18 WOMEN'S I "THEIR MARRIED LIFE" 1 fcjr llttniattnri W»w HntM "We ought to have a perfect time," | said Helen, watching the flying land scape and settling down closer in the seat of the car. "Yes. and the kid will be tickled with the flowers," said Warren, grinning amiably. "I'm glad you thought of that." "Girls are so thrilled about re ceiving flowers." said Helen. "I remember how T was at seventeen." Helen and Warren were on their way to see a school play. One of "Warren's nieces was at boarding school out in the Jersey hills and had sent tltem an invitation to at tend an annual play. For a won der Warren had been quite taken with the idea. Helen was vaguely l surprised as he so seldom had time for anything of the kind, but when the invitation had come he had said immediately that they must go. "Well run out in the oar," he had said suddenly. "Oh. then it isn't true." said Helen QUicklv, and then stopped. "What isn't true?" "That we are going to sell the car?" "Now, where did you hear that?" "Mrs Davenport mentioned It at Louise's luncheon." "And 1 suppose you have been making yourself miserable over It." "Warren had continued. "Well. Warren. I did think that If you had decided anything of the kind that T should have been told." "Well, we're not going to sell the car, make your mind easy on that score." "What did Mrs. Davenport mean?" "Well, business was poor a couple of months back and 1 did think 1 might raise some ready cash on the car. 1 spoke to Davenport about it. but I found that I couldn't get nearly what It was worm. I dldn'* tell you because I didn't want to worry you about it before 1 found out for sure." \ Perfect Day "And you want to go up in It Saturday?" "Pure 1 think that's a groat plan unless it rains." And so * hey had actually started In the car. Heh#i jubilant nnd War ren in one of his best humors. The dav was perfect and the car ran smoothly. They had left rather late In the afternoon as Warren had taken time to finish some busi ness letters, but they had planned to reach Mendel Valley in plenty of time to dress for dinner. War ren seldom spoke when he was driv ing. and Helen was silent too. The beauty of the day made her disin clined for talking and the country was looking its best. At Morris town as they were driving through a tire blew out. Helen stole a glance at Warren's face, and for a wonder found him grinning. "Tough luck." he remarKed. "Well, we'll have It fixed In a Jiffy. They drew up to the curb and Helen Jumped out and went Into the little dry goods store that boasted ihe name of Perkins over lis awning. She smiled a Uttle as she watched Warren from the window. He had eone to work and had the shoe off already. y\N ideal luncheon or I ■p^ai^a^^aj'*oo supper dish that takes B the place of meat and that X gives a delightful spice of variety is— Hotel Astor Rice Creole ■ I ru.l nt ftriinea lomttMt ' j tcvpxm 2 teupoonfuts salt I cuptiael? ait ocioas 1 tablespoon chopped parsley Hav? T>ur quirts of water boiling hard. Acd rice and coak for twenty-bye minutes. Drain ia yx: not w»tci L shaking so the grab* viil separate. Dry oa too ot range. the crippuias iato a pan, add foe onion* cook uiriii trader and yellow. Ada tomatoes, pepper. Mu thorough!* wi A liw rice. S?rrc on a platter and sprinkle top whh parsley. H Hotel Aator Ricm ii ao/rf in eealedcarton* only. H5 10c for a fvil poand in the yellow cartem. Al moat good grocofv. M y*tn cinot supply yn Mod 19c far faO peuad carta* to ■ B. FISCHER & CO., Importers, ~ 190 Franklin St., New York City DIRECT FORM PRODUCER TO CONSUMER Agricultural statistics of Pennsylvania show that the farm er receives about fifty cents on the dollar for his produce. The balance goes to the Middleman, —and the public pays. Much of this you will save by attending the CHESTNUT STREET MARKET Of value to Farmer and Housekeeper. The seller gets a little more for his produce, and the buver pays considerably less. Get the economy habit. Go to the Chestnut Street Market, Wednesday mornings until 10 o'clock. Practically all day Saturdays, until 9 o'clock in the evening. ....... * —iiTminmii Stock Transfer Ledger TTie Pennsylvania Stock Transfer Tax lm.vr (Act of Jnne 4, 1916) which l« now tn efTect requlrea all corporations in the Bt»ie. ; no matter how laree they may be to keep a Stook Transfer Ledger. ] We are prepared to supply these Ladders promptly at a vary nominal ij 1 price. \ ! Ii ii Ii 1 ! I! | The Telegraph Printing Co PrlnUiit—Binding—Designing—Phot® Engraving HAiUUSBUKG, PA. FRIDAY EVENING, HXKR'SBURO TELEGRAFI MAY 12, 1116 1 The rest of the drive was accom- j plished safely and they drove up to the low wooden structure, where tbey engaged rooms, or where Nat-1 alie had engaged rooms for them. | Everything was pleasant and they : went upstairs Immediately to a j large square room. The bed looked comfortable, and Warren walked around and examined thtngs closely: as was his wont. "Things look great, eh?" "Yes, everything Is certainly corn- ! fortable. dear." "Well, It's after six: shall we 1 right away? 1 feel as if a bath ■ would make a good Impression on me." "You take your bath and I'll get ! your things out," said Helen, begin-! nlng to unpack the traveling bags. Things were progressing beautl- 1 fully. She was beginning to feel quite girlishly excited over the ' prospect of being the guest of honor i and having one's niece take a j prominent part In a play. She had i met Xatalle only once and remetn-i bered her as a slim little thing with a wide laughing mouth and beauti ful eyes. Warren flnlshed dressing and urged her to hurry. "We want some tim* to look around before the show starts." he had said. I Helen hastened as much as pos sible and Just as she was ready to come out she heard Warren utter a savage exclamation. Trouble at 1 -ast "What is it dear?" she called. "What Is it?" repeated Warren sarcastically. "Well, you've made a pretty mess of things." Helen wondered what she had forgotten to pack and hurried out to him her eyes filled with anxiety, "What's the matter. Warren?" "Matter? Matter enough. Do you know what you've done? You've hroucht my old dress coat." "Why, Warren, that isn't possi ble." "Why Isn't it Here it is, you can see for yourself. Now, what's going to be done?" Helen was genuinely sorry for Warren. She knew that he boyish ly wanted to make a good Impres sion that evening and she was furi ous with herself for the mistake. "1 thought you had put that coat away," she said penitently. "I am so sorry, dear. 1 wouldn't have done ; it for worlds." Helen might have said that it was his own fault for not remembering to take care of it as he said he would. She had offered to do it herself, but he had told her to leave it alone. Well, things might be; worse. Warren must make the best of it. "It won't be noticed, dear," she offered consolingly. "Won't be noticed. That's all you' know about, it," said Warren, get ting into the coat. "I've a good mind not to go at all." And he went angrily out pf the room. (Another incident In ttils Interest ing series will appear here soon. 1 COLLAPSE OF ALL ACCEPTED FOOD Chapter ST ! Hr. K. Purreuon of the hronpriiia Wffltetan l>ld Not Consider the Short ness of liratUi ami the Pallor the Clew Engaged in Shikiug French and British Ships to He Seriously Sigulti oant—>V»r Tills Rcawui No KtTort Was Made to Ctiange the Dietary, Which llnaily Resulted Not Alone In the Col lapse of the tierniaii Sailors, but Also In the Coliaiise of All the Popularly Accepted Theories Coiiotiruiing Food Values. The Kronprins \VUhr.lm steamed , from Hoboken August 3, 1914. A little more than a month later, September 4. 1914. she sank the British steamer Indian Prince jfmnd from Bahta to Ntw York, after confiscating all the coal, white flour, meat, butter, canned vegetables, coffee, sugar, and soda , crackers found on that ship. Her own supply of fresh meat was nearly exhausted when the Indian Prince was sighted. The white flour and meat were looked upon as manna l from heaven. Another month passed. ' October 7, 1914, the British steamer l.a Oorrentina, bound from Argentina to l.ondon with 5,600.000 pounds of l'resh beef, was sighted by the Ger- ■ man ship's lookout. She. too, was, run down and from her Immense re- , frigerators, flooded with formaldehyde gas. the Germans seised enough chilled and frozen beef to supply her needs for several years. She crammed her own spacious re frigerators with hindquarters and ribs. In addition she corned 150,000 pounds of rounds, using the custom ary brine of sodium chloride and potassium nitrate in the process. After taking enough meat to provide I each member of her erew as much as three pounds a day for an entire year J she confiscated all the L.a Correntina's butter, patent flour, tea biscuits, sweet crackers, potatoes, canned vegetables, and her meager supply of fresh vege tables before blowing her up. Six weeks passed. . November 21. 1914, she captured the . French bark Anne de Bretagne on , her way from Fredrickstad to Syd- I ney. This boat, before she was blown to pieces, surrendered all her coal, patent flour, butter, potatoes, canned vegetables, sugar, coffee, champagne, and dried peas. The rest of her pro visions went to the bottom. The Germans had all the meat, bread, and hutter they coud eat. With their twenty-six knots an hour they knew they could continue to scour the seas until the end of the war, If necessary, sinking vessel after vessel and obtaining coal and provisions as lon;j as the men continued in health. Fresh meat, bread and butter, and • potatoes are generally assumed to be life-sustaining foods. The Germans unwittingly were about to explode that mischievous but long-venerated theory. December 4. 1914. after she had been cruising for four months, she | sank the British steamer Bellevue,, bound from Liverpool to South Amer ica. From this ship she secured 4,000 tons of coal and an immense shipment of sweet biscuits with all the patent flour, butter, and canned vegetables which the Englishman carried. The slow-moving influence of their refined and demineralized diet (en- ! tlrely acid-producing) had not yet made itself felt in the bodies of the' sturdy Germans and there was no; suspicion, even among the ship's sur geons. of the fact that the fruits of: her raids were actually gnawing Into! her own vitals. On the afternoon of the same day. j December 4, 1914. she sank the French steamer Mont Agel, bound from 1 Marseilles to South America. Before: blowing her up all her butter, patent flour and potatoes were seized. Each raid, while supplying tons of food, was slowly but surely inten- j slfylng the mild acidosis that was finally destined to a violence that; would overpower her crew and compel her to make her last dash through i What! Mayor Comes Out For Kissing Just After Park Spooning Stand Mayor E. S. Meals has proved him self an able ally of Dan Cupid this year, and only yesterday advised Har risburg girls not to be afraid of kiss ing. He, of course, urges them to be particular about whom they kiss. Re cently the Mayor went on record in favor of spooning in the city parks. Following are a few of his paragraphs about kissing, which he is positive will bring goods results if used: Young men and women should kiss —lt would mean more marriages, more homes. Naturally be particular whom you , kiss. Husbands and wives should kiss, it would mean fewer divorces. Children kiss your parents, you would learn to appreciate them more. Kiss your friends—you would have fewer enemies. Kis your enemies—you'll make them your friends. CANCEL WARD I.FCTVRF The city survey and lecture on com munity center work scheduled for next week by Professor E. J. Ward, l»te of the University of Wisconsin, has been BUT THIS IS HOW HE DID IT OH VES, hRS. I'M FOMD f IOP WIDOWS —IN rvY.IT WHEN I WAS \ \ YOONCEfR, I SEVERAL! J darkness Into a neutral port, en feebled. broken and undone. Had It not been for her plentiful supply of typical American and Eng lish meals she might have remained out there on the high seas until the end of the war, sinking French and ' English ships. Christmas of 1914 passed Quietly.! and three days later, December 28, she ' sank the British steamer Hemisphere, ] bound from Hull to Uosario, obtain- i Ing 5,000 tons of coal, with a great quantity of white flour, butter, sweet cakes, potatoes, and canned vege tables. January 19. 1915, she sank the British steamship Portaro. bound from Liverpool to South America, after taking all her coal, patent flour, sugar, canned vegetables, butter and enormous consignment of Huntley & Palmer's sweet biscuits. So many of these biscuits were seized that tin boxes of them were presented as "tips" to all the small boys and mes sengers who ran out to her In small boats on the James River with papers, packages, telegrams, and mall after her arrival at that port. As 1 watched the boys take away those prize boxes of Huntley * Pal mer's biscuits I wondered whether the people would really ever hear the truth through the magazines and la dies' journals and other organs of up lift that parade the advertising of so many foodless foods. January 14. 1915 she sank the Brit ish steamship Highland Brae, running between the slaughterhouses of Buenos Ayres and the meat markets of lA>ndon. The temptation to seize I more fresh meat was not resisted, and j in addition she took enough shoes to j supply a small city. She also took all the butter, patent flour, potatoes, and j canned vegetables which the High- j land Brae had aboard. Scarcely had the bomb exploded | which caused the British steamer to < lurch forward and gurgle to the bot tom when fhe British schooner Wil fred Al, from St. John's to Bahia came peeping over the horizon. In half an hour the Germans hail over hauled her and in a few hours had confiscated her cargo of salt fish, po tatoes. white flour and butter. The pallor of her crew and the dila tation of the pupils of their eyes, to gether with marked shortness of breath here and there, were observed l)V Dr. Perrenon, but were not con sidered seriously significant, and the men went on devouring their typical American meals, so highly rated by the professors of convention and the advertising geniuses of the refined food industry. February 6, 1916. she sank the Nor wegian bark Samentha. from Linton to Falmouth, loaded with a cargo of whole wheat. The germ and bran of that wheat would have been worth more to the rapidly succumbing Ger mans than its weight In gold and precious stones, but the Germans did not realize that they were sick. Acidosis is a disease which does not And its way Into the papers, and the common people, including those who suffer most from its ravages, have ntxer heard of It. It was not sur prising that the Germans did not know how badly they needed that whole wheat with Its alkaline bases and its oilier soluble extractives and ! vita mines. They did not know that within a 1 few weeks one hundred of them would pass Just one Inch beyond the limit of toleration, after which only one treatment under the blue sky could save them. In consequence of their faith in fresh meat, white flour, but- Iter. boiled potatoes, canned vegetables, sweet biscuits, coffee and condensed milk, those thousands of bushels of whole wheat with their priceless salts and colloids were sent to the bottom, and not a single bushel was trans ferred to the German boat. The facts about to follow have made history, even though they are doubt less destined to provide moad oad less destined to provoke much noisy and futile controversy in high places. I cancelled owing: to failure of Mr. Ward to complete lilts work In the West in time to reacli this city. An expert from 1 one of the Eastern titles in which the system Is operating will be secured at : an early date. Adams Agriculturists to Arrange Farm Bureau Special to the Telegraph Gettysburg, Pa., May 12. —Plans are about completed for the organization I of an Adams county farm bureau by I farmers and final action on the or ganization will be taken this week. 1 Fruit growers, dairymen, market gar • deners. stock raisers and grain farm ers are interested in the organization 1 and when completed a county agent will be employed to take charge of the t business end. I BrfTOX STHTKF KVDB '] Special to the Telegraph 'I Lykens, Pa., May 12.—Employes at , the Short Mountain colliery resumed i work yesterday morning after being ! idle two days on account of a "button j strike." The twelve men on account of whom one thousand were compelled t to remain Idle have secured buttons or t given satisfactory promises that they i would do so. Qll I I II BOOK'S < f r 1 us * ® n ' Another Shipment of \ M ~BWomen's Kid Boots i t / * \\ J'J The same boot other stores are asking $5 and $6 for. >»w 'V iIK Special for this Saturday < 1 I *T JL\ A Handsome . __ A Very < * V. i\\ 9-inch Clever JL U Lace I J. t J New York \ |f \ it IL Model Style T *IV White Kid, Gray Kid, Champagne Kid, I Ui\ Bronze Kid, Nu Buck and Combinations 1 *K>'S SHURI *4/ 1 Y OXroRDS \ I vtr y popular style and moderately priced. These handsome kid aq a> \ a hoot* In the desired heights for wear with shorter skirts. Stunning: \ M models in white and colored kid and two-color combinations. Kverv I Women's White ffiEP Women's Shoes, i Canvas Lace |H)h| Pumps and Ox- Y Boots with white fords, clever J soles and heels. Mj jR-TTTT eimfsuAuMtl styles in all X All sizes; $4 jflvt nAI\Ll(j leathers; $3.50 > value values at f $2.45 217 MARKET STREET™- $2.45 Summer Chautauqua For Mechanicsburg in July Special to the Telegraph Mechanicsburg. Pa., Slav 12. —Plans' have been forimilated liy the executive I committee of the Mechanicsburg Chau- I tauqua Association for the annual series of summer entertainments, the I date of Which is July 13 to 19. in clusive. The tent will be erected on the plot of ground on the corner of Market and Marble streets, where the Chautauqua was held in 1914, the only location available. The following chairmen of committees were jp uointed by the president, the Hev. H. Ilall Sharp: Hospitality, H. C. Ryan; advertising, A. B. Harnisli; parade. Louis A. Diller; grounds, James W. I/Oose: tickets. Miss Maude K. Wll liamson: junior Chautauqua, Miss Ree 1 '/A\g. The program this year will be of a high order and Dr. Cadman, who lectured last year, will again appear. The Chautauqua superintendent Is A. E. Turner. Officers of the local asso ciation, who are making: every effort for the most successful year,\ are: President, the Rev. H. Hall Sharp; vice-president. Dr. J. N. Clark; secre tary, Ouy H. T.ucas; assistant secre tary, George R. Hoover, and treasurer, A. E. Seiber. MOTHER'S DAY AT FAI.MOUTII Special to the Telegraph Falmouth. Pa., May 12.—Elaborate j programs have been prepared for 1 Mother's Day services in the Falmouth United Brethren Church and Geyer's 1 United Brethren Church on Sunday. May 14. at both church service and ] Sunday school session. The pastor of the charge and the superintendents of the Sunday schools have made ar rangements for special services. ; JUNIOR MECHANICS' REUNION Special to the Telegraph Duncannon. Pa., May ll.—The sev- I enteer.th annual Junior Order United American Mechanics' Perry county re union will be held at Newport, Sat urday, June 17. under the auspices of Newport Council, No. 614. AGA|N IN BUSINESS Special to the Telegraph Duncannon. Pa., May 12. Theo 1 Noye and son Charles, who sold their 1 meat market to Kistler & Rot* sev | eral months ago. have purchased the business back again. Grasp SS ry Special & J 1 prices on all / /ftST / GAS RANGES lf/X\ y)J /and TANK GAS V/j/ V fS WATER HEATERS if bought before we \ \ 4S" f close Saturday night. \ \ Gas Range week is near \rK* J *ly over - Don't miss the oppor •ll I y tunity it brings to save you money. X $2.00 off the price of any Cabinet ' Gas Range. _Jf Double Oven Gas Range. In addition. , \ SI.OO off the price of Tank Gas A/ Water Heaters when bought and in \ Visit our store, or have us send a K representative. \ y Harrisburg Gas Company 14 South Second St. Bell 2028. Cumb. Val. 752 DRILL BY TRKSSLKR ORPHANS | Spteial to fit* TtUgiroph Newport. Pa.. May 12. Captain I James Halin will give a competitive military drill in (lie Square here on ' Saturday, May 20. at 1 o'clock In 'he! afternoon, by the junior military com- ! puny of Ttessler orphans' Home all l.oysville. The same company wiil drill at the Tressler Home on June 1 at the anniversary. The drillmaster will put in the hands of competent Judges SIOO as a prize for any com pany that can excel the boys in a strictly military drill. Resinol easily stops skin-troubles Doctors have prescribed Resinol 'very dmtgiit »«il» Rwhiol Ointment E for over twenty years in the treat- M *f ment of eczema and similar itching, tains nothing harmful or irritating pC|KfryT~ B (H 20 Industries Came to Harrisburg From 1909 to 'l4 Aocordins to a statement issued by the l r nited Slates Census Bureau, 20 industries came to this city in the period between 1909 and 1914. The capital investment in 1914 In theso plants was $21,650,000, and the cost of materials used that year, $10,605,0u0.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers