Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, June 01, 1916, Page 12, Image 11

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    12
Delicious Taste
N. B. C. Graham Crackers ara incomparably the finest
■ flavored of graham crackers. Thanks to our careful selec
tion of grain and thorough preparation, we get just tho
w? right proportion of elements to make a wholesome biscuit
and one that is the most palatable and appetizing of its kind.
Try N. B. C. Graham Crackers for their delicious nut-like
flavor and flaky crispness. Use them regularly at meals and
■ between meals, because they are as digestible as they are
I NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY
I. AW VERS IM.AN I'ICXIC
Details Tor the outing of members
of the Dauphin County Bar Association
to be held at lngleno"k June 'J are be
ing: completed by a committee consist
ing of John Fox Weiss. Charles C. Stroh
and John H. Shopp. The attorneys will
leave the courthouse In a train of auto
mobiles at 1.30 o'clock.
Guests of honor will include the pre
siding and additional law judges in
Dauphin and nearby counties. Among
these will be President Judge George
tunkel and Additional lav Judge S. J.
E. H Don't Give Your
IP Medicine
Vx HH Send for the doctor if the
f\ ■ baby is really ill. Other-
M w ' se B' ve your baby plenty
f ■ of sunshine and air, soft
® / ■ * res h loose clothes, a daily
n ffl P ■ bath, castor oil if you must
■ — an< l be sure his food is
I § Q// ® I* * s ahnost always
1 i / ' I kv\ HH the food that's wrong when
You know, if you cannot nurse your baby, he must have
milk in some form. There is a way to give your baby all
j the good in cow's milk without subjecting his delicate
stomach to the dangers that raw cow's milk so often carries.
Thousands of mothers are finding the right way every
' day. They are bringing up their babies on
Nestles Foocl
(A Complete Food—Not a Milk Modifier)
Nestl£'s is milk from healthy Nestle's Is building healthier,
cows, purified, the tough, heavy happier babies all over the world,
curds are modified —the baby needs Send the coupon for a FREE Trial
are added. Reduced to a powder, Package of 12 feedrngaand a book about
it comes in an air-tight can. No b'bie, by
hand has touched it —no germ can
reach it. To prepare you add only NESTL£'S FOOD COMPANY
fresh water and boil one minute. 200 Woolworth Building. New York
It is a complete food containing all Pieaae send me FREE your book end
;he nourishment needed to build a trial package,
happy, healthy baby. Nurse your
baby if you can—if you can't— Name
keep him safe on Nestld's Food. Addreaa
' _ City
j
'J •, J ' ■'-'■ l ''o ■. - Vv/ Kola some - Pa lata I
_ - RuHls Bread
Direct from oar oven
* /// PWe
Co your taMe Wajoid i
RuKls Pcntrook Bakery I
. • |
< There's a Difference In Coal,
m A vast difference. Tou may be burning more coal than la neces- |
# sary, because you are not burning the kind especially adapted to your
% requirements.
M Talk the matter over with us—we'll steer you right on the par- i '
% tlcular kind of coal you ought to be using—and supply you with the
M beat heat-giving fuel you can buy. Coata the same—and goes further, g
I J. B. MONTGOMERY >
■ 600—either phone Srd and ChesLaut Streets I |
Farmers' Excursions
STATE COLLEGE
FRIDAY, JUNE 2 TUESDAY, JUNE 6
Spei'inl Train l.enve* _ . . , ,
HnrrlMbi.rtc 7. 03 A. M. Special Train Leaves
Tlcketn *3.00 round trip, Mnrrlnbiirn 0.45 A. M.
•old, uond «n tml vt, IriMlnu;
Chum Iters hurt* 6.00 V. M.» stop- Propdrllonntt low fnr en
pins »t principal loenl Cum- from points on Middle 1)1-
herlnnd \ alley Stations to 11slon, went to Tyrone, Inclu
' Mh rrlslnirß. nlve.
Returning trulns leave State College 5.30 P. M.
s3=so $3,00
See Flyer* Consult Ticket Agent*
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD |
Try Telegraph Wani Ads
THURSDAY EVENING.
M. McCarrell, Dauphin; Judges S. B.
Sadler, Cumberland; Charles V. Henry,
Lebanon; W. Hush Glllan, Franklin;
Albert W. Johnson, Union-Snyder.
W. C. T. U. IST CHARGE:
The W. C. T. U. will have charge of
the meeting at the City Itescue Mission
on Friday evening. The Rev. A. IS
Hangon, of Park Street Evangelical
Church will be the speaker. A large
attendance is expected, good singing
from "Make Christ King'' book.
WOM£iV'S I
Why I Never Married
Why do BO many women who are at
tractive, intelligent, full of human af
fection and tenderness— the sort of wo
men who were designed by nature to
make Ideal wives and mothers—never
marry ?
Is it because they were bent on
cjllbaor? Or Is it because men were
too stupid to know a good thing when
they saw it, and so passed them over?
Or is it the fault of social conditions
that never gave them their matrimonial
chance?
It is one of life's great puzzles, and in
an attempt to solve it, Dorothy Dix has
asked a number of charming old maids
why they never married.
limL BY DOROTHY MX
.The reason that 1 am an old maid."
* J? nrst woman, "is because custom
and convention debar a woman from
picking out her mate. If I had been
permitted to pop the question I should
now be a nice old grandmother, knit
ting pink baby socks. Instead of a
lonely old spinster trying to nil In her
lire with a vicarious interest in
causes.
"Of course I had plenty of chances
to marry. woman who isn't a
freak can marry if she will lake what
she can get. but, as the children .say,
J 4 'choicy/ 1 knew exactly the
j i- a 1114,1 1 warned for a husband.
, I couldn't get him 1 preferred
to do without one.
"5° 1 am an old maid because the
men who proposed to me I wouldn't
t Ifja, l a ST l **.* and the man I wanted,
I dldn t have the courage to propose
to myself.
A Common Case
think my case is a very common
one. There are many women like my
self who have a high ideal of what
marriage should mean. To them it
should be a real mating, a union of
heart and soul. They are incapable
of marrying for a home, or a support,
or for the privilege of writing 'Mrs.'
before their names.
"These women would be glad enough
to marry If the right man came along,
but when he doesn't they refuse to
compromise on a makeshift. They would
lather be old maids than make a mock
ery of marriage. They would rather
do without love than to take a lower
love.
"Now. the maddening thing to those
of us who belong to this class of old
maids is that we do not go througn
life searching for an impossible Ideal
Announce Program For
Nurses' Commencement
i Eight members of the Nurses'
I Training School of the Harrisburg
! Hospital will lie graduated next Tues
day evening at the institution. The
exercises will be held In the Memorial
Hall opening at 8 o'clock.
The program follows: Music, "Pan
quita"—The Lemer orchestra; invoca
tion The Rev. Dr. George Edward
Hawes, pastor of the Market Square;
Presbyterian Church; music, "Hu
moresque"; address to the graduating
class—Dr. J. B. McAlister, president
of the Pennsylvania Medical Society;
music, "Aloha Oe"; presentation of
diplomas Frederick E. Downes,
Pli. D.. superintendent of the Harris
burg School dislrict; presentation of
bjidpes Dr. Frederick W. Coover,
dean of the staff of physicians and
surgeons of the Harrisburg hospital;
music, "The Glud Girl": benediction
—the Rev. Dr. George Edward Hawes.
The graduates are the Misses Char
lotte Marie Commings, Harrisburg;
Pearl Alberta Coulter, Reedsville, Pa.;
Blanche lona Feister, Harrisburg;
Nr.omi Ruth Hoffmeister. Auburn. Pa.:
Dora Natalia Josefson, Dagus Mines.
Pa.; Margaret Agnes Pfaff, Dagus
Mir.es: Cora Elizabeth Willis, Middle
town. and Marion Eliza Killian, Har
risburg.
Baby Tortured
with Rash
Healed in Three Days by
) iHlfkos I I
(omforu
V^POWDER/
Here u proof and baby's picture
"I sm sending a photo of baby San
ford, who suffered tortures from a rash
which covered her entire :
body. After using Com- |
L fort Powder night and
\ '*■ morning for three days
■£, fK the rash disappeared.
Comfort Powder is not
'• v X «v nurses' best
—- 1 1 friend, but baby's best I
friend."—A. M. Lawrence, Flint, Mich.
Not a plain talcum powder, but a highly
medicated preparation which combines
healing, soothing and antiseptic qualities
unequalled to heal okin coreness of in
fants, children and sick people. Used and
endorsed for 20 years by leading physi
cians, nurses and mothers. Ask for
Sykes* Comfort Powder.
At Drag and Pep't Stores, 26 cents.
THE COMFORT POWDER CO., Boston, Km
« Purify the
Complexion
Do not be troubled with
coirplcxion ills. Keep
a!l blemishes concealed I
while you are treating
■n. You can do this Instantly
lout detection by using
J/J. liouraud's I 3
Oriental Cream
It will also a&sist you to overcome "those j
ills" at the same time if they do not orig
inate internally. Renders to the skin a
soft, pearly-white appearance. Non-greasy.
Send lOe. for trial •
TEPD. T. HOPKINS A SON. New York City j
EDUCATIONAL
School of Commerce
| Troup Building 15 So. Market Sq.
Day & Night School
\ Bookkeeping. Shorthand, Stenotypy,
Typewriting and Penmanship
Bell 485 Cumberland ::l»-Y
Harrisburg Business College
Day and Night
Bookkeeping. Shorthand. Civil Service
Thirtieth Year
Market St. HarrUbur*. Ps.
The
OFFICE TRAINING SCHOOL
, Kaufman Bid*. 4 S. Market Sq.
Training That Secures
Salary Increasing Positions
In the Office
Call or send to-day for intereatiriK
Booklet. -The Art «f Ueltlnic Along la
World." Bell phone 694-R.
HARRISBURG ?£§s£& TELEGRAPH
of a man without ever finding him. The
tragedy lies in the fact that we genef«
ally do find him. but convention doesn't
allow ua to grab him and run off horn#
with him and live happy ever after
On the contrary, we have to stand
helplessly by, feebly trying to wigwag
to him the glad news that we think
that he is IT, and he sees us making
signs and passes at him, but doesn't
know the feminine code-book well
enough to understand what our signals
mean. Or perhaps he is so blind that
he pasties by without ever noticing us
at all.
"¥ou may say that if a man were in
love with a woman he wouldn't wan
for her to pick him out. He would do
the picking himself. Not at all. Only
men of great initiative ever think of
things for themselves. Everything else
is suggested to them. Yet look how
enthusiastic they become over schemes
that are attractively presented to them!
And they always end by thinking they
originated the idea.
The One Man
j "The same thing would hold good in
I matrimony. Besides, many a man who
l is really in love with a woman does
not ask her to marry him because he
| thinks that she is above him In social
station, or accustomed to more luxuries
than he can give her.
x< luciolu. wd.'ta. . N.. N.. N.. N'.. ..
"In my own case, the one man that
: I have met that I could have loved and
would have been glad to have married
was a poor chap, earning a small sal
ary, and with a widowed mother and
I a house full of little brothers and sis
ters dependent on htm.
"He wae a frail, delicate fellow, with
I small talent for business, but with the
| most beautiful soul and the most bril
liant mind I have ever met.
"There wasn't a taste, or thought, or
idea that we didn't have in common,
and I look back now upon mv comrade
ship with him as the most beautiful
episode in my life. 1 know that he was
as much drawn to me as T was drawn
to him, but he would not ask me to
marry him because he had nothing: to
offer a woman but grinding; poverty.
And T couldn't say to him, 'l've Rot
money, and strength, and health, and
I'll love you. and mother you, and take
your burdens off your shoulders, and
you'll fret well and be happy ever after.'
"No. T couldn't say tnat. because T
was young: and foolish, and bound down
by tradition, and I let him g:o away
from me and die. That's why I'm an
old maid."
YOUNG BOY'S SUIT
COMFY AND SMART
Try the Unbleached Linen, a
Novelty of This Season
For Boys' Clothing
By MA Y MANTON
9054 (TVilk Basting Line and Added
Seam Allowance) Boy's Suit, 4, 6
and 8 years.
Here is a boy's suit designed especially
| for summer needs. It is made with an
! open neck, the coat is simple and loose
and the trousers are straight and free at
; the knees. They can be rolled up when
wading is to be enjoyed and they are
always comfortable and satisfactory.
In the illustration, striped galatea is
: shown but this is a suit that can be made
from linen, from galatea, from chambray
1 or from gingham for morning and for
playtime or from pongee, linen or similar
material for afternoon wear. Unbleached
linen is being much used this season and
jis both attractive and durable. It is
I pretty with bands of blue and natural
colored pongee is smart with the collar,
j cuffs and trimming of the same material
; in red or in blue. For the playtime
suit stitched edges are all that are neces-
I sary but the bands make a good finish
: for the handsomer one.
For the 6 year size will be needed, 3
' yards of material 27 inches wide,
j yards 36 or 2 yards 44.
The pattern No. 9054 is cut in sizes
for boys from 4 to 8 years. It will be
| mailed to any address by the Fashion
Department of this paper, on receipt of
| ten cents.
1 GERARD DEPRIVED OK AUTO
By Associated Press
London, June 1. An Amsterdam
1 dispatch to the Dally Mail says that
United States Ambassador James W.
j Gerard has been deprived of the us©
'of his automobile through the refusal
of the German Foreign office to permit
'the embassy to buy enough petrol to
j keep one car in service for three
| months. A request by the ambassador
I for permission to import petrol from
i abroad was met with the reply that
j the military authorities feel compelled
j to confiscate .any petrol found in Ger
-1 many.
Observe Well-Gowned
( j Women Everywhere
Hair under the arms is a needless in*
curebrance of which women nowatlaja
' | wisely rid themselves in a most agreeable,
"womanly" way—by the aimple use of a
■ | toilet preparation called El Rado.
El Rado is a sanitary liquid that removes
hair from the face. lip. neck, or arms by dis*
I solving it in a few moments, almost like waph
ingiiofT. Easily applied with piece of absorb*
ant cotton. El Rado is absolutely harmless,
and does not increase or coarsen later hair
» growth. Money-hack guarantee. fiOcandli.OO
' at all toilet counters. •
l£ yon prefer, we will gladly fill your order
C by mail direct, in plain wrapper, if yon »ill
I write at air pa or coin. Pilgrim Mfg.
i Qa., i 7 Last 28th Street, New York.
durable. Strong and fimfy woven of H
HICH EST AWARD selected, long, pliant, jointless wire-grass j
OFTICTAL * n ? revers '^ e service is doubled. J
RIBBON Tneir^ wearing qualities and adaptability the
| 111 To protect you against imitations and disappointments
«AN E the name C-R-E-X is woven in the side binding
SONS OF ITALY
CLOSE SESSIONS
Delegates Guests at Banquet'
Tendered by Harrlsburg and
Steelton Members
Delegates to the Sons of Italy State
convention wound up business in Har
rlsburg; last night as guests of Harris
burg and Steelton members of the
order .t a banquet. Peter Magaro
was toastmaster and the big feast was
| held in Chestnut street hall and at
tended by 200 members,
j Toastmaster Magaro in his open
ing address referred to Harrisburg's
' popularity as a convention city and
| said it was a pleasure to have the
■ Sons of Italy representatives guests
|if only for a few days. He expressed
a hope that they would hold another
convention in Harrlsburg In the near
future. Other speakers were Thomas
Russo, a prominent attorney of
Philadelphia and A. Joseph Di Sil
veetro who was yesterday honored
with an unanimous re-election as
grand master. He begins his fourth
consecutive term to-day. Other
officers elected are:
Antonio Zafflro, Reading, assistant
grandmaster; Croce J. Tortaro, Read
ing. past grandmaster; Dr. A. E. Ab
bate, Pittsburgh, grand speaker;
Behedetto Oro, Philadelphia, treas
urer; Antonio Vigllone, Philadelphia,
financial secretary; Alfredo Perifilia,
Philadelphia, corresponding secretary;
Matteo J. Alberti, Reading; Agostino
Branca, Harrlsburg; Domenico Pap
pano. Philadelphia: the Rev. W, J.
Vavolo, Pittston; Salvatore Lolaconno,
Wtlli&msport, grand trustees.
I The meeting next year will be held
in Uniontown.
| The delegates differed on the ques
tion of amount for a death benefit
and Compromised on S4OO. This
' amount will be paid by assessments
I o-i each member. The plans of the
Supreme lodge for an Orphanage In
Pennsylvania was ratified and the lo
cation and details will be left to the |
grand lodge officers, subject to ap-;
proval by supreme lodge officers. The
new officers were installed by Oresta
Siflio, grand treasurer.
Previous to adjournment Grand
Master Di Silvestro was commended
for his good work and presented with
a gol' 1 medal set with a large dia
mond.
Many Entries Received
in Birdhouse Contest
' Entries have been received by Boyd
I P. Rothrock. curator. Pennsylvania
I State Museum in the Harrlsburg Na
tural History Society's birdhouse con
! test, as follows: Garfield McAllister,
! SO4 North Sixteenth street; Frank B.
I Miller, Hlghspire, Pa.; Herman Holsop
j pie, 621 North Seventeenth street; John
Henry Hobart, 715 North Seventeenth
! street; C. D. Backenstoss, 1425% Derry
i street; George A. Meyers. 1700 State
street; Dixon Speakman 709 North
'Seventeenth street; Arthur "Wilson, Boy
I Scout Troop No. 4; Theodore Selig, 920
North Sixteenth street: G<#rge A. Shre-
Iner, Jr., Seventeenth and Forster
Streets: Leonard Looker, 214 North
Tenth street; Ahram Burkholder, 722
North Sixteenth street; Raymond Coble.
1629 Apricot street: Stewart Hose, 1651
Walnut street. Qulnter Holsopple. 621
North Seventeenth street; Henry Klugh,
gOO North Sixteenth street; Ross Mc-
I Cord. 107 Hoerner street; Paul McDon
ald. 1312 Swatara street; Fred Morgan,
1726 State street; Clarence Newmeyer,
7."i North Seventeenth street; George Pa
vord, 1514 State street: Faber Pleftfr,
121 North Eighteenth street: Clyde Itil
i ter, 411 South Thirteenth street: Marry
| Uupy, 1508 ltcglna street; liuii Wright,
JUNE 1, 1916.
619 North Eighteenth street; Alex Wel
lan, 1010 North Sixteenth street; Ed. j
Rockafeller, 1359 Berryhill street; Groh
Hosier, 1513 North street; Paul Hope, j
1614 Briggs street.
HIGH SALARIES FOR RULERS
London, June 18. King George, l
who has made a gift of $500,000 to the
treasury for war purposes, is by no
means the richest of European raon
archs, for, though he receives close to
$2,500,000 per year, three-quarters of
that sum has to be set aside for offi
cial expenses. The King of Italy re
ceives $3,760,000, the Emperor of
Germany $4,600,000 and the Emperor
of Austria $5,250,000 from the State,
and the two latter, like the Czar of
Russia, have enormous private in
comes.
The Household Remedy
for the ailments from which almost everyone sometimes
suffers—sick headache, constipation, disturbed sleep,
muddy complexion, lassitude, backache, depression ana
other results of a disordered digestive system—is
IFCUUMS PILLS
They have achieved the distinction of being the most
widely used medicine in the world, because millions of
people have found them dependable, speedy and sure in
their action on stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels.
Compounded from vegetable products, Beecham's Pills are free from
harmful minerals and dangerous drugs. They do not promote the
physicing habit—do not irritate the bowels. Should be taken by every
member of the family at the first sign of illness—so mild and effective
that they are good for the aged, and for the ills of childhood, are
Safe for Children
Direction* of Special Value to Women with Every Bo*.
Sold by druggist* throughout the world. In boxes, 10c, 25c.
pilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
The money you spend makes money
for the other fellow the money you
invest makes money for you.
= The Harris Building ami I <Ollll Association offers an excel- 1
= lent opportunity for the investor in its FULIj-PAID STOCK. s
Eg The shares are S2OO each and draw interest at the rate of 5 ==
E l>er cent. The interest is paid semi-annually, and is com- =
= l>uted from date of certificate If stock remains at least six =
§ months.
S The stock in the Harris Building and I'ian Association is f=
S non-assessable and does not fluctuate. The Interest rate and ==
= (he security offered makes this full-paid stock an attractive =
~ proposition for the investor—large or small.
= You will be Interested In the Information in our booklet ||
The Harris Way." Write or phone for it.
|
POISONED WEEDS KIM, COWS
Lancaster. June 1. A number of
1 valuable cows, owned by John San
! srey, a Pequea township dairyman,
| died yesterday from eating weeds
j growing along the Lancaster and
I Quarryville railroad. Track repair
[ men had sprinkled a powerful acid to
I kill the weeds, and as the herd was
I being driven to pasture across the
tracks the animals ate the poisoned
| herbage.
j EIGHT-HOUR MASS MEETING
TO BE HELD JUNE 25
Charles W. Erwin, of Philadelphia,
| and Allen W. Rlcker, of New York,
will be the speakers at a big "elght-
I hour day" mass meeting to be held
in the Victoria Theater Sunday June
i 25, with sessions at 2 and 8 o'clock.
I Charles F. Qulnn, secretary of the
! Pennsylvania Federation of Labor,
will preside.