OF INTEREST TO THE WOMEN THE STRUGGLES OF A WIFE By Virginia Terhune Van de Water CHAPTER XV I (Copyright, 1916, Star Company.) Thp two teachers whom Grace Webb invited came to supper on Sunday j The evening passed so pleasantly that j toward the end of the week Grace sug- i Bested that Miss Perkins, the assist ant school principal, be asked to come ! * to dinner soon and bring her brother, j a man of forty. "I know you and father will like them both." the girl said. "I have met Sir. Perkins several times when . he has come to the school to speak J to his sister about some matter of j business. He is homely, but has lots of sense." Myra was somewhat appalled at the idea of entertaining guests to meals twice within a fortnight, but she offered no protest. This was the kind of things she had wanted Grace to do: therefore she must put the thought of rigid economy aside on such occasions. "Will next Thursday night do?" Grace was asking. "Make it Wednesday, dear," Myra auggested. "Thursday is Lizzie's even ing out next week." Miss Perkins and her brother prov ed indeed to be delightful compan ions. Mr. Perkins was a teacher In one of the city colleges, and was, as Grace had already said, a man of cul ture and breeding. It did Myra's heart icood to see how her husband unbent toward these guests. He was more ; talkative and cheerful than for many j months. For his sake, as well as on Grace's account, they must entertain : oftener. A Now Experience This thought was in her mind as i she sank peacefully to sleep that 1 night after their new acquaintances j had departed. But two hours later | she awoke with the now familiar; qualm of fear at the thought that phe was fe-pending more than was j right for living expenses. She lay, until in the dim light of j the winter morning a nearby clock i boomed out seven. Liszie was still in bed. and eved ' her mistress with stolid indifference. "Sure. It's sick T am this mornin'." i she announced lugubriously. "I tried ; to get up and dress, but me head hurt j me that bad I had to lie down again. You'll have to get the breakfast. Later, j maybe, I'll be better." • 115 DEATHS IN MARCH One hundred and fifteen deaths were reported in the city during March this year—eleven more than for the same month in 1915. Of this total pneumonia and nephritis were responsible for 13 and 11 respectively while 9 persons died from tuberculosis. Measles was directly responsible for one death, and scarlet fever six. March, 1915, no deaths resulted from either of these diseases. One person was, \llled during the month in a railroad i iccldent and another death was «used by burns. jj Relieves itching gjfeg I almost instantly §§ Resinoi Ointment, with Resinol _ si Soap, usually stops itching at once. WOSBFj W cases of ectema, rash or similar dis- >,/V* g tressing skin or scalp eruption, not H due to serious internal conditions, j-, % Physicians have prescribed Resinol v-. ■>/ 'j j§ Ointment regularly for over twenty !S_ \ sadgy* H years, so you need not hesitate to j/'/ Every druggist Resinol Ointment and .= —/</ 1 "Don't Peel Your Face," Says Beauty Doctor, "If You Want a Good Complexion ENGLISH BEAUTY SPECIALIST GIVES SOME TIMELY ADVICE TO AMERICAN WOMEN For centuries past U has been real ized that the homely woman with deep lines and furrows, has to tight an un equal battle with her younger and bet ter looking sister. Therefore it Is not to be wondered at, said a noted Beauty Specialist recently that many have res orted to annoying and even dangerous experiments, trying to regain their for mer youthful appearance. Beauty is unquestionably woman's birth-right and she should be encourag ed to do everything that she possibly ■ an to enhance and preserve the charms that nature has given her. However, discretion and good judgment should be used at all times. To see women resort to face peeling either by the Surgeon's knife or with preparations containing mercury, would be humorous were it not such a serious matter. Thousands of women know to their sorrow that face peeling is not onlv humiliating to a marked degree but it is also positively dangerous. Blotchv faces and ruined complexions • sre too often the result of these barbar ous methods. If you want to renew your complexion or get rid of wrinkles, pim ples, black heads, lines or furrows, here is a simple, safe and reliable test that you can make that will cost you little and is known as the "Nourishing Pro cess" which Instead of peeling your face will renew the life and activity of the skin and will bring to any woman un der years of age as fine, pink and delicate complexion, free from lines and wrinkles as any woman could pos sibly wish for. Tlet;e Is the test. "Take your hand mi'-ror to the window and examine rour face closely, noticing carefully the'size of your pores, the depth 'Of your wrinkles and your natural tendency'to freckle or facial blemishes. Next ap ply a generous amount of Am-o-nized Cocoa over the entire fac,. and neck leave on for five or ten minutes and J then remove by wiping with a soft dry I FRIDAY EVENING, HARRJSBURG &&£& TELEGRAPH APRIL 7, 1916. There was no time to stand par leying. so telling the girl to "try to sleep," the mistress dressed quickly, and. after calling her husband and daughter, repaired to the kitchen, heated a dry cereal, made the coffee, toasted some bread and fried some bacon and eggs. All was ready by the time that Horace had taken his scat at the table and looked over the mall which his wife had laid by his plate five minutes ago. A sigh from the man broke the si lence. "Well! It will have to wait!" he exclaimed, as the result of his mus ings. "What, dear?" "The rent," he replied tersely. "I've just got a second reminder that It's overdue. I hoped to pay it be fore now, but I had to meet my Insur ance, you know." He paused. Yes. Myra knew that there had been the insurance, and she recalled with a throb of grati tude that she had returned the money she had borrowed from him. the money that he had laid aside for that very same insurance. How glad she was that she had done this! But her sensation of triumph was short-lived, for her husband's next speech crushed it. The Hills Increase "I had the money for that, and paid it, of course. I never let my Insurance wait," he continued. "But —well, to tell the truth, Myra, the housekeeping bills—T mean, the bills for provisions, are larger than they have been heretofore, but I don't see why. Dear knows we live plain ly enough! I did not mean to mention this increased expense—but it's there. "Then there have been several arti cles of dress I've had to buy if I would look decent—shoes and gloves, for instance —and altogether It's been Impossible for me to save the full amount for the rent. Yes. it'll have to wait. But It's unpleasant to be dunned." Was all of her life to be like this? Why must she always struggle and strive, working as hard as he did-, and yet he be the one to receive all the sympathy, all the appreciation? Then she reproached herself sharp ly for her bitter musings as she heard her daughter's step in the hall. (To Be Continued.) HCRLEI) FROM TRICK James Henderson, aged 19, of 1317 Liberty street, baggageman at the Pennsylvania Railroad station, was hurled from a truck yestterday when It started suddenly, sustaining a deep gash over the right eye. Physi cians at the Harrisburg Hospital are not positive whether the sight will be impaired. GIRL IIAS AI'PENIWCITIS Dora Kassen, aged 14, daughter of George Kassen, 1909 North Seventh street, underwent an operation for ap pendicitis at the Harrisburg hospital. I " T delightful surprise will await Wit"; »i,.,-' aVe ii Seen hundreds of women Yi VK sallow wrinkled and tiabbv those with enlarged pores and fhoc ?i® faces entirely remove i }! £ blemishes and more than double the beauty of their complexion, simply J . | n ® ? ),* e Am-o-nized Cocoa once a ..PV.'il eJ y a f. l have explained above . and this, after they have in some cases been treated by expensive Beauty Spe , cialists without obtaining any benefit. In many instances women can make themselves look from 10 to years i ;i? ; u "f ' r - v V 1 e Properties contained in P, • sentle. nourishing vet effective emollient. Many a woman has obtained high social position or secured advancement In business ahead of her unfortunate rival who did not under , stand the power of beauty. .. Beauty may be only skin deep, but the woman who has improved her com plexion and kept her face soft, white i and free from wrinkles by the use of Am-o-nized Cocoa has an attractive skin that suggests a refinement which places her in a higher class than that occupied by the careless woman who has been indifferent to the development ; or her personal charms. Beauty is wo man s birtli-right and nature's "greatest ' , .*l. enhance this charm Is Am-o nized Coeoa Cream. i NOTE:—Am-o-niaed Cocoa, rccom j mended above by Winifred Grace For i rest, the noted English Beauty .Special ist, is one of tlie newer forms of Co i coa cream. Unlike the older products it ' is pleasant to use, has a soft, fragrant odor ni"' • used almost exclusively for massage ami facial treatment in the r.nglish Beauty Parlors, where refine ment and good judgment prevail. Amer ican women who are treated bv Benutv j Specialists should insist that no other i emollient be used on their faces for I massage. Superfluous hair ami ruined | complexions too often result from the j use of cheap massage creams. Am-o nlzc.d Cocoa can alwnvn he obtained I from all first class druggists and is so j easy to apniy that the average woman I has no need for the services of a Bcatuv I fcfp.'ciallst.—Advertisement. " ' < 'REAL MIDDY SUIT FOR YOUNGER SET Striped Skirt With Plain Blouse Makes Stunning Little Suit By MAY MAN TON 9005 (Jft'ith Basting Line and Added Seam Allowance) One-Piece Dress, for Misses and Small Women, 16 and 18 years. i Everything that suggests the middy finds a welcome with the younger con-1 tingent. This blouse, while not strictly 1 in that style, suggests the idea. It is | finished with a sailor collar and can be made with elbow or with long sleeves. The skirt is in two pieces. It may he fin ished separately or it may be cut off and joined to the bloyse beneath the hem. In ilie illustration, white cotton gabardine is shown but if liked the blouse could be itiade of a plain material with the skirt of a striped or the blouse of striped and the skirt of plain, to be fashionable. For the 16 year size will be needed, 4J4 yards of material 36 inches wide or yards 44. if blouse and skirt are joined; 5 yards 36, 4 V yards 44 inches wide if tney are finished separately. The pattern 9005 is cut in sires for 16 and 18 years. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper, on receipt of tea cents. Stough Lawyer Insists Courts Are Prejudiced Special to the Telegraph I Wllkes-Barre, Pa.. April 7.—Paul J. | Sherwood, counsel for Dr. Henry W. i Stough In slander suits brought j against the evangelist by Hazleton j businessmen, yesterday filed answer to , the charges of the Luzerne County | Bar Association in their action to dis -1 bar him for an alleged disrespectful I attack on the integrity of the county judges. | Sherwood does not apologize for! anything he said in the federal courts |in his answer, lie denies, however, j that he accused the Judges of being! personally prejudiced, but sticks to his allegation that they are "legally, prejudiced." He challenges the right of the bar association to hold him responsible' in the county courts for statements he made in the federal courts. He claims that whatever was said, was said in the federal court and that the county court is without jurisdiction. Sherwood sets forth that the Stough i case Is not an ordinary case. He de- ' Clares the cause of justice is the cause 1 of God and that the Stough case is "a tight of God against the liquor traffic j in souls." Asks Coroner to Measure Him For Coffin; Dies Later Special to the Telegraph Omaha, Neb., April 7.—"Take my l measure for a coffin, will you?" Elmer H. Wood, of Hbensburg, Cambria county, Pa., asked the county coroner here last night. "We don't measure lively corpses j like you," replied the coroner. "All right; you are only a few I minutes ahead of me," answered Wood. Ths morning his body was I found in a door-yard a few blocks ! from the coroner's home. Wood was without money. His county was noti- | | tied. FAKE SOLICITORS WORKING City police have issued a warning! to residents of tills city, not to give' : any contributions to two colored wo men who have been soliciting funds I without authority for the Colored Day! Nursery, in North Seventh street. The police were notified this morning by j representatives from the nursery, that' I the two women are not known by the j | nursery management and have not, 'been authorized to collect any money' for the home. ________ 1910 LICENSE TAGS Ol"T License tags for 1916 have been re-j ceived at the city treasury for dis- j jtribution. A five-point star is the de -1 sign adopted for the junk dealers, an oval for the hucksters, a small In-1 1 dented parallelogram for auto de liveries and a large parallelogram for teams. The tags are in dark red with i ; black lettering. TWO OVERCOME: BV GAS By Associated Press Reading, Pa., April 7. A man and ! a woman were found In a rooming house here yesterday. The man was dead j and the woman is now unconscious at a hospital. The gas jet had been turn ed on. In the man's effects was found ! a card bearing the name of M. R. C. A. i Ifawley, a bond salesman, of New Torn The woman is unknown. TO T\I.K 0\ DAXCK HAM.* j Interesting lantern slides will be used by Miss M. S. Hanaw, Baltimore to explain how Baltimore inaugurated the municipal dance hall idea, when she lectures, April 17, in the Harrisburg Public Library, as the guest of the Social Workers Club, of Dauphin c oun- I tv. Alis* Hanaw has conducted the Baltimore dance hail for more than six dears, I FOODS THEY BUILD OR DESTROY Amazing but Rarely Suspected Truths About the Things You Eat. (Copyright. 1916, by Alfred W. McCann.) CHAPTER 42 Short-Time Experiments With Any One of the Extracts of Natural Rice] Prove Conclusively That It Is Not Sonic One Mysterious Element Pound in tile Whole Grain Which Us So I Necessary to Life, but the Combina tion of All the Elements Which Rice Yields to the Daily Eood of Man Tlu»t Is So Essential. In 1905 Dr. Donald McCnskey, to j whom reference was made in a pre vious chapter, was a medical inspee- j tor in charge of a company of Igorotte I soldiers in Buena Vista, Cavlte Prov ince, Philippine Islands. The soldiers ] all went down with acidosis, or beri beri; all complained of palpitation of! the heart, pains in the nerves, flab-1 biness of tissue, emaciation and putty j swelling of the limbs. The disease! ended ultimately in paralysis and death. When Dr. McCaskey was put in charge of these troops he noted that they had been eating the usual Phil ippine ration of rice, which, however, had been polished In imitation of the American custom. McCaskey was familiar with the outbreak of beri-beri that had swept like wildfire among the Japanese troops during the Russo-Japanese war and he knew that it had been ob served at that time that such troops as Were fed with unpolished rice were not subject to beri-beri. Numerous drugs had been employed on the Igorotte soldiers, but as tlieyl did not bring relief McCaskey put j them on a diet of unpolished rice. These are his words: "The results were so astounding that inside of six weeks' time the beri-beri sufferers had recovered sufficiently to take the trail and hike on their own legs fifteen miles to Manila." Later the convictions borne of this Manila experience of Dr. McCaskey were still further confirmed by his study of beri-beri in the Japanese hospitals at Hiroshime, Tokio, Kobe, and Sasebo. Surgeon-General Takaki of the Japanese navy was made a baron, in recognition of his discovery that beri beri, prevalent among Japanese sol diers and sailors, was not of bacterial but of dietetic origin, "due to the loss of certain food constituents, notably phosphorus, contained in the inner coating of pericarp of the rice grain, which is always removed and discarded in the preparation of polished rice." Chamberlain and Vedder of the United States Army Board for the Study of Tropical Diseases, after studying- the very high mortality of breast-fed infants in the Philippine Islands, reported that "these infants recovered from nervous diseases of dietetic origin with remarkable rapid ity under treatment, with an extract of rice polishings." This extract con tains phosphorus, iron, calcium, po tassium, and many other bodies of unknown nature discarded in the MUTILATED CORPSES TESTIMONY OF CRUEL BARBARITY , The American Committee for Ar -1 menian Relief, in co-operation with i the Committee of Mercy, has issued an ■ i appeal for relief of Armenian refu ' I gees who are victims of Turkish per | secution. American Consuls and mis sionaries. from personal knowledge, I not only endorse the truthfulness of j reported atrocities, but emphasize the urgency of immediate aid being given ['to these sufferers. From these same sources comes the information that of the 2,000,000 Ar ; menians in Turkey one year ago, at • j least 1,000,000 have been slain, driven from the country, forced in Islam, have perished on the way to exile or 1 been deported. There are <IOO.OOO Ar -1 | menians still in Turkey, 225,000 refu gees are in the four Russian provinces • | bordering on Turkey and the Cau ' casus, the United States Consul at Aleppo reports over 150,000 exiles in J this district alone, 4,000 have escaped '! to Egypt while many have fled into s Persia where there are 70,000 Chris i ] tians in pitiful condition. '! "Nowhere in the world's history," ' says this appeal, "can a page be found ' j to parallel that upon which are re ! corded tlio inhuman brutalities prac ' ticed by the Turks upon the defense s less Armenian people.." Direct and ! authentic records tell how men are i being subjected to inhuman tortures i until death relieves them, some four ■ or five being placed one in front of the other In order that one bullet will i j suffice to end their lives. The men of ! the army were the first to be brutally ■ i slain and then horribly tortured clvil- L ians followed. Armenian professors, • j with high degrees from American and j European universities, along with 1 these other unfortunates, were tor i tured by pulling out their hair, beard and finger nails, by burning and cut ,: ting off their toes and by beating. Even the garb of the priests did not j save them from brutal murder. Women, children, the sick and aged , I were compelled at a moment's notice . ; to start on foot on a journey to un known exile. Mothers were torn from \ their children and were compelled either to leave the little ones behind or witness the brutal killing of them. 1 Women giving birth to children on the road were not allowed a moment's de ' lay but were forced by the whiplash Kingan's 'Reliable' Cured like our Hams and the flavor will surprise you. Ask your Grocer for KINGAN'S Shoulder Kingan's Provision Co. HARRISBURG, PA. modern process of milling rice to give it a white and fancy appearance. Vedder, with Strong and Cowell of Manila, experimented with a rice diet In Billlbid prison, the hygienic conditions of which are reported as almost ideal. The result of their experiments has been briefly summarized in the fol lowing words: "It has been generally admitted that the higher the phosphorus content of rice the less is the possibility of that rice to produce beri-beri. "Fraser and Stanton found as an average result of all thejr examina tions that unpolished rice contains 0.540 per cent, of phosphorus pent oxide. "Aaron found an almost Identical quantity, his figures being 0.557 per cent. "We therefore emphasize the neces sity of carefully considering the question of the amount of phos phorus pentoxide which rice should legally be required to contain in order for it to be regarded as an unpolished rice exempt from taxation in the Philippine Islands." All these investigators have clearly established the fact that refined foods from which certain elements placed in those foods by God are removed, be come at once inadequate to the needs of the living animal. Some of them, however, in their ef fort to elaborate upon the great but simple truth that at iast lay before them conclusively demonstrated have gone Into confusing and dangerous fields. "Give us enough 'phosphorus pent oxide' and we shall be safe," concludes one group. "Give us enough 'potash' and every body will be safe," says another group. "Give us the 'vitamines and our food of whatever it mav consist, will be sufficient to our needs," declares another group. Another group tells us that "if we consume sufficient "calor?es" we need have no other worries and therefore the food value of all food should be determined bv the number of calories which it contains." "A spoonful of gravy :s all that is necessary to supply the offsetting ele ments missing in white bread and other refined foods," says Dr. Woods Hutchinson. ' None of thees commentators seems to realize that it is not any one of the elements of known or unknown nature to be found in natural food, however important in itself,' but rather the combination of all of them which is essential to health and lon gevity. Short time experiments with any one of them or with the absence of any one of them or with any arbi trary combination of some of them cannot yield results which will servo as a standard for an entire lifetime. Of these things in their proper places we shall have much to say that is startling and conclusive. to continue their march until they dropped out of sheer suffering or from exhaustion to die. The crimes of which the Armenian women have been made the victims are too cruel and horrible for words. The more attrac tive women and girls are made the prey of their guards and the ruffians of villages and mountain passes. Hun dreds of mutilated corpses of other women bear mute testimony to this reign of inhuman barbarity and perse cution. Helpless little children are among tliese victims. A United States Con sul reported that ho saw many of them killed by beating their brains out against the rocks. Other children were thrown into rivers and those who could swim were shot down as they struggled in the water. Children as well as their helpless elders were brained with clubs or beaten to death. This is the plight to-day of the Ar menian people, now staggering under the unprovoked blows of assassins and calling in desperation to the civ ilized world for assistance to save the remnant of the race. This is the fate that has befallen thousands upon thousands of one of the oldest and most notable of ancient races—the first nation to adopt Christianity as its national religion. It is for these sufferers, that an ap peal is madp to the generous-hearted Americans. Not only are these refu gees in desperate need- of immediate relief but all funds provided for them are most judiciously expended. It is a matter of record that 10,000 Ar menians in Persia lived for one month on SIO,OOO. Think of It—a human being living for one month on one dol lar! Will yon help these sufferers? Won't you make a generous contribution that will mean food and clothing for them and provide shelter that they may have a chance for life? Every dollar contributed will be devoted in full for this purpose, all administration ex penses being borne by members of the committee. The actual work of relief will be done by American con suls and American missionaries, thus guaranteeing that the proper supplies will be placed where they are most needed. Advanced Cavalry Is Beyond Communication Ry Associated Press San Antonio, April 7. —The most advanced cavalry detachments en gaged in running: down Villa were be- yesterday and at Jia.ior General Funston's headquarters It was believed they already were an I far south as Satevo, from whence I trails extend toward Pnrral. WII.M \MSTO\Y\ JUNIORS \V!X ! Willianisport, Pa., April 7.—Mem | bers of the junior class of the Wil linnistown high school defeated the senior class In n debating contest re | cently. The representatives of the junior class were Charles Klinger, I Allen Rank and George Hoffman; of the senior class, Clarence Flckinger, ! Howard Shuttlesworth and Harold j Rudd. The question was "Resolved, That President Wilson's foreign policy is justifiable." The Juniors selected the negative side of the question and succeeded in convincing the Judges that President Wilson's foreign policy is unjustified. ROYAI.S .MOT $ 100 | By netting: more than S4OO at the big l fair last week in its llrehou.so, tho I Royal Fire Company has practically I solved its problem of financing its end I of the big State Firemen's convention in this city during the week of October 5. | Miss Grace Koons won tiie popularity 1 contest and was awarded a prize of a | kitchen cabinet. SAM'S «AD." PAYS | While selling papers at his old stand, I corner Walnut and Second streets, some I days ago. Sam Klompus. a newsboy, I found quite a nice set of false teeth. Bays, Here's the Way ta Make Muscle. More muscle more muscle than Skinny, Fat, or anyone in the gang —do you want more muscle? If you do then you should do what the football men and the men in the big leagues do —eat the right thing for breakfast eat Cream of Barley. It's good for muscle, and its good fFor tomorrow's 1| breakfast have Cream jF\ Barley Biscuits Get that — Sunshine —they're made in the Sunshine. That's why they have that name. 350 varieties from which to choose —each the best of its kind. Try Sunshine Grahams —crisp, flaky crackers baked to a golden brown. They're good —and good for you. In each package of Takhoma Biscuit is a paper doll in colors. Other packages of Sunshine Biscuits contain pretty dresses for her. See list in Takhoma package. JO OSE-WILES giscuiT (OMPANY Baktrt of Sunihin• Biscuit* 10 c Wm Package \ Dainty enough to set « V simple and economical I it is a standby as a family dessert — I Hotel Astor Rice and Peach "Dainty" Pat I copfd Hote! Astor Rice (washed and drained) info a saucepan with 2 eupfula of mill, 2 tablespoons of sugar,. 2 tablespoons of butter and the sratrd rind of Vj lemon. Simmer gently I\ f hours uitil milk is absorbed. Found nee, snd while hot press into a well buttered mold. When cold, turn out with a sharp knife and mark around top to form a wall. Bruih over with erf. put into ©Yen a few minutes. SCOOD out centre. leaving wall and a bottom crust of rice th* same thickness. Fill centra with fresh or canned peaches. Heap whipped cream H on top and chopped nuts if desired. §o* Hotml Astor Pica i§ mold in aaalaet cartona only. 3H lOc for a full pound in thm yellow carton. At most good srocers. If yearscams! supply yon send 10c far fell peaad cartea to ■ B. FISCHER & CO., Importers, 190 Franklin St, New York City fjjj "The Bread Prob lem" is not a problem in the home where Shredded Wheat is known. The whole wheat grain is the real staff of life, and you have it in Shredded Wheat Biscuit, prepared in a digestible form. It contains more real, body building material than meat or eggs, is more easily digest ed and costs much less. The food for the up-and-coming man who does things with hand or brain —for the kid dies that need a well-bal anced food for study or play for the housewife who must save herself from kitchen drudgery. Delicious for breakfast, or any meal, with milk or cream. Made at Niagara Falls, N. Y. Did Sam advertise his find in the papers? He did. Incidentally he got results. A man yesterday called around to the corner, claimed the molars and paid Sam a nice little reward. 21
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers