16 A Crisp, Delicious "Snacfe" for luncheon or after-the-theater, or any old time when the appetite craves"something different," is TRISCUIT, the Shredded Whole Wheat toast. Heat it in the oven to restore its crispness, then serve with butter, soft cheese or mar malades. As a toast for chafing dish cookery it is a rare delight. It is full of real nutriment. Made at Niagara Falls, N. Y. Two Boys Built a Boat; It was Weak; They're Dead Special to the Telegrvfh Sioux City, la.—John Avery, aged 12, ; »nd Gustavo Johnson, aged 14. were j drowned in the Floyd river here, arid Brnest Rawley, who attempted to save i them, was rescued with difficulty. The two boys wer in a homemade boat and rb they went tinder the, Great Northern bridge asked Rawley to throw them a brick to he used as an anchor. The ! brick went through the bottom of the boat. Rawley Jumped to their aid. j ENGINEER TS HEI.-P West Kingston. R. 1., April 28. Charles H. Mansfield, engineer of the Gilt Edge Express on the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad which crashed into a local train at j Bradford April 17, causing deaths of' Ave passengers, to-day was indicted j lor manslaughter. Hotel Astor Rice and Pimentos ||| 1 cup Hotel Astor Rice 2 egg» H I small can pimentos I Vt cap* milk |£jw I cupful grated cheese Salt and pepper to taste Wash Hotel Astor Rice, boil in plenty of salted water, drain. Add the pimentos (chopped), the eggs (well beaten), milk and seasoning. Bake in a buttered Bj ■ baking dish for 20 minutes in moderate oven. H Hotel Aetor Rice ii mold in Mealed cartone only. 10c for a full pound in the yellow carton. At Boat goed frocers. If rear* cannot mpplr yen aend 10c fnr fall poind carton to B. FISCHER & CO., Importers, 190 Franklin St., New York City tfg When Undecided What to Order For Lunch or Supper, Ask Your Dealer For king an' s Minced Luncheon Delicious Either Cold or Hot, Always Appetizing and Economical Kingan Provision Co. Harrishurg, Pa. Sketect Ifcutdefif! Against Substitutes * Ask For A HORLICK S A MALTED MILK Ru9Uw|ljn Made ><* the hwgwt, b««t equip p«d and UC sanitary Malted Milk plants the world | . fgj do not make "milk products Milk, Condensed Milk, etc. Ask For HORLICK'S L I THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK \@AtoTBSVTLERS/ Made irom clean, full-cream milk and the extract of select malted grain, reduced to powder form, soluble in kfivrwSl ' wa ' er * Best Food-Drink for All Ajei* Used ov * r ■ Quartor Century t , < Unloßß yarn may "HORLIOK'S" r, .1 i you may got m Subatltuto. Tako a Package Homo FRIDAY EVENING, BAKRISBURG irfSjft* TELEGRAPH APRIL 28. V)\6 OF INTEREST T j THE STRUGGLES OF A WIFE By Virginia Terhune Van de Water CHAPTER XXI (Copyright, 1916, Star Co.) During dinner Myra Webb chatted brightly and cheerfully, but with little encouragement from either husband or daughter. After failing to rouse Horace from his depression she turned her attention to Grace, inquiring as to what kind of a day she had had. how lessons had gone, and whether her classes had been well attended. For a few minutes the girl an swered politely. But at last she leaned back in her chair and sighed. "Mother, dear," she suggested wearily, "don't let's talk about school. I know you are making an effort to be agreeable and enter- I talning and really It's not worth I while. To tell you the truth, I am | tired of thinking of school." | The mother flushed and lapsed ■ into silence. She told herself that she had done her best, and that her efforts were not appreciated by the man or the girl for whom she was ! straining every nerve. For some : minutes not a word was spoken. , Neither Horace. who was eating [absent-mindedly, nor Grace, who stared moodily at her plate, ap j peered to notice the absolute still ! ness. "We are not exactly a gay party, are we?" Myra observed at last. I "An.vono would think we were I mourners at a funeral feast." Her lips trembled as she spoke, but she tried to hide her hurt under a light tone. "I have to do enough talking dur i ing the day," Grace remarked, "to 1 like to be quiet when I get home. There is nothing especially interest ing to talk about anyway. Ai d, as 1 have a stack of exercises to cor rect this evening, I like to relax while T can." ' Horace a Martyr Another silence. This was broken by Myra's final effort to elicit some speech from her husband. "Aren't you feeling well, Horace?" ! she ventured. "I told you a little while ago that I was well, Myra." he replied., "I also intimated that 1 was simply tired and worried, that's all." The tone of reproof nettled the wife The events of the day had worn upon her nerves. The triumph of selling her story had been in it self somewhat of a strain, and the , lack of enthusiasm with which Horace had received the news of her good fortune had dashed her spirits cruelly. Now with her endeavors to make home pleasant set at naught. she felt her self-control replaced by a subtle sense of resentment at the i Injustice of her companions. "I am tired myself," she re marked. her voice vibrating with hardly - suppressed impatience. "And I. also have a few worries. But 1 do think that if I try to talk and i Vie agreeable while we are at table, I the least the rest of the family I can do Is to help me out." Her husband looked at her in sur prise. "My dear wife," he said in the judicial tone that adds fuel to fires of vexation, "there ts no need of your assuming that injured man ner. If you had been down town nil day. as I have. X doubt If you would feel any more like talking of > trivialities than I do." j Tears sprang to Myra's eyes, but she winked them back resolutely. : Grace, glaucing at her ,saw her dls j comflture and feared that there might ensue an altercation such as she especially disliked. Therefore, I she pushed her chair back from the j table and rose to her feet. "If you will excuse me, I think I j will go to my. room now," she ex- I plained. "I have a great deal to do, | and I am so tired that T do not think i that 1 will wait for any dessert j but get right to work." When she was gone, the meal j ended in complete stillness so far as the pair in the dinlngroom was concerned. Horace ate one tart, and | helped himself to another. To the wife, the dessert tasted of sawdust. I She felt as if she shourd choke if I she did not get away by herself soon. Even Slnjrlng Is Barred From the kitchen came the rattle of dish washing, mingled with the unmelodiouß crooning of the maid. T-izzie was evidently reeling well once more and was so deeply occu pied in her task or in the music of her own Irish song, that she forgot all else. Over and over again she sang the same refrain, until the master of the house set down hts coffee cup with a mutter of exas peration. "I declare!" he exclaimed. "That girl's singing is enough lo sef one crazy! You must tell her to stop it. Myra!" The wife herself had been an noyed by the sotind but at her hus band's speech she forgot all except his outburst. "<>h, Horace," she protested quick ly, "if anyone can be happy enough to sing, let her do it! Few of us can." Her husband's look conveyed re proach even more strongly than his words. "That is not a very kind thing to say, Jlyra," he remarked. "Things are hard enough for all of us with out your complaining and making them harder." "I have not been complaining!" the wife retorted. "I am merely stating a fact. And perhaps if ail of us tried harder to be pleasant we would find things easier all around." "Are you trvirtg now?" the man demanded, sarcastically, his New England temper the one emotion which (lie descendants of the Puri tans are not ashamed to display getting the best of him. "And that is hardly a kind thing for you to say," M.vra reminded him. "I am sorry if 1 have seemed cross or depressed, but I have received no encouragement to he otherwise since we sat down to dinner." The husband's eyes snapped an grily. "1 suppose you mean that all the effort in everything is on your part?" he accused. "I've been a failure in business and in my home as well. You probably feel because you have sold a story that you are becoming a success where I failed. Well, it is not the pleasantest thing in the world for a man to feel that his wife is helping support his household. Please bear that in mind, Myra!" She did not flash back at him. She told herself that he was angry and did not mean what he said. Still, the hurt went deep and rankled. (To Be Continued). To Conduct Study of Sunday School Lesson REV. W. O. SANDERSON The Rev. W. O. Sanderson will con duct the study of the International Sunday school lesson this evening in the Young Men's Christian Associa tion. The subject is "Peter's De liverance." The class is free and will be open to all Sunday school super intendents, teachers and workers. Fol lowing the lesson, an opportunity will be given to ask questions on the sub ject. REBATING CHARGED By Associated Press Cleveland, Ohio, April 27. —in a statement Issued here to-day by the railroad transportation brotherhoods campaigning Jointly to secure an eight hour day from the railroads of the country attention is directed to the practice of railroads in granting re bates to shippers and hauling private cars. Trainmen and other officials claim that special car and rehate privi leges are granted at a heavy loss to railroads. SCALLOP FINISH FOR THIS DRESS Bolted Frocks Are Fashioned This Season For Old and Young By MAY MANTON 8954 (With Basting Line and Added Seam Allowance) Child's Dress, 4, 6 and 8 years. i All the belted frocks are essentially fashionable this season. This one is novel for the belt is passed through openings that are made for the purpose, to give an unusual effect. The pockets with their shaped upper edges are pretty. In the picture, blue linen is scalloped with white. The material and the treatment both are in the height of style but this is a frock that can be made from linen 1 or piqu6 or from thinner material, suc-h as lawn, T-ith equal propriety. For the dressy frock, taffeta would be pretty, with the pockets omitted. White scal loped witn color will be much worn throughout the coming summer. White linen, cotton gabardine and piqu6 are charming made in this way for sturdy frocks. Handkerchief lawn is lovely for the more dressy ones. For the 6 year size will be needed, yards of material 37 yards or I 2 yards 44 inches wide,. The pattern 89.24 is cut in sizes for girts from 4to 8 years. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper, on receipt of ten cents. Homely Virtues by Beatrice Fairfax Are the old-fashioned virtues of dig | tllty and self-respect going out of j style Occasionally one is tempted to think so. But as long as the world lasts the woman who values herself lightly will Ibe lightly valued in turn. Never for get this when some man urges you to have a drink to prove yourself a good •"sport, as some "popular" girl explains to you that the persons wouldn't like her so well if she didn't let them make love to iter occasionally. A certain cheap success may be ob tained by an undignified catering to the baser side of worldly natures. But it is cheap success—remember that. ( It leads nowhere, and it does not abide i long. White you are young and pretty and able to carry off boldness and flashi ness and lax moral standards with a little air of youthful bravado and '"cuteness" you may be the center of a gay circle. But tiieir admiration is not worth having, and it can't be ; kept. | No worth-while man wants his wife 1 to be a woman of questionable reputa tion, or even one of whom gay com rades speak lightly, nor yet one whose intimates are people of too giddy a , sort. Popularity which can be bought by | relaxing the standards of self-respect ling womanhood is not worth having. Too many girls are writing me agi tated letter about the boys who sud denly stopped being nice to them when (refused a good night kiss. The boy who sets a price 011 his attention and demands that a girl repay him for his society as escort to a dance is either weakly selfish or scoundrelly, in any case his terms are usurious and no dignified girl should pay them. ' Familiarity does breed contempt. That is an axiom of fact based on human nature. A boy who is per mitted to take liberties with a girl is justified in supposing that other boys are allowed the same freedom. He does supp6.se it. He thinks the girl a cheap little coquette or worse. What girl would sanely sacrifice her chances of future happiness to pay some young Lothario for a chocolate Ice cream soda or a trip to Coney ls when put that way, doesn't it, girls? But that is just about how it stands. Let people can you prim, prudish, 'land? It sounds absurd or sensational j old-fashioned, slow, not a good sport, a quitter, anything they like, and re j fleet that people who reproach your dignity in these terms are morally lax j young wasters who are ready to mort -1 gage their ideals, their education and ! their chances of future happiness in successful marriage for the sake of a 'little cheap emotion of the sort that is guaranteeed to leave a bitter after ef fect. WHEX YOl' GET THE FEVER | "Yes, Ben is home." "Say, don't you ; think a little week-end trip—? .lust thinking about the same thinK your self?— All right, come over to-night and we'll dope It out." That is how it comes—sometimes In the Spring when the ground Is cover ed with the tiny wlldflowers of the de sert and the quail are mating, perched in the giant yucca and Spanish bay onet. and the air washed sweet by re ! cent winter rains. Again when the sun has parched the hills, and the chap 'arral and sage are heavy with dust, i you go again Just to see the sunrise and the sunset and to lie on your back ,at night watching the stars. Or per i haps it Is Fall and you make the quail season an excuse—or winter when the t ducks come hown in great wedges | across the gray and threatening sky.— I May Outing, Protect Your Food From the Ravages of Summer's Heat I nsure Freshness, Cleanliness, Purity, Fourfold Econ f || omy (Health, Food, Ice and Time) Are Realized t I || When You Own a lyfe'g pi Leonard Cleanable \j- O. I • One-Piece Porcelain Lined W=!| REFRIGERATOR A lining of pure smooth, white porcelain —one piece fused (not baked) on steel; unscratchable—no lodging place for grease or germs. Perfect cold, dry air circulation —insures food freshness and purity. Scien tific insulation saves one-third your ice bill. Refrigerators and Ice Chests From $6.75 up to S6O Easy Monthiy or Weekly Pay Bicycles Garden Florence Automatic Oil Stoves A handsome wheel, 22- Tj An inch frame, Troxel saddle, AjLOSC f&~ _ i nmd guard and stand; coast- ~, ... U er brake; guaranteed tires. I'4-nch black hose with 17 Bell and toolbag, couplings: different lengths, - T"lrt' M $35.00 12c Per Foot gfe 1 t KP'THEKT H# Simplify cooking question; I|"| | I I Jm%| mimical :in0 Chief Engineer Ashmead of the; lladeira-Mamore Hallway Company ate largely of while bread, mashed potatoes and fresh meal obtained by i slaughtering cattle imported on the; litof. As a rule twice a day and often three times a day this diet of bread, biscuits, cakes, crackers, roasts, j steaks, and potatoes constituted the bulk of his meals. Reporting his experience to me, he [ said: "I realized that 1 was not up to snuff, but could locate no particu- j lar cause for anxiety. I simply felt languid and uneasy. Then I began to observe among the men a tendency; to stub their toes while walking along smooth roads. 1 noticed also, that some of them complained of slight swelling in the ankles, which gradually extended upward to the; knees. When this swelling was at its height a dent in the flesh, made by pressure from the finger, would re main a long time. "Shortness of breath and palpitation of the heart were the next symp- j loms. All of the men suffered serious heart trouble, after which they began | to walk as if they had locomotor! ataxia. As the cases advanced the swelling subsided and the limbs gradually wasted away, suggesting, prior to death, complete atrophy. | Nothing remained but the bone and | skin. "The twenty physicians with us gave j the victims every conceivable kind of ■ medicine. Nothing did them any j good, and, prior to their death, they were- completely prostrated and help- J less. "Some of our doctors said tlie dis ease was not beri-beri, because the men had consumed no rice, although the symptoms seemed to be peculiarly the same. Other doctors contended , that It was beri-beri." The doctors did not know that rice i has nothing to do with beri-beri, and j that beri-beri is only an accidental, oriental phrase by which white bread I starvation, in its last extremity is de scribed. The fact that all mal-nutrition, anaemia, or mineral starvation is ac-1 companied by serious bcart distur bances had not suggested to the; twenty physicians in the Madeira-1 Mamore poison squad that the dying men could have been saved had the missing elements in their diet been supplied. Having observed with morbid inter- ! est these symptoms among the sick and dying laborers, Chief Engineer j Ashmead noticed with alarm, under circumstances that impressed all its! details upon his mind, that he him self was becoming a victim. The camp had lost a man in the jungle, which was so dense that, hav ing penetrated it. one's sense of di rection was completely confused. Once lost it was a serious problem to find the way back to camp. Ashmead participated in an extend ed search which failed. As night came on he gave orders to have the camp j whistle blow at short intervals until morning in order that the sound might give the lost, man some guide by which to direct his course through the brush. During the search and while still fresh he climbed a little hill. When he reached the top he was out of breath. His heart was pounding. He was obliged to stop and rest. That night when he removed his leggings he noticed that his ankles were slightly swollen. For three days he found It difficult to buckle the straps on his leggings. Then came the consciousness that he was losing his appetite for bread and desired to eat nothing. He remembered also that for the first time In his life he had a craving for orange juice. He had never been fond of oranges until that time. He knew nothing of the fact that oranges are base-formers and that his body, starved of bases, was clamoring for the elements so necessary to life. On the fourth and fifth day follow ing the first appearance of the strik ing symptoms lie observed that when his flesh was dented at the ankles the finger marks remained. Laborers were dying around him everywhere. "Beri-beri is killing them," said the doctors. "T have beri-beri too. T am not going to stay and die," he said. He quit camp at once. Bv first boat he returned to Eng-j [ land and on the ship took no j food hut orange juice, which he con sumed in large quantities. On a diet of little else his heart dilation dis-[ I appeared within sixty days. Except for experiencing a depressing sense of lassitude for the following six: | months he was apparenty none the ; worse for his close call. Ashmead had no knowledge of the | fact that oranges are base-formers, j He did not know that the feeble or-! ganlc acids of_ the orange juice are' 1 quickly oxidized in the body and burnt in the production of heat and 1 the alkaline earthy salts or bases of the oranges are thus made available) for the work which they are intended 1 I to perform in the economy of nutrl j tion. He did not know that the abstrac tion of calcium salts from the tissues, through the consumption of refined, demineralized, acid-forming foods, I : prepares them as fertile fields for j the deevlopment of tuberculosis. He did not know that nature's I method of curing tuberculosis, as we I have already seen, is by calcifying the | tuberculosis area, thus shutting it off from the rest of the body. He did not know that nature can j do tills work only when food calcium j J is available in its proper forms. He did not know that there was no j calcium in the Madeira-Matnore Rail-1 way Company poison squad diet. One j ! of the suppressed facts Sti connection j j with the record of mal-nutrition j among the laborers was tne scourge of j I tuberculosis, which swept over ' the men who escaped "beri-beri." Both Ashmead and Dose observed that as! many men were lost through tubercU- ' ; losis as through the disease which j ! they called "beri-beri." So rapid was the progress of the 'disease that many of the men died of j hemorrhage within three or four j months following the appearance of| the first symptoms of the disease. j til AHIJSMK.V I.ACIv TI JIK I'Oll PIS At TICK, (APT. MOKRIK SAVS , ; Special to the Telegraph Philadelphia, April 2S.—Critics of the I: National Guard are unfair, according to p Captain Hubert Morris, of the Third 1 j Regiment. National Guard aU Pcnn- h ■ - - - - ■ - Soap a friend to poor complexions' Resinol Soap is not only unusually The soothing, restoring influence cleansing and softening, but its reg- that makes this possible is the Resinol ular use helps nature give to the skin which this soap contains and which and hair that beauty of perfect health physicians have prescribed for over which it is impossible to imitate, twenty years, in Resinol Ointment, Tendency to pimples is lessened, in the care of skin and scalp troubles, redness and roughness disappear, If the skin is in bad condition through nefltct and in a very short time the com- or an unwise use nf conivetics, Kfsinol Siap . plexion usually becomes clear, fresh £ 0 » ,d w'luTna . » and VClvety. dealers* ill toilet goods. s Window Boxes Filled New Cumberland Moral Co. New Cumberland, I'a. TORN Wit WilH SAGE TEA If Mixed With Sulphur It ' Darkens So Naturally Nobody Can Tell The old-*ime mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur for darkening gra\,* streaked and faded hair is grandinoth j er's recipe and folks are again using jit to keep their hair a good, even I color, which is quite sensible, as wo are living in an age when a youthful [appearance is of the greatest advan tage. ' Nowadays, though, we don't have the troublesome task of gathering tho I sage and the niussy mixing at home. | All drug stores sell the ready-to-use , product, improved by the addition of I other ingredients, tailed "Wyeth's | Sage and Sulphur Compound" for about 50 cents a bottle. It is very popular because nobody can discover it has been applied. Simply moisten your comb or a soft brush wjth it land draw this through your hair, tak ing one small strand at a time; by | morning the gray hair disappears, but I what delights the ladies with Wyeth's | Sage and Sulphur Compound, is (hat, besides beautifully darkening the hair !after a few applications, it also pro duces that soft luster and appearance of abundance which is so attractive. This ready-to-use preparation is a de lightful toilet requisite for those who desire a more youthful appearance. It is not intended for the cure, miti gation or prevention of disease.—Ad vertisement. sylvania. In an address at the weekly luncheon oivtlie Jovian Electric League at tho Hotel Adelphia yestraay lie de clared that the guardsman's shortcom ings wore due to employers who would not give their employes time for rltle practice. Consequently, the men of t lie National Uuard did not get sufficient drilling to put them on n plane of effi ciency with regular soldiers.