14 OF INTEREST TO THE WOMEN "THEIR MARRIED LIFE" Copyright by Uimatlml K«m lerrlet Helen and Warren arrived home rom the automobile party tired and ross. Warren had slept very little in spite of his remarks to Helen about not being a sport, and the mosquitoes bad kept Helen awake. Consequently sh had one of her nervous headaches and it was an effort for her to be agreeable. On the way home that af ternoon the Browns had stopped to make a call on some friend who had a gorgeous home on the Sound, and Helen had been forced to smile while they were shown about the grounds. "You must all come home with me for supper," Mrs. Holmes had remark ed hospitably after they were once more seated in the car on the way home. But Helen, had demurred. "Not to night. thank you. -Mrs. Holmes." she had said sweetly, "Sir. Curtis is really too tired, and I think we all ought to go right home. I for one want a bath and bed as soon as possible." "I think so. too," said Bunty, and now that Helen was once more in her own apartment she heaved a sigh of relief. "Shall we get cleaned up and go out for something to eat?" Warren had remarked. "Oh, no, dear, I can get something for us. You had better get into your bathroom and make yourself com fortable while I rummage in the ice box. There is sure to be milk, and I can fix some eggs." While Helen was busy in the kitchen the doorbell rang, and she heard War ren exclaim crossly as he went to an swer it. A strange woman stood out side. and as Helen had gone to the door of the dining room to see who it was she oould see very well. The wo man was very well dressed in a dark blue gown and a hat and veil. She looked very up to date, and Helen was curious to know who could be wanting them at this time on Sunday night. "I beg your pardon for knocking," the woman said in a metallic voice, "but I live in the apartment just. I underneath and I am locked out brought a boy over from the hotxl with me to pick the lock, but I would see if by any chance your keys hap pened to tit." "I hardly think they will," said Warren, going back into the bedroom to get his keps out of his pocket. "Here they are, you can try. anyway." "Thank you," the woman responded, taking the keys and hurrying down stairs. The Keys No Good "I might try the fire escape," War ren called down after her, "if you think your window might be open." The woman had handed the keys to the boy, who was trying to fit them into the lock. "I guess they won't do," she said after a couple of vain efforts. No, I'm afraid it would do no good to try the fire escape, thank you. lam sure that our windows are securely locked." The lighted warmth of the Curtis apartment looked very friendly and Mahomet. Helen's Persian cat. came out and brushed up against Warren as he stood in the doorway. Helen xas just behind him. She was won-1 lering if «he ought to ask the strange IN Mlmft,* f A /i A I Are You Giving I* JRr /\ Your Baby What m |x XX Heßeally Needs? lli*i/ .. IK tjjajf jy-'N Are you giving him sunshine ? Utt, ' w ' He will unfold and bloom in it am like a flower. Are you giving If V! J ift*" \J / him the sunniest room in the // house with bare floor and #Z>/| yj\// : tainted walls ? Are you giving 7/ /f ' I f\// yf him a perfect digestion ? " > With all their love, so many '. | mothers do not know what to j give their babies. Yet today, with our National Government searching for the truth each day— you can know without a shadow of doubt, what is best for your baby This is what the U. S. Government says to you and every mother— "Milk as ordinarily marketed is absolutely unfit for human food." Nurse your baby as long as you can—and when you have no milk left to give him—wean him gradually on the nearest thing to your own milk— Nestles Fool (A Complete Food—Not a Milk Modifier) Nestles has in it the fats, proteids can know that you are giving your and carbohydrates that your baby baby the !cod his little body needs. need 9. Don't try to use raw cow's r - rDrr milk as a make-shift. It won't do. „ Send the coupon for a FREE Unclean—often filled with germs of Trial packcge of 12 feedings diphtheria, scarlet fever and (that and a book about babies by greatest of horrors) summer complaint -raw cow's milk carries off more specialists. babies than any other cause. Cow's ' • milk fill® the need of calves—not of BABICS - NESTL£*S FOOD COMPANY. In Nestl6's—milk from healthy cows, Woolv/orth Building, New York purified,free from germs—thecalf needs PDUC . . , are modified-the b.by need, are , ri " nd me FREE your book ,nit of a taxlcab. drawn up before the Culld- Intr. evidently waiting for a passenger inside. It was the same machine from which had come th.e vajn cry for help— the machjpe whirh had eluded their belated pursuit. Even as Mary's wan dering glance noted the telltale license tag. the door of the Beauty Parlors opened, and a middle-aged man. In a stylish spring suit, hurried down the stens ana across the walk. He climbed into the machine, with a curt direction to the driver, and it moved off. Mary ordered Carson's chauf feur to follow. The curtain of the taxi had been tolled up. and the two girls could see the occupant without dif ficulty. He was leaning back in his seat putting at a thick brown cigar. "Do vou know, Mary, I have seen that man before!" said Mona suddenly, knitting her brows. "That Is exactly the idea I have had, too." answered Marv. "Maybe, we have ssen his picture somewhere. There, his ca r is stopping! He ig getting out!" The taxi ahead drew up at the curb, and the occupant, tossing the driver a bill and without waiting for the | change, made his way across the walk, and into the entrance of an office build | jnsf as the taxi continued on its way. The girls studied the building for a mo li.ent in s.llence, uncertain as to whether l J" v to follow the man fur ther The first floor was given over to the use of a bank. On the corner win dows of the second floor appeared the Daniel Slatern, Attorney-at "We might as well give it up for the present, said Marv finally. "With what Wt have learned, no doubt Mr. Carson •an surrgest the next step!" seem to have a lot of confidence lament " smiled Mona. retorted shouldn't I?" she So ilie Continued Tuauorraw, Hetty Green's Millions Are Kept in Family Bellows Falls, Vt„ July 6. The will of Mrs. Hetty Green, long known as the wealthiest woman In America, leaves the bulk of her estate to her son, Colonel E. 11. R. Green, und her daughter, Mrs. Mathew Astor Wilks. The remainder is distributed in small er bequests to old friends of Mrs. Green. The body of Mrs. Green was buried here yesterday in the family plot ad joining lmnianuel Episcopal Church, in a grave beside that of her husband, Edward H. Green. A plain granite shaft, inscribed only with the family name, marks the spot. Services were held at Immanuel Church at noon and were attended by 200 persons, most of whom had known Airs. Green ju>.a resident nf thft^ningp IN MEXICO 70 YEARS AGO [Continued t'rom Kdiiorial l'ajce] >( volunteers and hud won no special nllltary renown. Hie Treaty of UiMklalupe-Hidalgo and tlu- Territory TticTcoy Acquired A treaty of peace between commis sioners representing the United States ind Mexico was signed at the small Vlexican town of Gu&dalupe-Hldalgo, [•'ebruary 2d, 184 8, but it was some months before Its provisions had been ratified by the legislative bodies of :>oth countries. The articles of this :routy were twenty-three in number, :he most Important provision being that Mexico, In addition to recogniz ing the lilo Grande as the boundary line of Texas, ceded to the United States an area of territory of North ern Mexico 522,568 square miles In ex tent for which the United States paid $15,000,000 besides assuming the I'laims of American citizens against Mexico aggregating nearly $5,000,000 more. This addition of territory was supplemented, In 1853, by what Is us ually termed tMc Gadsden purchase, which added 45,535 additional square miles of Mexican territory to the Unit ed States at a price of $10,000,000. Thus. Including the enormous State of Texas with Its 262.290 square miles, our flag now waves over more than 830,000 square miles of territory that once belonged to Mexico. One may be inclined to wonder that the Mexican authorities should so readily yield up so great an amount of land. In the tlrst place they were thoroughly whipped and the conqueror held their cupital. In the second place the Mexican authorities of that period thought a few millions of solid cash in hand worth more to them than vast areas of unsettled and unexplored land. They hud robbed and pillaged all over Mexico in a succession of for'-ed loans until they knew not where their next dollar was to come from. So Undo Sam's coin looked very good to them. The Slavery Question in the Mexican War The territory acquired from Mexico by the treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo has been carried into the States of California, Nevada. Arizona, Utah, New Mexico, while a considerable part of Colorado and small portions of Wyoming, Kansas and Okahoma also belonged to this gigantic addition to our national area. The annexation of Texas, the re sultant war with Mexico, and the Gadsden purchase were all bitterly op poseu by the antislavery element of the Northern States because these men believed that the underlying ob ject was the extension of the area of slave-holding territory in the United States. And such, undeniably, was the intention of the powerful and then dominant pro-slavery element of our country. One of the fiercest opponents in Con gress of the Administration's measures for the prosecution of the war was Thomas Corwin, of Ohio, commonly known as "Black Tom" on account of his swarthy complexion. He delivered a series of speeches against the' act authorizing the president to call out 50,000 volunteers which are among the most ornate forensic efforts of America's legislative halls, ranking in beauty and force with the eloquence of Webster, Clay and Everett. In one of these speeches Corwin said: "Yau may carry your banners to the loftiest peaks of the Cordilleras. They may wave in insolent triumph in the halls of the Montezumas; the armed men of Mexico may quail before them. But the weakest hand in Mexico, up lifted In prayer to the God of Justice, may call down against you a power in the presence of which the iron hearts of your warriors shall be turned Into ashes. There Is a God who rules the destinies of nations." How vain are the pre-judgments of man! I will take for my text the last sentence of the above quotation— "There is a God who rules over the destinies of nations." Not an acre of all that vast area obtained as the re sult of the Mexican war ever became slave territory. So bitter were the Nor thern opponents of slavery in their op position to the Mexican war that their utterances often verged closely on dis loyalty. Yet the results of that war have been amongst the grandest vic tories of civilization that the centuries have seen. That war opened to Ameri can enterprise nearly 1,000,000 square miles up to that time sparsely settled by a people whom Dana, in his "Two Years Before the Mast," has charac terized as "a race so lazy that they hardly seemed to earn their sunshine. It actually appears as if daylight was thrown away on this people." What a wonderful, wonderful differ ence it would make in the North Am erica of to-day if all that vast expanse of territory had remained under the imbecile and corrupt domination of Mexican authority. Yes! there is a God who rules the destiny of nations and out of seeming evil He brings ever lasting good. And who knows but that the un speakable Carranza may be the very instrument. In God's plans for our na tion, to make us translate a meaning less chatter about "Preparedness" in to effective action. (The Conclusion.) News Items of Interest in Central Pennsylvania Allentown. Accused of being the ringleaders of crowds that engaged in a Roman candle battle, Willie Mc- Geever and Spook Mccarren, Allen town pugilists, were placed under ar rest. Tamuqiia. Three operations of the 1-ehlgh Coal and Navigation Com pany in the Panther Creek Valley are still Idle, the result of the firemen be int; on strike for more wages. Mahanoy City. A car belonging to Jacob Drabnis went over an em bankment at Lakeside yesterday and was saved from dashing the occupants to death on the Reading Railroad by striking a pole. Mahanoy City. Crowded to the edge of an embankment by an autobus an auto containing Harry I,attlmore, Michael Lasko and Harry Spotts, of Morea, tumbled over and pinned the three men underneath. Huzlcton. —Having practically closed the deal for the purchase of the Cran berry and Crystal Ridge collieries, the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company is negotiating for the Lattimer and Minesville mines of Pardee Brothers & Company. Reading. Charles Hawk, a 16- year-old boy, who gave his age as 21 in order to enlist, was arrested here on a charge of desertion at Mount Gretna. Coaldale. P. J. O'Donnell was nctlfled that he has received the nomi nation for subdistrlct president of District No. 7, United Mine Workers of America, a position now held by Sheriff Michael Hartneady, of Nesque honlng. • How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollurs Reward for any caae of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall'l Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEV & CO., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, hare known r. J. Cheney (or the laat 15 rear*, and believe him perfectly honorable In all buslneag transaction! and financially able to carry out any obllfatloni made by bla firm. NAT. BANK OF COMMF.RCE, Toledo, Ohio. Hall'i Catarrh Care l« taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucoua aurfacea of the ayatem. Teatlmonlala eent free. Price 78 eanta per bottle. Sold by all Drutatata. Stk* Ball'* Family Pill* for conatlpatloa. JULY 6, 1916. I ICE H VuURTH SMj I Near the Young Women's Christian Association STORE OPENS 8 A. M.; CLOSES 5.30 P. M. JUST FOR FRIDAY WOMEN*!* AND MISSION* ™'^VOSlTlvjr"^"" I WASH DRESS Q|- SUMMER WASHABLE I SKIRTS i/OC DRESSES, ft» o QJ- The *1.50 Kind. For Pretty belted and pocket styles, The *5.00 nnil sil.uo Kln«l. S made in neat awning stripes, rep Stunning white voile; also striped M ■ and beach cloth. All regular waist voiles—neatly trimmed; last-min- w ■ bands. ute styles; all sizes. ■ ALTERATIONS IKKK ALTERATION'S FREE I Tan Duster Bungalow Silk Waists, House Auto Coats, Aprons, Dresses, 95c 24c The nnd 88c Suk"3V Hw. belted Kuarante e d silk crepe tie ta neroul? I pitch Dockets' an? hable ' , s , mftll chlne - AU c '"- l '"l chanibrays. | All Mzr,' k si'V's. »•««"» XS.SS2. ®' iIL. 0Ol ° n "DON'T USE FACE CREAMS," SAYS BEAUTY DOCTOR, "If YOU WANT iO iiE UOOU-LOURING'- Kiililiili Beauty SpecialiM (;lve» Some Hood Advice To Aiiieri va u V omen Many women seem to think that the else o£ an Ordinary lace cream is un aid to good-looks and beauty, said a . noted Englisn Beauty Specialist, when, as a matter of fact, a great majority of j tlie grease creams sold now-a-days con tain animal fats which are positively injurious. Ureaseless creams are equal ly bad for they are made generally from Stearic acid wnicu dries, chaps and j wrinkles the skin. Creams of this kind drive the blood away from the surface of the skin, giving it a pale sallow look and often ciogs the pores, producing pimples and blackheads. Every woman realizes these days that beauty is her greatest asset and it is her duly to enhance her beauty by every means at her command, however, common sense must be her guide. No woman woulu think of eating Stearic acid or common lard to nourish her body, yet thousands of women apply them to their 1 aces daily. They know their skin requires nourishment of some kind, but lew peo ple know what to use. If you have facial blemishes of any kind, are pale or sallow, freckled or wrinkled, or if your skin lias a tendency to be dry and tlabby, you owe it to yourself to make the following test which will require j 110 special skill or expensive toilet re qulsities. Take your hand mirror to I the window and examine your face : closely, noticing carefully the size of j your pores, the depth of your wrinkles j and your natural tendency to freckle or facial blemishes. Next, apply a gener- J uut amount of Am-o-nized Cocoa over \ the entire face and neck, leave on for live or ten minutes and then remove by j wiping with a soft dry cloth. A de lightful surprise will await you. I have I seen hundreds of women with dry, sai- j low, wrinkled and flabby skin and those j DRUGLESS HEALING Tells How Nerve Insulation Quickly Stops All Pain And Allays Tlie Inflammation. Even Rheumatism, Sciatica And Neuritis Yield to Marvelous New Discovery The nerves of your body are like electric wires. They carry the nerve energy (neuro-electrieity) which is generated in the brain, to all the cells and tissues. The nerve sheaths are insulated to resist a current of about 4/1000 cf a volt as has been proven with the aid of Lord Kelvin's galvanometer, an instrument so sen sitive and accurate that for the first time it is now possible to measure the strength of nerve currents. It has been found that wherever acute inflammation occurs the in sulation of the nerves is broken down, making It difficult, and often impossible, for nature to heal the surrounding cells. Germs cannot live in healthy tissue; it is only through damaged cells that they thrive and spread. Obviously there fore, the right way to successfully SAYS FAT FOLKS NEED MORE FRESH AIR Advises Moderate Diet Ar Weight. Tal Lack of fresh air it is said weakens the oxygen carrying power of the blood, the liver becomes sluggish, fat accumu lates and the action of many of the vital organs is hindered thereby. The heart action becomes weak, work is an effort and the beauty of the figure Is destroy ed. Fat put on by indoor life is unhealthy and if nature is not assisted in throw ing it oft a serious case of obesity may result. When you feel that you are getting too stout, take the matter in hand at once. Don't wa)t until your .lgure has Workmen's Compensation jj Act Blanks We ere prepared to ship promptly any or all of the blanks J! made necessary by th«> Workmen's Compensation Act which took 1 1 effect January 1. L * - ! I with enlarged pores and freckled, pale laces eiiiiieiy remove tiiese blemishes and more than double tne beauty of their complexions, simply by using a mile -tm-u-mzed Cocou once or i>. ice daily as 1 have explained above, and this, alter they hud in some cases been j Heated uy expensive Lieauty Speclal ! ists without obtaining any benent. in many instances women can make them selves look irom 1U to 20 years vounger. 1 .Many a woman has obtained high social position or secured advancement in ; business ahead of her unfortunate ; rival who did not understand the power 1 of beauty. | Again, the woman who neglects her self must continually tight an unequal battle with her younger and better looking sister. Beauty may be only skin deep, but the woman who has improved her com plexion and kept her tace sott, white and tree from wrinkles by the use of j Am-o-nized Cocoa has an attractivo skin that suggests a refinement which places her HI a higher class than that occupied by the careless woman who has been indifferent to the development oi her personal charms. Beauty is Wo man's birth-right and natures greatest gift to enhance this charm is Am-o nized Cocoa Cream. Note:—Am-o-nized Cocoa recommend ed above by Winifred Grace Forrest, the noted English Beauty Specialist, is ouo of the newer forms of cocoa cream. Unlike the older products it is pleasauL I to use, has a soft, fragrant odor anil j is used almost exclusively for massage ! and facial treatment in tlie English | Beauty Parlors. American women I who are treated bv Beauts' I Specialists should insist that no j other emollient be used on their face for ! massage. Superiluous hair and ruined i complexions too often result from the use of cheap massage creams. Am-o- I nized 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 I Beauty Specialist.—Advertisement. treat inflammatory disease is to quickly repair the damaged insula tion and enable nature to restore the diseased tissue to a healthy condi tion. lon-o-lex Unguent does this. lon-o-lex Unguent is not a drug. It does not contain opiates or nar cotics. Its action is entirely me chanical. Applied externally, it penetrates the tissues and surrounds the Injured nerve sheaths with an insulating bath. Then the inflam mation subsides and nature quickly repairs the nerve lesion—you are well. Don't suffer another minute, just go to H. C. Kennedy and get a large jar of lon-o-lex Unguent, it costs little, use as directed and if you cannot say that it is the greatest means ever devised for conquering inflammation wherever it exists, your money will be cheerfully returned without a question. d Deep Breathing To Reduce e Oil of Korein become a joke and your health ruined through carrying around a burden of unsightly and unhealthy fat. Spend as much time as you possiblv ean in the open air; breathe deeply, anil cet from any druggist a box of oil of korein capsules; take one after each meal and one before retiring at night. Weigh yourself every few days and keep up the treatment until you are down to normal. Oil of korein is ab solutely harmless, is pleasant to take, helps the digestion and even a few days' treatment has been reported to show noticeable reduction In weight. —Advertisement.