New Method Better Than Face-Peeling. Proves To Be Great Aid To Beauty Brautr Specialist Tells of Reliable Way To Become Good Looktag If your pink complexion is fading, if Tinkles are creeping into your fa*«, tf aalfownese is destroying your beauty or pimples, blackheads, freckles and brown spots are making you unattrac tive. Hera is a simple, safe and reliable method for overcoming these destroyers of boautv that will bring you pleasant and most surprising results. Take your hand mirror to the window and ex amine vour face closely noticing care f ullv the size of r°«»r pores, the depth I of your wrinkles and your natural ten dency to freckle or facial blemishes. Next apply a generous amount of Am- I o-ntie 20 vears younger. Many a woman has obtained high social position or se cured advancement in business ahead of her unfortunate rival who did not un derstand the power of beauty. S. P. C. A. Notes V To its plea for more general sup port and lnoreased membership made by the Harrisburg S. P. C. A. there have been encouraging returns. Every ■day new names for membership are be ing sent Into society headquarter*. !ffo. 7 North Third street. There have also j been sorae special subscribers. This is a good beginning, but the so ciety's aim is 1.000 members to put It on a secure basis. Must this good work cease or be curtailed to the point of ineffectiveness? With hot weather at hand the sufferings of animals In crease. Must they be unprotected this eummer? For four years the Harris burg 3. P. C. A. has done much for Infants-Mothers Thousands testify HGRLIGK'S The Origlnat MALTED MILK Upbuilds and sustains the body No Cooking or Milk required Used for 73 of a Century Free Sample Doriicb's, Racing, Wis. NATIONAL will idraacf In price July Srst. 13—cylinder Highway .S1&90 to •2190 O-cylindex ... tl«90 to (1750 PENNA AUTO SALES CO. OS SOCTH CAMERON JTRJiET Bell Phase 1497-& \f t Suits to Order Sjafill SIO.OO I 1 Room 3 36 N. Third St. V LOOK! ONLY E. BLTJMENSTEIN 14 South Court Street "Onyx" Hosiery Yo« Get GOOD Value at ANY Price —Sili ; LiiV or Coosa 25c to S&JO per p«k Emery-Beers Company, inc. _ NEW YORK JABREQU "" Eradicates Dandruff- makes New Hair Grow and Promotes Hair Health For sale by druggist or sent to any address on receipt of 25c. KUTZ MEDICINE COMPANY 1325 Derry St., Harrisburg. ——— ——— —i | IT'S THIS WAY | | KING OSCAR | I 5c CIGARS I ♦♦ ♦♦ H Are packed full of quality. ~ | Get wise and give yourself | | a treat by smoking regu-1 H larly this 25 year old:: H quality brand. H ♦t s S John C. Herman & Co. ♦♦ WEDNESDAY EVENING, Again, the woman who neglects her self must continually light an unequal battle with her younger and better looking sister. Beauty may be only skfn deep, but the woman who has Improved her com plexion and kept her face soft, white and free from wrinkles by the -use of Am-o-nized Cocoa has an attractive skin that suggests a refinement which places her in a higher class than that occupied by the careless woman who has been Indifferent to the development of her personal charms. Beauty Is Wo man's birthright and nature's greatest gift to enhance this charm Is Am-o nized Cocoa. Note.—Am-o-nized Cocoa recommend-! od above by Winifred Grace Forrest, the noted English Beauty Specialist is one j of the newer forms of cocoa cream. 1 I'nlike the older products It is pleasan' to use, has a soft, fragrant odor and Is used almost exclusive for muss** and facial treatment in the English , Beautv Parlors. American women who are treated by Beauty Specialists should insist that no other emollient | be used on their face for massage. ' Superfluous hair and ruined complex- j lons too often result from the use of, cheao massage creams. Am-o-nlzed Cocoa can always be obtained from any first class druggist and Is so easy to apply that the average woman has no need for the services of a Beauty Spe- ' clalist. the comfort of all animals, especially j horses, dogs, cats and overcrowded i poultry. This work must stop If more j friends are not available. Show your > Interest by Jotning the society. The 1 membership fee is but II a year. Send, in your name to-nlglft to the president, John T. Olmsted. The animal protection le world-wide. S. P. C. A. literature Is published in many languages and societies organised in various parts of Europe, Asia. Africa and South America. The war has bad ly affeoted many of these foreign so cieties, hut none has stopped. In Madras. India where the war pinch was badly felt at first, the na tives have rallied to the support of the society. One curious efteot of the war on animal protection t« the extreme leniency of the magistrates, who even in cases of conviction, have made the fines so low as not to be deterrent to cruelty. They excuse themselves for this because of the rise in food prices. In Madras alone there were over 2,000 prosecutions last veaj. The methods of this MadTas society are very progressive. It owns an ani mal hospital officered by graduates of the government veterinary college. In deed, the society lends the hospital to the government There were over 1,200 patients last year. A cruel practice of the municipali ties, that prevails all over India, is the hiring of men to club to death on the streets stray dogs. The society now maintains lethal chambers for humane killing of these stray animals. Simple Home Treatment to Remove Hairy Growths (Beaaty Culture) Two or throe minutes' use of & dela tone paste will banish every bit of hair from you r face, neck or arms. This paste Is made by mixing tone water with powdered delatone. After the paste is removed, the skin ahouM be washed to free it from the remaining delatone and It will be dear and spotless. You will not be disappoint ed with this treatment if you are sure to obtain real delatone from your druggist. AUTO STORAGE— First class, fireproof garax* open day and night. RaTes reasonable. Auto Trans, (israge He Social Urates Story No. 11 The Fangs of the Tattler. Plot by Qeorg* Bronson Howard. N«7*ll«ation by Hugh C. Weir. Copjrrtf ht Kalem Company. "Ijj this Miss Hartley—4A>n* Hart girl who had picked op the tele phone Transmitter gave a Wondering affirmative to the queetton over the wira, noting: that it was a woo* n't vojoa which had spoken—a voice which e t auefception of hysteria. My name Is Burton," continued the voice, "Mrs. Amos Burton. You don't know me, but I have heard of you and your friend, Jtftae Davenport, and I—l . w ;L sh v,/ coul 4. hel P me! I am lr trouble, desperate trouble!" The hys teria in the speaker's voice was rleing to a shrill crescendo. "Don't say vou oanhot. It you refuse me, I don't know *hftt X Shell do!" Mona glanced at her watch. If you VIU give me your address, Mrs. Burton, Mlse Davenport and I will see you at once," she said briskly. It was shortly after eleven o'clock when the hired motor of the two girls drew u

*' « *a« eaey enough to read between the linee of the rav *"*e® v. own dissipation. But 1 sent hfcm some money, rather foolishlv ~e nffo o t the incident until yestexflay." B.owb P ar/deXi?it a el> d COntlnue « „-'^J^? rdar afternoon I received s "LAi?"® Btyl , ir \? Wmself Abner Runkie, attorney, with a request tor f- n Interview on a vital subject. Re luctantly I received him and he horri ned me with the announcement that my letters from George Allison wer« lu the poeuesaion of a newspaper, and about to be publiohed— unless I could raise enough monoj- to bur ttwmn back. Of oour«e, I thought he was shooting at run dam, but when I searched mv desk I found that he had. Indeed, spoken*he truth, for all of my letteri had been stolen." Mona's ftce oonCraoted grimly . A,* 8 ®. 1 * ®he.said grimly. "And what ne * B " it Ti*v, TaUler! . s V r6ly ' you most know it. It has acquired a tremendous repu tation by publishing the moet sensa -80(1 J dais of any paper In this : section—affairs which no one but a l person intimately acquainted In society ' ciuld have known about Everyone has suspected for month® that The Tattler was b.-ing supplied with its material by someone being reocived into the oest homes of the city—and there have been ugly rumors of other scandal s tor lea. even more sensational than those it has published, whloh were suppressed strangely at the last mo ment. w hen I received the proposi tion of the lawyer. P.unkle. I could understand how had been done, and tnat I was not the only victim tvhich The Tattler had caught in its coi.s He told me that he had hap pened to drcD into the editorial offices of the newjiftper quite by accident, and while there had seen the proofs of the article about me, which were to nave been published In this week's .ssut. Knowing the injury which such a publication would be to me. he had prevailed upon the editor to hold up the article, ae he expressed It until he could see me—explaining that it would mean considerable loss to the paper's circulation to Mop the publica tion of such a sensational story, and that if I were willin? to fcvake up this iobs. he thought It possible to get back the luttors for me. He told me that it mignt be arranged for five thousand joilars, and he is to call tomorrow for the moiey." "And you nad planned to give it to aim? asked Mary. "I can't! I haven't got it! And there !s no w.iy X can raise it without carry ing the whole wretched s'ory to my husband You see, I have over drawn my allowance, and it is quite mpossible even to pawn my Jewels without Mr. Burton finding It out. and suspecting all sorts of things. No there is no way out, unless you oan help me!" ' You siv the letters were stolen from your private desk?" asked Mona thoughtfully. "That fact, at least, 3hould eive us a base from which to work. Who. besides yourself, had access £3 the de*k—and who knew the letters ;vere there?" "No one!" said Mrs. Burton promptly. "But that is impossible, remon strated the (drl. "The thief must have known. Ana we miwt find the thief If we are to help you! Have you a maid?" "Of course—but Mlml is quite above suspicion. I assure you. I would vouch for her devotion." "Can we talk to her?" asked Mona. To Be Ceillmil Tomorrow, WILL GO AS NURSE By Specicl Correspondence Waynesboro, Pa., June 28. Miss Sarah Gonder. formerly of this place, a sister of Mrs. Campbell McKelvey, who has been a trained nurse In Phil adelphia, will go to the Mexican bor der as a trained nurse in the service of the United States. TRAPPED 200 SPARROWS By Special Correspondence Waynesboro, Pa. June 28. —S. E. Beeler, east of town, has started to wage war on the English sparrows. Several days ago he built a wire bird trap in which he placed several spar rows and some crumbs as a decoy. In three days 200 birds were captured! The trap will hold twenty birds at one time. HARRISBURO TELEGRAPH IN MEXICO 70 YEARS AGO [Continued from Kditorial Page] Impassable gorges, and the wildest of | scenery, stood the bristling hill com j ruonly known as Cerro Gordo (prop j erly Sierra). Here Santa Anna, who j had hastened to the capital after his j > defeat at Buena Vista, stood ready to i bar the Americans' way with 15,000; [troops and thirty-nine pieces of 'artillery advantageously posted. The attack upon and capture of thin apparently impregnable position is ; pronounced by military critics to have been the most scientifically fought bat- I tie this world has ever seen. Gen- | eral Scott issued, in advance, to his i commanders an order of battle In which he not only detailed every movement of each division of the j troops during the attack, but indi cated the exact time at which each position of the enemy should be taken by storm and the movements of the various detachments after the battle was won. And every single particu lar of his general orders was executed to the letter and on exact time. Previous to the main attack, Scott's soldiers had opened a road several j miles in length, through a country al most Impassable from rocks and ' chaparral, by means of which a posi tion was gained on Santa Anna's Hank and rear. After some desperate fight ing here on the 16th of April, 1547, a general assault was made the next day, front and rear, upon the cannon bristling heights. Col. Harney's divi sion leading In the first, and the di vision under Goaeral Twiggs In the later. The defense by the Mexicans was determined and bloody, but in the face of a withering fire the American soldiery rapidly pressed up the heights, surmounting every obstacle which the ingenuity of Sunta Anna had added to the natural defenses of the position, and stormed the last line of Mexican defenses at the point of the bayonet. By noon the Mexican rout was complete. Santa Anna barely escaped capture by fleeing on one of the mules detached from his carriage, leaving In the hands of the victors that vehicle containing his treasure chest with a large amount of specie, his wooden leg, and his plans and specifications for future action in driving the ' Yankees" out of the land. For several years after the Mexican war the whole United States was sim ply wild over the unexampled triumphs of American arms and Am erican prowess. In 1849, a Philadel- \ Time! Time has demonstrated that a spade of a certain width digs easier and faster—with greater efficiency Scoop-shovels in gardens are have developed a better bal of little service. And a crowbar anced, more powerful, lighter, for spading is a worthless tool. sprightlier motor. The one is too wide the And we have reached the other too narrow. The right point—the point of the greatest medium is the efficient spade. motor efficiency. Experience—the best of More cylinders would be use practical and scientific motor * ess \ Fewer would not give experience—has made convinc- maximum service, ing the logic of the Twin Six. That's why the Twin Six has We have put two power- been the greatest Packard suc producing factors where there cess—time-tested by six thou was only one before. sand delighted users—your logi- i T . . cal car—now. Prices $2750 j In reducing the size of the $3150, upward —f.o. b. Detroit cylinders by half, and multiply- Packard Motor Car Company of ing their number by two, we Philadelphia, 107 Market Street. Ask the man who owns one ij _, " » i Another Big Suit Sale Friday (Next) CO Women's and Misses's W Spring Coat SUITS K— 1 Former Values $15.00, SIB.OO, $20.00, $22.50 to $25.00 v S W On Sale FRIDAY (Next) For A GOOD ASSORTMENT OF SUITS IN A BIG I VARIETY of the Most DESIRABLE COLORS & SIZES t See These Suits Now On Display In Our Windows. f Remember None Are Sold Until Friday Morning (Next) f phla publishing firm of a practical' turn of mind to earn some money out of the national enthusiasm, issued an almcnac in German, intended more! particularly for sale ia the German speaking counties of Pennsylvania. 1 This calendar gives the chronology i and history of the Mexican war with ! anundant and excellent pictorial illus trations. One of these represents sev eral American soldiers in Santa Anna's chariot, one of whom is holding up, Santa's wooden leg to the gaze of his t comrades, while others seem to be in tent on diving into the specie chest. Thousands of copies of this almanac ■were sold. I doubt if to-day there is a single copy of it to be found in the I city of Harrisburg except my own. The American loss in this wonderful' JUNE 28. 1916. battle was 431 killed and wounded. : General Scott captured 3,000 prison jers, 4,000 stand of arms and 43 pieces lof artillery. The retreating Mexicans i also left more than 1,000 dead and 1 ; wounded on the field. After Cerro Gordo, Scott advanced rapidly toward the Mexican capital. T wo days after the battle, Patterson's division occupied the city of Jalapa, 30 i miles beyond. May 2, General Worth ; i forced the surrender of the celebrated fortresr. of Perote, 40 miles distant! | from the recent field of battle. The ! surrender included 66 pieces of artillery I and an Immense stock of artillery am- I i munition, enough to fire 30,0001 !rounds. On the 15th of May, the same! 'division entered Puebla, a city of 60,- | 00 Inhabitants, to which Santa Anna, ' mounted bareback on his mule, had fled from Cerro Gordo. Santa Anna al the head of 3,000 cavalry nvide a ' feeble opposition, hut his troops were soon dispersed. The Americans then entered the city without opposition, except as they were obliged to dodge crockery, household utensils, pieces of rock and other missiles hurled upon , them from roofs and windows by the irate citizens. I Scholars, for centuries, have been 1 reading "The Retreat of the 10,000" !as chronicled by Xenophon. In the I next number I will tell of a march ! quite as daring, quite as full of thrills 1 and hazards. (To Bo Continued)