to sleep in the little room to-night, for I don't feel well." "All right." he said. "It's a ridicu lous notion—but if you've got a cold, I'm not anxious to catch it." She had meant to close the door be tween the rooms. But, instead, after the lights were out and Augustus was asleep she arose softly and made sure that it was open. For she was afraid to be alone. (To be continued.) A FACE IN' THE NIGHT Out of the nlglit you crept. A form with a hardened face; Out of the night you crept. With shame and perhaps—disgrace. Was it bread iliat you wanted, bread? Was It hunger, alone, that led? Out of the dark you came. With eyes that stared far ahead; Out of the dark you came. With soul that semed almost —dead Our fire gleamed warm and bright. You shrank from its friendly light. / are unusual I Nature's gifts in that they have food value and^^l^' their juices are most refresh- lk • i • 1 A i **•% -U ;■•- ■ '..% ? '•* \ % 1 ing as a drink. A good 1 1 sized grapefruit is almost As beneficial \g&Pm % the juice of one will give as strengthening as they are If r m E=\ new life at any hour. luscious, grapefruit are favored Jlls| H V well known among hospitals. But only tree-ripened Jfv = EE: Florida medicinal the fruit is lacking in = 1 graptfrak'are proper- juiciness and « apply y£ 1 =z produced and sold ties flavor _ , Sealdsweet grape = by members of the Flor- fruit regularly; insist __ ~ ida Citrus Exchange, a co- at h° do so * Buy ky EE operative body of growers, formed EfCITRUS EXCHANGE 1 #m c u 1 a SaV r C * noney * = == for the mutual benefit of themselves | ■"%!( Sealdsweet oranges are of the same __. and consumers. They are pledged — 1 fine quality as Sealdsweet grape- __ to ship only tree-ripened fruit. r~l IOU take no chances. EJ All grapefruit sold under the Sealdsweet brand Jjl Booklct telling how to serve oranges and = E= have been picked and packed by white-gloved B ra P cfrmt and containing many recipes zzz workers—no child labor is employed in Ex-/ ty for their use in cookery and for confections, -r: == change packing houses. No human hand handsomely illustrated with color pictures = trCCS and of frult and w!th Srovc scenes, mailed free EE I to you anywhere 011 application. :ri i Florida Citrus Exchange ' | S; "We know what's good—it's MoxleyV' There is no food you can place on your table »£* more carefully made, more rigidly tested, \j£ more surely proven good and pure than is vj£ V FMKM.raaEMd 3>l LI 1 Vfc "Try it with your next meal." aW, Don't let prejudice waste money for you. If you don't know Moxley's Special Oleomargarine, you don't know how good this pure and delicious spread can be. bjal DR. WILEY, the Famous Chemist, testified before the Agricultural Committee, U. S. \ House of Representatives \ /VV-lILN —that he found nothing 4 \ X -js-fc objectionable in oleo- LVI ■ \ margarine and that he \ \ 2l{ found it palatable, pure \ A#* ' A V * n< * more ""tritiom than V s . \ t ********* . \ Wm. J. Moxley, Inc/^L|. FACTORY BRANCHES. \ t CA L yW 120-122 First Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Write for 64-p*ge boot 117 Callowhill St.. Philadelphia Pa. Of Famou* Rectpet—FßEl Into our home you stepped. Our home that was sweet and bright; There in our home you heard That wrong, when confessed, comes j right. Ah, God! It was small to do, The message we gave to you. Into the dark you went, In search of the vision true; Calmly you braved the dark. All ragged from cap to shoe. Your eyes searched the gloom ahead; God give you, to-night. His bread! —The Christian Herald. Elect Officers and Receive Names For Y. W. C. A. Board The sixty-first annual meeting of the Young: Men's Christian Association was held last evening, when officers and directors were elected for the present year. The officers elected follow: President. Charles A. Ivunkel; vice president. Benjamin M. Nead; record ing secretary. Wilmcr Crow: treasurer, \V. Grant Itaucli. and librarian. Frank lin J. Roth. Nominations were received for five directors, to serve three years, and two directors for two years, as follows: Three years, Henry W. Cough, George G. Carl. Albert K. Thomas, Robert A. Carl, Arthur H. Bailey: two years, K. J, Slacltpole, Jr., and John 11. Alricks. The next meeting of the association will be held Monday. March 15. when plans will probably lie started for the sixty-first anniversary celebration to be held later In the Spring. At this meet ing President Kunkel will announce his standing committees for the year. At the session last night Secretary Homer Black reported a successful year for the organization. The lotal at tendance for all clHasses held during the year was 9.0R0. A song service pre ; ceded the business meeting.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers