Children Cry for Fletcher's The Kind Yon Have Always Bought has born© the signa ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision lor over 30 years. Allow no one to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and ** Just-as-jrood " are but experiments, and endanger the health of Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA ©astorla is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It de stroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been In constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Trou bles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years THE CENTRA COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY WOMEN'S "THEIR MARRIED LIFE" || CwrUM by la.rrmatlnna! News Service Helen turned to Anne after Frances had left to go to Carp. "Won't you go home with me for dinner, dear?" "No, I don't think X ought to, Helen. Frances will need some one when she comes back and I ought to be liere." "But not alone don't you want j to telephone Jack to come down?" "Jack is out of town." "Then I'll stay." "But, Helen, you oughtn't to, 1 really. "Warren won't like it a bit." "Warren will have to like it that's all there is to it. I don't do a thing of this kind often, and to-night there is nothing eise 1 could do and feel at all right about it." Anne made no other objection. The truth of the matter was that she hoped Helen would stay. Fran- ! c«s had unnerved her a little, and she had no idea how she would be when she returned. Anne was a little bit afraid of Frances some- ' times, when she was temperamental I and queer and hard to understand. Frances was always different when | she wrote. She even admitted afterward that! she didn't blame Anne a tilt for hating her. Once Anne had asked her a question when she was deep | in thought, and she had turned on the younger girl fiercely, blind with sudden, uncontrolled anger. And I yet Frances could be as gentle and terder as the simplest woman at times. Every one who loved her knew that. "I'll call up Warren," Helen said. ; conscious that Anne was nervous. ! And she crossed over to the tele-1 phcne and sat down before the lit-1 tie table. She hardly knew what Warren would say. She hoped that he would take it all right, but he was Just as apt to be disagreeable as cot. Not for the world would she have admitted such a thing to Anne, however, and she gave the number with perfect nonchalance. ' Warren himself answered. "Hello, dear, this Is Helen. I am i down at the apartment with Anne. J Yes. I am going to stay down here' for the evening. Warren. Avery At- i wood has been hurt and Frances has gone to him. Yes, Anne is alone and T think I ought to be with her when Frances comes back." Warren Asks Questions Warren muttered something about not understanding why Frances was needed In the case of an accident to A%ery Atwood.. Helen never told 1 Warren Frances' secret, for she did not think he would understand and she would not have dreamed of tell ing a confidence to Warren under! any conditions. "He was asking for her, dear. They are good friends, you know." j "Well, is Anne afraid to stay: alone? Where's Jack?" Helen hated to answer the last question for fear that Anne would feci hurt and insist upon Helen's I leaving. Why couldn't Warren un- j derstand just once! Warren was plainly disagreeable at the prospect of having dinner nlone, and Helen, after a few more I remarks, was forced to ring off or else betray to Anne that Warren thought it was all a lot of foolish-; ness. "Was he nice about it?" Anne questioned. "I know he thinks I am perfectly Idiotic to need you, Helen, I and I feel selfish." "Not at all. Mr. Curtis would have been selfish not to understand. Now, j what are we going to eat? I, for' mn— 11 am 'win 1 11 ib in ■! iiim ■■ i hiii w i minaiii mm Absolutely No Pain f Mr latest Improved appll ~ /* rV Ml aneea, Including aa oxeygen- jur <.y Vlaed air apparatus, make* . ,yV i 'W ' / extracting and all dental \V w Wi f work poaltlvely palnlea* .A» ,•> perfectly EXAMINATION ** .^^, n h u ■*i s #< 0 teeth ...»S.bvi FREE VVv G ° ld «««nna »x ' • alloy 50c Rcglaterrd 4 V r Gold crowna and Ormdnate a a bridge work $3. Hss Aaalatanta Office open dally 8:80 2iK gold crown. . .96.00 A f V to t p. M.i Mon, Wed. m and Sat., till 8 p. m.| Soa- days, 10 a. a. t> 1 p. m. F BELT ' FHOXE 332'J-R. if % EASY TERMS OF PAYMENTS Market St. Harrisburg, Pa. u -I-a , t fcßrt aWt TUESDAY EVENING, lone, in spite of that tea, am begin ning to feel hungry." "There isn't a thing in the house," | Arne confessed; "Frances and I ! were planning to go out for dinner to-night. Effie has been home 111 i all week and hasn't been in to I cook for us, and we haven't enjoyed | messing around a bit." "Ought we to go out anywhere i and eat?"' "I'm afraid Frances might call up ! or something." "Perhaps we could call up some where and have them send In some -1 thing hot. Is there a restaurant or hotel anywhere near?" "Yes, there's one around the cor ner, we might try that. Oh!" and Anne jumped nervously. "That's the bell, Helen, I'll go. I wonder who that can be ?" I Helen followed Anne into the hall and stepped forward eagerly when sbo saw who It was. "Why, Warren Curtis, I'm so glad !to see you. However in the world did you get here so soon? It ; hasn't been fifteen minutes." I "Had the car outside," Warren said briskly. "Didn't feel like having dinner alone and thought I might be some good down here. So here I am." Helen hadn't been so dellclously happy In weeks. She glowed all over at the thought that Warren really needed her and had come to her. "We were just going to telephone to the Elliott to see if they wouldn't send in something to eat," | I Anne was explaining. "Can't you both come out soms i where and eat? I am starving to i death being so long without a meal." A Compromise "Frances might come back and need us," Anne explained. "I just i hate to Inconvenience you people. I'll tell you what to do Mr. Curtis. Vou and Helen go out and have I something to eat and then you might l bring me home a sandwich or some- I thing when you are finished. I j wish you would really, I'll feel so | much better about it." "I should say not," said Warren | stoutly. "I'll skip around the corner and see what I can get for the three of us. How's that?" "Warren, that will be dear of you." said Helen enthusiastically. | "We'll have everything ready when I you get back." "All right, it won't take me a 1 minute. Gee, I quite enjoy the prospect of dining picnic style like this." And with a good-natured and reassuring grin at Anne, who I looked embarrassed and was in ; reality afraid of Warren, he was i gone. The two women got the table ready and brought out dishes. War ren came back In about ten min utes followed by a waiter who car ried a tray covered with mysterious ; looking covered plates. Helen and Anne made merry over the affair and after the waiter had been dismissed with the order to return in an hour, they gleefully began to arrange the eatables on the table. Anne*laughed whole heartedly at one of Warren's sallies, and Warren insisted upon beer for all three. It would have been a great party. Helen though, if the shadow of Frances' trouble had not hung too heavily over the hearts of both Anne and herself. Another instalment of this inter estmg series will appear here soon. vnnnfi THEY build OR A "V/ MJ DESTROY AMAZING BUT RARELY SUSPECTED TRUTHS ABOUT THE THINGS YOU EAT l?f 0 r P /d r^ ht MeCann b ) y By ALFRED W. McCANN CHAPTER 76 Tbe Bread Inquiry of the Attorney General of New York State, February and March, 1915, Brought Forth the Extraordinary Admission of the Larg est Baking Concern in America to the Effect That All White Bread, Unless It Contains a Certain Added Patented Powder, Is Worthless—The Investiga tion of the State Resulted in the Re duction of the e-Cent Loaf of White Bread to 5 Cents, but It Did Not Suc ceed in Restoring to the Devitalized 5-Cent Loaf the Priceless Elements Which All Bread Should Contain. The manner in which the staff of life can be manipulated at will for commercial purposes, not alone through the withdrawal of elementary substances necessary to normal nutri tion but through the addition of sub stances not found in any natural food. Indicates the necessity of establishing an official definition of the word "bread," together with means of con trolling its integrity. In February and March, 1915, much Interest was aroused concerning the use of "plaster of Paris" in the pro duction of the bread made by one of the largest bakers in the United States. Considerable light was shed upon the secret use of a mineral mixture in the making of broad in Boston, Xew York and other American cities, when Referee Nussbaum, at the In quiry of New York State into an al leged conspiracy to Increase the price of bread from five to six cents a loaf, I on the ground that war prices made i bread Ingredients higher, probed into the secrets of wholesale bakers. Prior to taking of testimony in the bread case, at the office of Deputy Attorney-General Alfred L. Becker, I 299 Broadway, New York City. In j spector James O. Jordan of the Boston \ Board of Health made a report to Mayor Curley, in which he asserted that bakeries in Xew York and i Massachusetts were making bread ! which contained calcium sulphate o»herwise known as gpysum or piaster lof Paris" materials used in making plaster casts. When questioned concerning the truth of Inspector Jordan's report the vice-president of the Ward Baking Company, one of tne largest baking j concerns of the world, admitted at the state's hearing that such a product j was in use, that it had been employed for three years prior to the date of j the state's investigation, and that it j had been patented. He justified its use on the ground i that it enabled the baker to leaven his dough before excessive fermenta tion took place. "Excessive fermentation" he said, "is destructive of practically all food 1 values in the ingredients used in mod ern baking." He argued, therefore, that the only bread which retains any food value is the bread that contains this patented powder, for the reason !that prior to its discovery all bakers' I bread was worthless because of the destruction of practically all of its I food value. Of course, such conclusions cannot be true, however sincere the men who I arrive at them. We have examined l.the evidence that shows white bread j is not a bone-builder. | We have examined the evidence that proves pigeons fed on white bread such a mixture we know, notwith ; bones even to the extent of perforation I of the skull. We know that Volt established this i fact as long ago as 1882. According to the report of the Bos ton Board of Health on the composi tion of this "plaster of paris" powder the samples examined contained cal cium sulphate. 24 parts; sodium chlo ride. 24.90 parts; ammonium Chloride, j 11.50 parts; starch. 30 parts. ' Regardless of the functions per formed in the leavening of bread by C. E. OFFICES IN Y. M. C. A. BLDG. Nothing Will Be Left Undone For Convenience of En deavor Delegates Plans for the coming Christian En i deavor State Convention to be held In this city July 11-14 as announced by the general committee at Christian Endeavor headquarters last evening indicate that nothing will be left un done for the comfort and convenience of the Incoming delegates. During convention week the headquarters of the general committee will be in the Y. M. C. A. building. Second and Lo cust streets. The decorating and halls committees under the direction of A. J. Lightner and H. W. Keltel, chair men. will construct and arrange booths in the convention hall, tt*e Chestnut Street auditorium, for the ac commodation of the registration. In formation and entertainment com mittees so that the delegates upon arrival will find all their needs sup plied under one roof. Booths will also be prepared for the exhibit of the Pennsylvania Christian Endeavor Bulletin," the State paper, for the conbentlon press committee, and for a rest room. The convention hall Itself will be tastefully decorated with the national and the Christian Endeavor colors. It Is believed merchants of the city will welcome the young people of the State with window displays Home Celebration of Wonder Interest "The arrival of a baby In tbe household the entire aspect of H I anxious period of ex- I I pectancy, there is a m splendid remedy known Is for external use, re- I muscle expansion, , I soothe* and quiets the ; I T |I2S|H fluence to the internal I I Organa and removes to laiBHHiMHHHH * feat extent the ten dency to worry and ap prehension. R li | natural treatment, safe for tbe mother, baa no drug effect whatso ever and for this reason must csxert a most beneficial influence upon thoee functions di rectly connected with motherhood. In a Terr inter eating book the subject is freely discussed and a copy will be mailed free to all expectant mothers by Bradfleld Regulator Co., 408 Lamar Bdf.. Atlanta, Oa. Get • bottle of "Mother's Friend" today of any druggist. Use as directed and you will then know why mothers for nearly half a century hare used and recommended this iplendid aid to motherhood. Their letters are message* ot cheer. tMt •~eaUio comfort la or cry wanL HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH such a mixture wo Know, nowith standlng the statement of the vice president of the concern that has pat ented it, that It is not the failure of i the baker to use ingredients of this j kind which makes commercial white j bread a grossly inadequate and neu j ritis-producing food. We have examined the evidence that proves the miller who sifts, bolts, | screens, and reflnes the wheat, thereby removing the bone-bullding and ; other bio-chemlc elements from his | product, is the man who is responsi j ble for the denaturing of white bread. However, the testimony taken be fore Referee Nussbaum was not with out its value. It placed on record the admission of one of the most promi nent white bread bakers In the world that white bread Is worthless bread, devoid of food value unless It contains a certain chemical compound manu factured under the direction and con trol of certain commercial conditions. When the people are informed that the way to restore the food value of white bread is to add to It a com- I pound of gypsum or plaster of Paris, j in amounts however small, all the ln ! dictments charged against the broken i staff of life are unwittingly confirmed. It may make little difference to the man who enjoys a great variety of foods whether his bread be impover ished or even worthless, or whether It : contain "plaster of Paris" or any other | chemical addition. The highest of high prices paid for denatured bread means nothing to the ! well fed or to those In comfortable i circumstances, but to the average ! American family, whose dally diet j consists largely of bread, it means I decay. The poor and the rich together are i consuming an inadequate substitute ! for wheat in the form of white flour food, but the poor, who need all the i honest nourishment they can get, con sume by far the greatest quantity of this foodless form of food. In New York City the common peo ple know that the European war was merely an excuse for advancing the price of bread to six cents. It was be cause they cried out against this ad vance that the attorney general of New York State interfered. They know that it was due to his : interference that the price was not only returned to five cents, but that lone year later, February, 1916, when j the raw materials from -which bread is made, were bringing even higher i prices than when the six cent rate was arbitrarily fixed, one large con j cern in New York City sold the same | bread made by the same people at four cents a loaf. j By its clamor the public had af fected the price of bread while re maining in ignorance concerning its devitalized character. Growing chil ! dren who eat bread three or four times a day are not concerned in an advance of one cent a loaf or in a re duction of one cent a loaf. They are unable for themselves to heed the signifiance of the fact that , chickens and other animals perish in a period of six or seven weeks when j fed on an exclusive diet of white I bread. ; Their parents, who know nothing of , physiological chemistry, have little i conception of the meaning of bread, i and so they cast their eyes upon the j significance of a penny saved, and, confining their Interest to that Issue, j pay heavy toll to the Great Reaper who gathers his richest harvest from i the underfed and enfeebled children i of the -white bread addict. 1 The bread Inquiry of the attorney ; general of New York State, through the extraordinary admissions which it ; provoked on the part of the bakers ! themselves, shocked and for a time confounded the entire white flour in j dustry of the United States. I We shall now examine the signifi cance of those admissions. which will feature the Christian En deavor colors, red and white. It was announced that a meeting of the registration committee, W M Mai ley, chairman, will be held in the First Baptist Church of this city, Mon day evening, July 3. The work of this committee has already begun and shows most encouraging results, re | ports from all over the State indicat | ing that practically all of Pennsylva nia s 2,500 Christian Kndeavor Socie- I ties will be represented at the "Great Convention" in the Capitol City. Opening Hours Changed at the Public Library During July and August, the Har risburg Public Library will be open, Monday to Friday, from 9 a. m. to 1 p. m. and from 4to9p. m. On Satur days the library will be open from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. The practice of clos ing from 1 to 4 p. m. on every after noon except Saturday, during July and August, has given general satisfaction to the patrons of the library, who also find it convenient with this arrange ment to have the library opened at 9 o'clock every morning. Attention is called to the vacation privileges for drawing books, which permit six books to be taken on each reader's card, for a period of two months, subject to recall. This num ber may Include three works of fiction (not including seven-day books), and three of nonflction. In this connection, it Is Interesting to note the many attractive books of travel added to the Library recently, of which selected titles are given be low. Special stress has been laid on "Seeing America First," and the travel table contains, In addition to ' the books, many descriptive folders and circulars, giving practical information in regard to summer tours. Interesting books of travel In the Harrisburg Public Library are Auer, "Camp Fires in the Yukon"; Bishop! "Panama Gateway": Clarke, "Haw thorne's Country"; Dunbar, "History of Travel in America"; Gladding, "Across the Continent by the Lincoln Highway"; Hough, "Let Us Go Afield"; James. "Our American Won derlands"; Kilbourne. "Chronicles of the White Mountains"; O'Connor, "My Beloved South"; Pardoe, "Up the Sus quehanna"; Peet, "By Motor to the Golden Gate"; Putnam, "In the Ore gon Country"; Reed, "Dune Country"- Saunders and Chase. "California Pad res and Their Missions"; Scully, 'Lodges In the Wilderness"; Street! "Abroad at Home"; Thoreau, "Canoe ing in the Wilderness "; Verrlll, "Isles of Spice and Palm"; Waller. "From an Island Outpost"; Wood,"Tourist's Cali fornia"; Wood. "Tourist's Northwest"" Zahn, '"Through South America's Southland." Many Picnics Booked For Boiling Springs Park Special to the Telegraph Mechanlcsburg, Pa., June 27.—Pic nics are booked for Boiling Springs Park as follows- June 2fi, Episcopal Sunday School, Camp Hill; June 27 Second Reformed Sunday School. Har risburg; June 28, Calvary Presbyterian Sunday Bchool. Harrisburg; June 29 United Baptist Church, Harrisburg; June 30, Messiah Lutheran Church Harrisburg; July 1, Church of God, Carlisle; Carlisle Commercial ictxooli ! - " A I y^-V. To Home-Makers Who Love Bargains The biggest of all food bargains is offered in the big loaf of MOOtY-BfICK Bread at ten cents. Meats, eggs, milk, potatoes and all other staples have been steadily soaring for years back but Money bacK ' BREAD 1 At only 10 cents per loaf provides four teen times the energy of meat or eggs Just glance at the table of food values shown below. The fig ures show the comparative amount of energy that 10 cents will buy. Energy ARTICLES Energy |A. Egg* . 385 mm Means lllL Beef, sirloin . 410 mmm „ Mutton, leg 445 win inn MUSCIe Will Milk 1030 ■■ I and WW MI Pork,loin. 1035 HM Pill/ Butter 1365 Strength lilSjy Potatoes 2950 mmmmnaummpyr rs.iSmM I Beano, dried 3040 GlVlIl(J MOPCY BfICK Bread 6540 Qualities (U. S. Department of Agriculture Farmers Bulletin No. 142) I Of eggs 10 cents will buy 385 units, of beef sirloin 415, of BREAD 6540. These figures are authentic and were furnished by the United States Government. Established by official tests. They mean much to you. Eat more bread —be better led and cut down the eost ot llvlna. Sold In large double sized loal at 10a Harrisburg Baking Co. copyright 1918. W. T5. Co. I ' July 6, Church of God, Camp Hill; j July 7, Olivet Presbyterian Sunday: School, Harrisburg; Jul., 8, Calvary i I nited Brethren Church, Lemoyne; j Siate Printery, Harrisburg; July 11,: St. Paul's Reformed Sunday School, i Mechanlcsburg; July 12, Trinity Lu- 1 theran Sunday School. Harrisburg; \ July 14, West Falrview Sunday School; ! July 15, Pokoson Council. No. 66; July; 18. Trindle Springs Lutheran Sunday School; July 16, Grace Evangelical 1 Church, Enola; July 20, St. Paul's Church. Carlisle; July 22, Grace Evan gelical Sunday School, Mechanlcsburg; | July 25, Cumberland County Medical i flESi^ JUNE 27, 1916. ' Association; July 26, St. Mark's Lu ] theran Church, Mechanicsburg; July 127, Camp Hill Lutheran Church; July j 28. Bethany Presbyterian Church, Har | lisburg; July 29. Maccabees, Carlisle; I August 1, union picnic, Churchtown; August 3, Shiremanstown picnic; Au | Fust 4, First United Brethren Sunday j School, Mechanicsburg; August 5, \ Perry county; August 8, Middlesex : Sunday School; August 9, -Brother j hood of Locomotive Firemen and En- Rinemen; August 10, St. Michael's Ger man Lutheran Sunda\ School, Harrls : burg; August 11, Municipal Band, Har- I lisburg; August 12, Men's Bible Class No. 1, Church of the Redeemer, Har risburg; August 15, Eberly's Mills Sun day School; August 17, Fraternal Or der of Eagles, Carlisle; August 19, Oakville Sunday School; August 23, Fifth Annual Farmers' Industrial Pic nic; August 26, Men's Bible Class, No. 23, Steelton; September 4, barbers' picnic, Harrisburg. BIBLE CLASS ENTERTAINED Hummelstown, Pa., June 27. —Mem- ber.'- of the ladies' Bible class of Zion Lutheran Church were entertained at the home of Mrs. Ed. Allwine on hei tarm near town. 9