16 ir F I>* 2Q NUKIH K)WIH XtS*Near theYoang Women's -COME TO "ROBINSON'S WOMAN SHOP" AND SEE WHAT AN HONEST JULY CLEARANCE Sale Is PLEASE NOTE! We Buy No Goods For Sale Purposes. We DON'T Buy Any Seconds. We NEVER Charge For Alterations. Wash Dress Skirts Altered FREE. Cheerful Salespeople to Serve You and Not to Urge You. r > Now is your opportunity to secure a Stat, Coat, Dreßs, Skirt, Waist, Blouse, or Housedrese at a big reduction—and remember low operating expenses mean big savings for you. L ADVICE TO THE LOVELORN By Beatrice Fairfax TALK TO HIM FRANKLY Dear Miss Fairfax: I am twenty and for seven months have been going about with a man of twenty-two who has some fine quali ties. By that I mean that he does not smoke, does not play cards, and has a pleasant disposition. He earns only; sl2 a week. I would like to know if I J shonld go out with this young man, as ("^EORG^^OURBiE^^ FUNERAL DIRECTOR 1310 North Third Street Bell Phone. Auto Service. I j —iinii'ii 111—111— "nr 1 t Absolutely No Pain My luieat Improved appll /»_ nnccn, including an oxeygei- Oy Iced air apparatus, makea J extracting and all dental \V w work positively painlea* ,A» / -_V» and la perfectly harm- •A'J leaa. (A*e BO objectlo^^^^^r EXAMINATION FREE S ,Ss!i."£"a.s • alloy 60c Oeclatered A % ' Oold crowaa and Graduate jSr » A brldite work »3,HM AuitUnta jdr T jSr Ofilce open daily Bi3C /%% Y S2K cold croivn. . OO A f to 6 p. m.j Mon., Wed. and Sac, till 9 p. M.i Suo <luyn. 10 a. m. ta 1 p. m. it • EASY TERMS OF PAYMENTS * 329 Market St. (OTer the Hub) Harrisburg, Pa. lt dldnH hnPt . Mt IQtchen the family happy with meals splendidly cooked and on time, and hot water when it is needed —all at less cost for fuel than with other methods. - See the Gas Ranges and Gas Water Heat ers at our show-room or send for a representa tive. Easy terms if you prefer. Harrisburg Gas Company 14 South Second Street 8e11—2028 Cumberland Valley—7s2 FRIDAY EVENING, when we go he spends money and I feel he can not afford it. MABEL M. Your attitude toward this young - man is admirable, and in very pleasant i contrast to that of some of our modern 1 girls so selfishly intent on what they call a good time that they never stop to consider whether their men friends are. justified in expenditures. Why not tell this young man frankly that you would enjoy visiting in your own home or taking walks or street car rides tbeee pleasant evenings just as much as indulging in more extrava gant pleasure? No man can admire you less for a frank and friendly inter est in his welfare, and the confession that it is his society you enjoy rather than the pleasures he can buy you will make the right sort of boy realize that you. are a thoughtful friend whose in terest is well worth having. WOMEN'S INTERESTS "THEIR MARRIED LIFE" C*,rrlcM by liaeraitloial Hem ItnrtN I believe that we are going to have warm weather at last," re | marked Carrie as she took off her veil and rolled It primly, took off her blaok hat, ran Helen's white comb through her straight, neatly 00m bed hair and followed Hslen Into the cool ness of the living room. "I see you |have new awnings here. Helen; more I extravagance. I should think you i would drive Warren into the insane j aslyum." "That happens to be a pieoe of ; Warren's extravagance this time," said Helen, laughing. She was de , termlned to hold her temper this af j ternoon ao matter what it oost. After ' all, It was ridiculous to mind what Carrie said or did. She was so ob j vlously setting out to be disagreeable I that it did not pay to humor her and notice it. | "Do you mean to say it was War. Iren's Idea?" j "Exactly," Helen responded. "War ren has wanted green and white awn ings ever since lMt season! and now |we have them." "X don't think they will wear as well as the brown. Give me the more sober colors every Ume. I don't be ! lieve in this fashionable foolishness." "Not even if It's pretUer?" "No; It's only a fad and the mate- I rial costs more; you can't deny that." "But not enough to make any dif ! ference, and Just look how restful It j makes the .room seem. Are you warm still, Carrie? Wait a minute and I'll 'have Mary make some lemonade." "Don't go to any extra trouble," Carrie demurred, pacified at the pros ; pect of something cool to drink. HELEN REFLECTS, j "It won't be a bit of trouble," as sured Helen, glad to escape from the room for a few minutes. Suppose she had to build her life along the nar row lines that Warren's sister chose for hers. It might easily be possible if Warren were allowed to gain the j upper hand. Helen reflected that ever since she had married Warren his entire family had tried to make her over accord ing to the Curtis patterns. And they , had succeeded to a certain extent, but I not altogether. Helen was glad to I know that she had some individuality left. When she returned to the living room Mary followed her with a tray. There was ice tinkling in tall glasses, a little silver pot filled with fragrant Orange Pekoe, some wafer-like rice cakes and some of Mary's rolled bread sandwiches with crisp lettuce and de lectable mayonnaise spread between I slices. Carrie was lying in the chaise longue, her head propped up with pil | lows. ! "Well," she remarked, smiling, "this is the first time I have sat in one of these things, I had no idea they were so comfortable. I think I shall have Fred get me one, Helen.* "I knew you would like it," said Helen, beaming delightedly. "And I've brought you something good to | eat You like your tea with lots of ! lemon, dont you? Put the tray on the wagon, Mary; that's right. Now I I'll wheel it right up next to you, : Carrie, and you needn't move. I'll just serve you where you are, you j look so comfortable." ] Helen was so relieved that she had i managed to put Carrie into a good humor that she was actually eager to keep her so. It would be so nice | if just once Warren should hear good | reports about his wife's treatment of I his sister. As a general rule Carrie was sure Ito artfully suggest to Warren her dis approval of Helen, and although War ! ren at times resisted his sister's in fluence, still there had been a great | many heartaches over this family j interference. ! Helen poured the hot tea over the I ice and sugared it carefully. Then I she prepared the lemon and placed HAKRISBURG TELEGRAPH the glass on the arm of the chair within Carrie's reach. The cakes and sandwiches she placed in readiness, and then preparing her own glass, she leaned back In her chair and amiled at Carrie gaily. "Now tell me all about the oews in the suburbs." "Oh. there's nothing to tell," Carrie responded carelessly. "There's more to talk about here in the oity. . Of' course you know that the Evans girl is working In the office next to War- | ren's." Carrie shot this barb warily, and ! glanced at Helen to sea how it would affect her. .CAKRIE TRIES TO HtIRT. I "Yes, indeed, I knew that," Helen responded Just as carelessly. She knew it would please Carrie to have her wince and act hurt, and she de termined not to do that no matter what subject came up. "Warren told me she went on. "He said that the poor girl was failing rapidly." j "You don't say. Well, that's the 1 penalty for living that kind of a life, j I blame the girl every timfe." Helen smiled. "Most women do, and I am inclined to myself. Even the poorest girl has so much that is precious if she would just stop to think of it that way." "Well, X don't know about that." I Carrie responded tkrtly, and having finished her tea she put down the J glass and sat back in her chair. "But I'll telj you what I do think, Helen. Perhaps it's none of my business, but I told Fred that I was going to say something to you about it." Helen looked up surprised. She had : not the faintest idea of what was coming "1 think if you have any influence j with that Knowles girl now's the time to use it." You know very well what I mean;! It's disgraceful the way she is carry ing on with that man on the Scroll. These temperamental people may have all kinds of liberties in the way ; they live, but if you really entertain j the ideas that you profess about women's relations with men, then you certainly ought to agree with me. [ "Carrie, you have no right to speak that way about Frances." t "Oh, yes I have; any one has the right to express an opinion, and that girl is laying herself wide open to the severest criticism." "But I know Frances well, and X know that she is good and that she has never done anything that would not bear the light of day." "She is making herself conspicuous with that Atw»od man, and I have been told that he already has a wife." "Yes, he has," Helen admitted, al though she could not for the life of her imagine how Carrie had discover ed that fact. "But Frances simply regards him as a friend; be is in a sense her business adviser and a su perior type of man. You have no right to think anything wrong,, nor any one else." Carrie nodded her head sagely and Helen wished that she felt in her heart the conviction that her words implied. Frances was more than mildly interested in Avery Atwood, she was madly in love with him, and things could not drift on so forever." Another incident of this interesting series will appear soon. SWEETHEART vs. SISTER She Answers the Question: "Have Men Different Standards for Each?" By Beatrice Fairfax The price of popularity for too many girls to-day seems to be the lowering of the standard of womanly sweetness | and dignity. And to any girl who is tempted to meet the terms of the too masculine love pirates I want to sound : a word that shall at once warn and j plead and convince. , Human nature is about the most un l changing thing in a variable world. Human nature never values what it can get for the mere asking. Every one estimates highly the things he finds it difficult to obtain. Feminine tavor will always be one of life's two goals for men. The other, of course, is success. Think how a man struggles and works for the worldly success he has set his heart upon. And think how, on the way to his goal, many a big man turns aside for a little light dalliance with this girl and that one, and mar ries at last a dignified—often ingly unattractive —young woman of a type far different than that his sweet hearts represented. Girls ask "Why?" in two widely di vergent ways. "Why am I unpopular? Is it because I'm two dignified and won't let the boys kiss me?" asks Mary at twenty. And if she decides against herself and proceeds to capitulate to a boy who demands a kiss in return for a litle social attention, Mary, at thiaty, asks this: "Why am I left ajone now? I was the most popular girl in my -9t ten years ago. I had dozens of beaux and Lucy had none, and Jane only pne. Yet they are happily married and ram left alone. Why?" The Price of Popularity Popularity can be bought for the moment by cheap concessions to mas culine emotion. The girl who lets a boy kiss her when he happens to want to is catering to the emotions of the moment. She is building nothing per manent and lasting. And when It comes to marriage, no sane man founds that lifelong relationship on any momentary flare of affection. Instead, he chooses the stable quali ties of congeniality and liking and re spect—plus the delicate emotions which have grown by self-denial in stead of wearing themselves out through cheap excess. The girl who says to a man when he tries to get her to drink or to permit him some liberty which seems slight, but which will inevitably lead to greater ones: "Would you want your sister to do that" is not bromidic and foolish in spite of the fact that the question is almost ordinary and trite. Insteaji, she is a sane youijg woman, who is dealing with one of the world old basic facts of human nature. The things a man would decry in his sister he resents al6o in his wife. The things a man selfishly asks of his tem porary sweetheart are not always the things he feels a self-respecting, digni fied girl should cdncede. And a girl who recognizee that fact and who doesn't make the blunder of catering to the emotion of a moment is far more likely to become a per -1 manent factor in a man's life than is a girl who capitulates to his least re i quest: LIVINGSTON'S \ 9 South Market Square This morning we began our July Clearance Sale. A sweeping dis- 1 posal of hundreds of smart garments. Read the items below. Every f article means Economy and Satisfaction Dresses—Dresses Women's & Misses' HATS—HATS Entire surplus -stock Coats and Suits Women's Misses' bought at less than cost-of iIUIIICII 5, miSSTO raw material. Wash and Bought up one of a kind J Alt j||l*/|||'» silk, worth up to $12.50 Sa ™ P e Co f^ s and Suits at 3,10 S ' p v next to nothing prices. Oft* CI QQ .. n $5.00 Coats $1.98 98c Hats 98^ "oC, )I.Ho lip *0 $6.50 Coats $2.98 $1.50 Hats 39<* 1 $7.85 Coats $3.75 $2.00 Hats 490 1 $8.50 Coats ....... $4.85 $2.25 Hats 59c? I $9.75 Coats and Suits «? m H-tc I Greatest values ever offered. $4.98 11 Wash Skirts sl ° 9B c ° ats a " d Children's Coats na«n vmna $15.00 Coats and Suits , A . . 8 Dark or Light $6.95 Silk and Cloth - A 0 . . , SIB.OO Coats and Suits fl $2 00 Sk!m •••"'• iZ - - $7 - 75 ■ ss ' oo Coau $1.98 !J $2.50 Skirts ...... $1.29 ' s2 -' 3 ° Coats and Sl i'o S . o 3 6 - 00 $2.98 jg $3.00 Skirts ...... $1.49 * _ $4.00 5kin5 ...... $1.79 children's Dresses WAISTS—WAISTS | Striped Skirts I SI.OO Dresses 49<? | 500 to Clean Up IS:::::::II il ®98c T . - Ages 4to 10. $2.00 to $4.50 *1 AO | a Jtpu^r berge Middy Blouses values 51 - 9 8 J Silk Sweaters .:?S'v^t. p A[l Boys' Suits All Colors and Stripes ci'm i J.O* es ? t0 SB.OO Sweaters .... $3.98 |};gj $3.00 value $1.98 I $9.00 Sweaters .... $4.98 $2.00 value 98<* $4.00 value $2.98 I Still a good selection. $4.00 Silk Middies, $1.98 $5.00 value $3.98 I Our Entire Stock of Men's Suits at HALF PRICE 1 $16.50 and (DQ Q& $20.00 and fill 1 Oft I SIB.OO Suits, $22 Suits, Excellently tailored Suits, from dependable manu- Suits from a well-known New York maker and facturers. Smart new styles and fabrics. Some Suits other good manufacturers. An excellent selection of in the popular plaited-baek effects. styles and fabrics; all sizes are included. LIVINGSTON'S QS. Market Square, Harrisburg, Pa. I CARRIZAL FIGHT FIERCELY WAGED "We Will Pass Over You" Capt. Boyd Replied to Commander's Ultimatum I Dallas, Texas, July 14. EI Pueblo, i official organ of the Carranza govern- j ment, in its issued of July 1, received j here, prints the official report on the { fight between Mexicans and American troops under Captain Boyd at Carriza). j The report comes from Lieutenant Colonel Genovevo Rivas, who took | command of the Mexican troops after j General Felix Gomez was killed. The report was made to General Gonzales j at Juarez and sent by him to Mexico i City. It follows: "I have the honor to report to you that on June 21, »v 7 a. m., an Ameri- j can force, compoeed of 80 to 100 men j appeared here. By order of General j Kelix Gomez. I went out to confer | with the commander of said force to learn the object of its presence. He said that he was looking for a gang of bandits that were in this vicinity. "I told him there was no gang of! bandits operating in this district, due to the perfect watchfulness of the Con stitutionalist forces. He then said that he was goiflg to Villa Ahumada to look ; lor a deserter, to which I replied that we had orders not to permit American troops to move in any direction except toward the Xt>rth. He replied that such orders mattered nothing to him; I that he had orders to go to Villa Ahu mada and that he would do so regard- j less of our Viullets. "After I had reported the result of, t-e interview Genera! Gomez person ally went to talk with the American commander, asking the same questions that I had asked a few minutes before and receiving the same answer. Gen eral Gomez told him that he would re i gret very much to be obliged to oppose the Americans with force and made him the proposition that he wait three or four hours until the matter could be put before ths military commander at Juarez by telegraph. "WUI Pass OVcr You" "The haughty American commander replied that he did not want to lose more time and that he would pass over us. My general replied that if he (the American commander) thought he was able to do so, to try it. "My general retired with his eecort to where our troops were and the Am erican commander returned to his troops. The American commander as sembled his cavalry and advanced JULY 14, 1916. them in firing line against our forces, composed of the Second, Third and Fourth squadrons o fthe Second Regi ment, who remained in extended line without making any aggressive move ment. "The Americans opened fire at a dis tance of eighty meters, to which our ! soldiers gallantly replied, joking the combat. The fight was intense and l lasted for two hours in which our first \ line sustained the enemy's fire with ' valor. "General Gomez having been killed early in the fight, 1 assumed command j 1 and ordered the advance of the first | I squadron of the Second Regiment' j against the right flank of the enemy I | and another squadron on the left. The I j movements were made promptly and [ J with precision, forcing the enemy to i flee, abandoning their dead, their j horses and arms. The enemy dead | were twelve, and we captured twenty two prisoners." The report gives the names of thirty j Mexicans killed, of whom eleven were ; officers, and forty-three woupded, of whom nine were officers. i 40,000 WAR WIDOWS London, July 14. Nearly 40,000 ! women in this country have already been made widows by the war. When i the conflict started and government j officials were making estimates of | the number of widows that in all | probability woud be created by the struggle, one of the nighest estimates | ~ l ' 1 TO TAKE OFF FLESH AND REDUCE WEIGHT Eat Plenty of Wholesome Food, But Breathe Deeply and Try a Little Oil of Korein With Meals. Some people seem to be able to eat I whatever they please without Its in- I creasing their weight to any degree, while on the other hand other folks, In clined to stoutness, try to eat lightly of the so-called tleshmaklng foods but ] keep gaining weight all the time. Such i ; a condition is both unnatural and dan- i geroijis but can often be quickly over- j ' come by practicing deep breathing In t ! I the open air. The blood of the average i overstout person seemingly falls to ac cept enough oxygen to consume the ex- j cessive fatty material In the fpod. But frequent open air deep breathing forces additional oxygen Into the system, I largely overcoming this defect and pre venting further Increase in weight. Then if this deep breathing plan Is ac companied by the use of a little oil of i korein. taking a few urops In a capsule i with each meal and again before golnn | I to bed, It becomes possible to greatly reduce the weight even In a very few I days. The best feature of this reducing method Is that it Is absolutely safe and >J unlike so many flesh reducing systems, I was 30,000. When Lord Kitchener heard of it he told those who were responsible for making provision for the war widows that the estimate was too low and said that they should make provision for at least 50,000. As a result of the recent naval battle 1,550 widows were added to the list of women receiving pensions. HEAVILY TAX TOBACCO Vienna, July 14. By raising the prices of cigars, clgarets and tobacco by an average of thirty-five per ceqj. | the Austrian State Monopoly hopes to j raise an additional sum of nearly j $16,000,000 a year. |f To Make Skin Clear \ V Don't worry about skin troubles. You can have a clear, clean complexion oy using a little zemo, obtained at any drug store for 25c, or extra large bot tle at SI.OO. 2>enio easily removes all traces of pimples, black heads, eczema, and ringworm and makes the skin clear and healthy. Zemo is neither watery, sticky nor greasy and stains nothing. It is easily applied and costs a mere trifle for each application. It is al ways dependable. Zemo. Cleveland. [ produces no weakening effects. In facA I there are those who have tried it wb' say It almost seemed that they gainej in strength with every pound of excess fat they lost. The use of oil of korein is Intended to eliminate the need of weakening pur* Jatlves. sweating nrocesses. dangeroJ* rugs, starvation diets or the various 1 forms of violent exercises which so i many use In a vain effort to reduce flesh. Instead, oil 01 .toreln operates in a natural and wholly harmless way [ to gently reduce the excessive accumu : lations of fat wherever thev exist on your body while the oxygen you are breathing Into your system from the I pure out door air not only helps tho action of the Korein but Is helpful In preventing a return of the unnatural It Is a good plan to welch yourself 1 once a week so as to keep close check i on what weight you are losing and do 1 not skip a single dose until your weight Is down to normal. Any dr gist can supply you with these csip»ulcn.7-r-Ad- I vertlsement.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers