10 CTNEAR THE TOI'XG WOMB*'# CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION. To-morrow we continue the Clearance of Every Cloth and Silk Suit in Our Shop. Our Entire Stock Divided into Three Lots—SK{>.7."». $13.75, —Nothing Higher. LOT I—SUITS at 23T /t%/* Trl Former Helling lip to £17.88 U / W F)very wanted material, style and color. You'll sure- a |a ~W M M Ijr be surprised at these unusual values. Bo on hand "Wr % 9 early and you'll g;et a splendid suit at a Jour price. 1 LOT 2—SUITS, at T Former Milling: prloen up to 922.8 R. 1 f* Yes. you'll surely bo amazed at this price MM # you see these beautiful suits. All-wool poplins. # |l I M ■ serges and checks. All sizes including: extra sife?%M JL Amel • w up to 51 bust. LOT 3—SUITS, at I Former 1101111111: price* up to #3-.f.n. Stunning silk suits and high-grade cloth I Ak 9 ■ handeomelv trimmed. Remember these are not.B ■■■ a W suits hought for sale purposes, but clearance nJUf JL \Jr • 0 3 our own stocks. • I Jgp"Even in Clearance Time—ALTERATIONS FREE. I CJOIN'O OVER TO GRANGE Special to the Telegraph Huntingdon, Pa.. May 9. During the past week two locals of the Farm- j ors" Society of Equity, Boyles Hun and I Fisher's Ferry, both near Sunbury, j severed their connection with that organization and united with the j Grange. The transfer was effected through the work of W. F. Hill, past master of the Pennsylvania Stale Orange. Link HeaSth With Strength A chain is no stronger than its weakest Blink —a man is no healthier than his stomach. The stomach is the dyna mo of the human system. Keep it well, and it links up health and 1 strength with all parts of the body. Be kind to your |||i|J stomach—find health, aid Ji - jjjjflf Take'care of your ||pl stomach an d when Beecham's am S the digestive or- Jj JB JA gans. They speedily relieve indigestion, help the process of assimilation ** * and carry off waste matter jwgi from the system. They leave JL jp* the stomach sweetened, toned f|L and strengthened. Sick head- Pache, bilious attacks, stomach gases and other unpleasant k symptoms caused by a de ranged stomach, inactive liver Wlif* or bowels arecorrect f H ed by Beecham's Pills. Mild ■ g and harmless, they link . M Directions of ar « es } Wed Special Value iS i?. 0 *? L H7 . to Women are Medicine in the World ' w ith Every Box Hold You Safe and Sound At All Druggists, 10c., 25c. T i"""if iirii<—i nr* ifxnwi#~> .r\j~_in i There's a Difference In Coa/( 1 A . 78,1 difference You may be homing more coal than Is neces- 4 I sary, because you are not burning the kind especially adapted to yoUT M I requirement*. ■ ™ atte , r over is—well steer you right on the par- § dcular kind of coal you ought to be using—and supply you with them oest heat-glvlng fuel yon can buy. Costs the same—and goes lurther I J. B. MONTGOMERY ) I BOO—cither phone Ird and Chestnut Streets \ iwimrtwywiij Stock Transfer Ledger ] The Pennsylvania Stook Transfer Tai Law (Act of June | ] I «, 1918) which Is now In effect requires all corporations In the SUie. J J! no matter how large they may be to keep a Stock Transfer Ledger. I We are prepared to supply thee* Ledgers promptly at a very nominal X price. j The Telegraph Printing Co j Printing—Blading—Designing—Photo Engraving | HAKKISnUKG, PA. TUESDAY EVENING, HOGS HAVE CHOLERA Special to the Telegraph Waynesboro. Pa.. May 9.—A carload iof hogs shipped to this place more i than a month ago, which were pur chased about Shippensburg and Scot land by a livestock dealer and subse quently sold to parties in this vicinity at a stock sale, proves to have been an unfortunate investment, because a number of the hogs have since died ! of cholera. I WOMEN'S Married Women and Young Adorers By ELLA WHEELEB WILCOX There are scores of married wo men who find the attention of very young men agreeable—women who, perhaps, have watched the waning of romance in the eyes of their husbands and who, after a decade of years, when i i life has seemed verging toward the commonplace, suddenly realize that they possess the power to attract sonic 1 younger man. and to stir nls heart with a feeling stronger than friend ship. Almost every woman possessed of any mental or physical charms has had the opportunity for such an ex perience. Too often this opportunity has been, seized, and the youth has been led on to make a young fool of himself, which flatters the woman's vanity, while she has been quite unconscious i that she herself was playing an old role of an older fool. Occasionally a woman possesses the good sense and the pride and the self-respect to curb impulses of the too romantic youth before they de velop too far, and to change him from an adoring swain into a delightful friend. 1 One such man tells of the treatment received at the hands of a married woman with whom he became hope lessly in love, shortly after leaving college; and he shows her letter, written in answer to an Impassioned missive which he sent to her one night, after sitting beside her at dinner. Not till years afterward did he | j show the letter—for when it was flrst ( ; i received, it hurt his pride and ! I wounded his vanity. Here are sotne extracts from her letter—a letter which it might be | I well for many a woman to copy and e use in similar situations: 1 "I happen to be a woman whose I 1 heart life is complete," wrote the 1 " : lady, "1 have realized my dreams. ! . pnd I have no desire to change them ] , |to nightmares. I like the original role j t I In life's drama, too: and that of the j I really happy and well-behaved wife j j seems to me less hackneyed than that! of the misunderstod woman who ! j needs a friend. "I find the steady flnme of one j 1 lamp better to read life's meaning by j \ than the ilaring light of many can dles. You are passing through a phase which comes to nearly every 1 youth. YOU are In love with love, and j your affectionate nature Is In that} transition period where an older woman appeals 60 you. \ "Being crude and unformed, a ma ture mind and body attract you. Any j middle-aged man of your nrqualnt r l. Our Library Tabl%i MINUTES j .AT EST BOOKS X. MAGAZINESIII^^I^EJ Nan of Maude Mountain, by Frank' H. Spearman, author of "Whispering i Smith." (Charles Scribner's Sons, $1.35 net.) Nothing better has been done In i reproduction of the life of the frontier West, the life that is rapidly passing with the advance of civilization. It 1 is a story with thrills in every chapter j a masterpiece of vivid portraiture, nn epic of the wild western hills. The heroine is a member of an outlaw, family and her love for a man whose j life Is devoted to exterminating her clan Is the central theme of an absorbing story. There Is not a dull page in the book. The Violin I-ady, by Daisy Rhodes Campbell. (The Page Company, Bos ton.) The "Violin Lady" is a young Am- i erican artist who is studying in Paris, t Having completed her course she j I goes to London on a concert tour, ac- j companied by a young friend who is | gifted with a remarkable voice. Her j masculine admirers are many and ! varied, but she eludes theni all and ! returns to Paris to find her "true love" awaiting her. Although hailed j by all the critics as a genius, she 1 reaches the conclusion that marriage j ,is her destiny and so marries her! ' lover and conies back to America. Tt must he admitted that while the ! I book Is pleasant and harmless, it is un convincing and quite uninteresting in spots. The story is a mere succes- 1 slon of incidents, lacks cohesiveness and force and portrays characters; that are unreal and artificial. The redeeming characteristic is the evi dent knowledge of music which the I author shows. Among the American authors whose work is considered in an article I jon The Great American Novel, pub lished in the Bulletin of the New York Public Library, are found Winston Churchill, Owen Wister, j I Jack London, Robert Herrick and j Mary S. Watts. "It Is a mistake," says the editor, "to deplore the con dition of American fiction. There have been greater writers hut never at one time In this country a more, worthy group." \ Capitalist's View of Socialism. (Parke, Austin, and Lipscomb, New ! York.) Socialism as a theory has again raised its head in hook form, this time In a repudiation of its tenets by an eminently successful American capitalist and a sound answer to the vagaries of those trouble-stirring mal contents who have not the interests » of the working class at heart, but who would rush Into the fray deter | mined to overturn every existing rela tion between capital and labor. They I would- "cure all human Ills hy tak ing from him who hath and giving to | him who hath not; by penalizing f I energy and thrift and rewarding . | ignorance, idleness and sloth; hy | guaranteeing to the sluggard at the expense of the energetic what he 1 —————————__ I A Fine Aid Mother-to-be We nre all greatly indebted to those who tell tlieir experiences. And among HB the many things which ' are of Immediate Im tant mother, to a splen pMed OTer the muscles [ -* i SB everywhere tell of Its soothing effect, how It allays pains Incident to Stretching of cords, ligaments and muscle*. They tell of restful comfort, of calm, peaceful nights, an ab- I senee of those distresses peculiar to the pe riod of expectancy, relief from morning sickness, no more of that apprehension with which so many young women's minds be tome burdened. It is a splendid help. Get , a bottle of "Mother's Friend" from your nearest druggist. Ask your husband to get it for you. Then write to Bradfleld Reg* ulator Co. 408 Lamar Btdg., Atlanta, Ga.. for a very handsome and instructive book. It is filled with suggestive Ideas of great help to all women Interested In the subject of maternity. And best of all are some let : ters from mothers Uiut are real iiUDlratiuii*. j JVrlts tuday, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH ance will tell you that he had a slml- I lar experience at your age. "If you had been thrown with any other woman just as you have been thrown with me. the »ame resuli would have followed. So while I am ( not flattered by your reeling for me, | knowing it to be no tribute to my atractlons, I am glad, for your sake. ' that it was myself and not some less, happy or more selfish woman who I i would have allowed you to proceed along the path of youthful folly. "Few boys of twenty-two are capa ble of knowing what they want In a! life companion, and ten years from . now your ideal will have utterly i changed. "When you say that you wish you had met me when I was free, I am obliged to smile: for when I was free you were rolling a hoop along the I pavement and wearing knickerbock ers. "If I were free now, think how ri diculous it would make you and me to have you an acknowledged lover. How shortly you would awaken from your Illusion—which you call love— and see me as I am, twelve years your senior. "Men of your age have married women of my age, and for a year or two, perhaps, they have neen happy but when the man reached my age and the woman was still a dozen years his senior, the man was miserable and the woman wretched, almost ln | variably. "It is an unnatural situation; and you want to thank God and me that it is an impossible one for you. "Your heart will no <*out>t expe rience many loves before you find the mate intended for you by me Divine Power. "Do not take yourself or your youthful passions too seriously, and do not let yourself be compromised by a married woman; and do not al low yourself to compromise one. "You will tind many restless wives ready and willing to take the roman tic attentions of a handsome youth: but they are not women wno will be worthy Influences in your lire. "Put this letter away and keep it until you can write and thank me! for it; you will be able to do this in ' time. "Do not answer it: and when we meet be my good sensible mend, and 1 ; one I can introduce to my husband, ' I for only such do I care to Know." j It was after the young man was happily married that he showed this letter to his friends and permitted I these extracts to lie given to the world. ' cannot gain by his own efforts In competition with his fellowmen." We as a country will have the prob- ! lem to- face squarely at the close of : the European war, when the period j of readjustment comes. The problem ! is in this book taken up with a frank admission of prejudice by this cap-i italist. but with a clear diction and ' convincing arguments withal. Manyj believe that Socialism does not pre- j sent either a just or practical remedy j for social and industrial evils, and ! these persons will be confirmed in their conviction, that these troubles I are rooted in individual character j and to be removed only by education. 1 Equality of opportunity is held to! be the ideal solution of the problem 1 that is involved, but the rule of the many by the few for thousands of] years is convincing evidence, like ' wise revealed in many another way, j j that a theoretically correct proposi ' tlon ofttimes will not work out to a | practical solution by reason of condi tions. To change conditions is the i only answer, and education is the | means. "The natural law of the sur vival of the fittest cannot be changed by human legislation," continues the j capitalist writer, and education tend , ing to make men more nearly equal in ability is the true remedy." COMB QUICKLY T know a physician who grabbed his srip in a hurry and started for the I house of a man who called his tele phone number and then whispered: i "Come quickly. 1 cannot live with out you." Rut the "patient" was call j ing for the doctor's daughter.—The ; Silent Partner. The Whirligig of Time, by Way land Wells Williams. (F. A. Stokes' Company, N. Y.) The significance of the three letters. W. W. W., heretofore confined so | exclusively and caharcteristically to i the present administration in the I initials of our Chief Executive's name, and his "watchful waiting" i policy, has taken a new turn in in troducing to a novel-loving public the initial endeavor of a young graduate i of Yale University, who has submit | ted his first and worthy literary al | tempt "The Wirligig of Time." Mr. Williams, an erstwhile member of the editorial staff of the New York Evening Post, has been more or less closely connected with the scenes whereof he speaks, having lived in '[ New Haven, graduated from Yale in 1910, spent a year in Paris and an , other at the University of Munich. His novel deals with two brothers, of opposite dispositions, but drawn 1 i closely together by a bond that re- I fuses "oftentimes to let them speak out their hearts to one another. Their careers are followed from the death of their mother through their school years, to the assumption of business ' cares and marriage. Two more inter esting characters cannot be imagined. ; 1 To an undergraduate or alumnus of Yale, the story presents possibilities | for infinite enjoyment. The atmo ' sphere of Yale is correctly depicted, 1 and two very sharply defined classes | of individuals outlined in the charac- I ter delineation as applied to the two j brothers. There is humor, imagina- I tion and life In the work of the young j novelist, and a great many of the ) weaknesses which are usually so (obvious In the early- attempts of a i coming writer are not discernible in ; this work. Mr. Williams shows ! great promise. DR. GRANVILLE AT HUMMELS TOWX Sfecial to the Telegraph Hummelstown, Pa., May 9. Dr. W. A. Granville, of Gettysburg Col- M lege and Dr. Charles Huber, principal of the preparatory department, ap -1 peared at both morning and evening 1 | services at the Lutheran church on | Sunday. Dr. Granville will spend the | week in Hummelstown, during which . time he will call personally on the | members to present the needs of their ; church college to them. UNDCSTRIKS FOR MONT ALTO Special to Ike Telegraph ! W T aynesboro, Pa., May 9. —lt was announced recently that Mont Alto, ! just a little to the north of Waynes boro. would have. In the near future, a shirt factory. State bank, water system, and, in all probability, elec tric lißhts furnished by the Waynes boro Electric Light and Power Co. At least three of these propositions are now a practical reality—the factory, bank and water system, with another i | industry in sight and the light ques . 1 Uun tus good as aetUeti. , The Latest Bulletin They f Q C^tMxo Coa-t If ****** 0k 'I With a Rush! ( T j: 1 Gas Ranges and Tank V j\ V - Gas Water Heaters use 1 I I 1 being bought by eager I Il3a jl purchasers at special \lj 7>A ' I prices (and at a time 11! Ci « when other metal-made —"1 «■ articles are increasing in jsßrr: price.) $2 off the price « _ » of any Cabinet Gas Range. $ I off the price of any Single or Double Oven Gas Range. In addition $1 off the price of Tank Gas Water Heaters when bought and in stalled with a gas range. A This Is Gas Range Week SUFFRAGISTS TO COM'IME I'SE OF YELLOW SI,IPS I The little "yellow slip" which has served so satisfactorily as a means of Indicating sentiment for woman's suff- j tKat Gas-bom^v^'<^\— J >mj&k _<&• Ever tag along in the wake of a smoke-sputtering, gas-cough ing car or truck that had you sputtering and coughing in turn ? Yes, we all have. And more than once we could have been arrested for what we thought of the driver in the car ahead. With careful driving and proper lubrication, cars should not smoke —with the emphasis on "proper lubrication." Atlantic Polarine is "proper lubrica- search and experimentation conducted in tion" for 8 out of 10 cars. It is the famous a manner that a plant of smaller size and year-round oil that is exactly right under equipment could not have attempted, all driving conditions. Motor experts and oil specialists seri- In all alternative cases, one of the ously recommend these oils as the other three principal motor oils —Atlan- correct lubricants for YOU. tic "Light,"Atlantic "Medium," or Atlan- In actualtests it has been demonstrated tic "Heavy"—is the one to use. that a properly lubricated car will often Here is a group of four motor oils pro- yield as much as five more miles to the duced by the oldest and largest manu- gallon of gasoline, facturers of lubricating oils in the Ask your garageman which of these entire world. four oils is best suited to your particular The group is a result of patient re- car, then buy that oil —and use it. Read up on thii subject. We have published a handsome and comprehensive book about lubrication. It is free. Ask your garage for it. If they cannot supply you, drop us a postal and the book will be sent you without charge.