OF INTEREST T "THEIR MARRIED LIFE" ftprrlgbt by International Newa Strvtc* The meeting of the C irrent Events Club occurred on one c' the rainiest days of the season. Everything oozed but nevertheless there was goodly number of women present. Helea was determined to make them see matters as she had seen them ever since she had called on Mrs. Mapes. Perhaps Mrs. Dalton would think her interference unwarranted, but then Helen argued that as long as the matter had been put in her hands she certainly had a right to an opinion, and she intended to do what was right In the matter. Mrs. Stevens hurried up to her and began to gossip sociably. "I never hear or see anything of you any niore, Helen. What are you doing ■with yourself? I think it's about time we had one of our annual card games. What do you think?" "I agree with you, of course," Helen said lightly. "Why don't you call me up some time and we'll arrange an . Y° u £e e> I have been west with Winifred, and then the weather .has been so horrid." Louise hurried up at this minute, v . Helen, will you og up to Malt by s afterward to help me select a wedding present for Bob's stenogra- P>jer? X haven't the faintest idea what to get." Helen felt a pleasant little glow of beiiig wanted. It was the first time in ages that she had been out with a crowd of women. After all, it was good to be with women of her own class. There was a comaraderie about the pleasant gossip that went around, and the feeling of belonging to a club of this kind was stimulating! Helen felt this more because of the report that she had to make and she sat down between Louise and Mrs. Stevens determined not to be nervous and to say what she thought at all costs. , "Haven't you a report to make to day.' Louise queried. "Or didn't you find time to call on that woman?" I called on her and I shall tell Mrs. Dalton Just what I found." "How did you like it, dear?" ques tioned Louise. "I am awfully interested," Helen confessed. And then Mrs. Dalton stood up and the meeting was called to order. Helen Speaks After the business has been trans acted we shall have an informal dis cussion," the president said in her quick, flashing way that Helen envied. Mrs. Dalton had a brilliant exterior that was fascinating. She had been with women for a long time, working at the head of different clubs and on different committees and she had written a book that was well spoken of on some sociological question. Helen hardly heard the minor mat ters that were taken up, and when the business was finished Mrs. Dalton stepped down from the platform and took a seat in the semicircle with the other women. "Now. we won't make this formal at all, ' she said, smiling. "Mrs. Curtis we ure all anxious to hear what you have to say." Every one turned to look at Helen, who blushed at being the first to speak, but who responded sincerely and truthfully with what she had to sav. "You called on Mrs. Mapes, didn't you ? T wonder if you had any suc cess She is a very difficult woman." THE HOME WEDDING 'Wedding customs are very simple things, but some of my readers are a little worried about the proprieties of the wedding day and wedding cere mony, and I am going to try to talk to them all in this article. A simple home wedding is always in good taste. It is generally given in the bride's home, whether she make her home with parents, friends or oth er relatives. The expense of the af fair is settled by the host and hos tess. as in all social events. The only part of the wedding expense the groom bears is the bouquet he gives the bride. If he wants to be particularly courteous he may also furnish the flowers for the wedding attendants and those ■which are used for decorations. If the bride chooses she may wear conventional white, otherwise "any simple dress or suit in accordance with her taste and within her means will be in good form. And the breakfast or luncheon or tea, which is served may also be per fectly simple. A wedding ought to be more re plete with the spirit of hospitality than any other form of social func tion. And it is never real hospi- START NOW To Make Your Hens Lay The Largest Possible Number of Eggs "LAY or BUST" Dry Mash Will Do It Start feeding your young hens now as well as the old ones —keep it before them all the time. Be sure to get the original and only "Lay or Bust" mash—made by Park and Pollard Company. We are their exclusive distributor. Prices —lO lbs., 30c; 20 lbs., 60c; 40 lbs., $1.00; 100 lbs., $2.50. Park and Pollard "GROWING FEED" is the best feed for molting season—and for making young birds grow, thous ands of poultry men feed it. Prices lO lbs., 35c; 25 lbs., 75c; 50 lbs., $1.38; 100 lbs., $2.75. EATON S CLIMAX Scratch Feed is the cleanest and best. Don't buy dirt, it makes your feed bills high. "Eaton's Climax" has not a pound of waste in a ton. Prices lO lbs., 30c; 25 lbs., 65c; 50 lbs., $1.20; 100 lbs., $2.25. WE DELIVER IT PROMPTLY—BOTH PHONES Walter S. Schell QUALITY SEEDS 1307-1309 MARKET STREET The Telegraph Bindery Will Rebind Your Bible Satisiactorily - * WEDNESDAY EVENING, Helen told simply of her call and the manner in which she was received. "It's a wonder she let you In at all," Mrs. Dalton said quickly. ••She opened the door on a crack the day I was there, and I had to talk to her that wav for the few minutes she gave me," put in another woman. "You must have hypnotized her, Mrs. Curtis." salrt someone else. "I am sure I don't know whether I went, about it as I should," Helen con fessed, smiling. She had forgotten her nervousness and was proceeding with her story logically and talking well. "And at first she was sullen and would not speak to me. Then she told me how she resented outside Inter ference." Mrs. Dalton smiled skeptically. "I don't know what she would do if we didn't help her." she said. "May I say just what X think, Mrs. Dalton?" Helen asked sweetly. Mrs. Dalton nodded. "Of course, Mrs. Curtis, I am anxious to hear what you have to tell us." "Well," Helen proceeded. "After the woman began to talk she said a great deal. She poured out the story of her bitternes3. She asked me how I would feel if someone who had money should come to my home and interfere with my family life." "But," began Mrs. Dalton, and then she stopped and motioned Helen to go on. "She told me that is wasn't her fault that her husband did as he did," Helen went on, "and she said it wasn't money she wanted, and most of all she resents the friendly talks that the club thinks necessary." "What did you say to her?" asked Mrs. Dalton. A Few Suggestions "I tried not to be patronizing," Helen said so simply that no one could think she Intended to knock the methods of the club. "To tell the truth. I felt like an Intruder. In some respects the woman has refinement, but she has become so bitter that it is not going to be easy to handle her case. What I should recommend is work. Something for the woman to do. :;o that she can be independent and not feel that she is being patronized. Something to keep her self-respecting and to remove her bitterness by a real interest in life." Helen hesitated a moment after this suggestion and then sat down. There was a silence in the room that could be felt. Helen was sure that Mrs. Dal ton was angry, but the woman was always fair and generous, and she was on her feet in an instant. "I am very much interested in your report, Mrs. Curtis. You have done remarkably well," Mrs. Dalton said quickly. "I am inclined to think that you have handled the case with rare delicacy; certainly you have done more than any other woman so far has been able to do. I want you to take entire charge of this individual case, if you will be so kind, with the knowledge that anything you may suggest will be received with gratitude from the club. Isn't that true, ladies?" There was a murmur of assent. "We shall wait to see exactly how your plans work out, and I myself shall help ypu in any way I can to make them successful." Helen sat quite still, conscious that she had scored quite a triumph. Per haps she had discovered her place in the world; at any rate, shfe would carry this thing through to a finish. tality to give more than you can afford, so that the effort is visible. The wedding is really an affair to which the bride's natural guar dians invite her friends, so that they are the happy witnesses of the ceremony which unites her to the man she loves. Just keep that in view and don't imagine that a wed ding is some new and strange cus tom or rite at which you conduct yourself differently than at any other social gathering. A honeymoon may be just as hap pily spent in the little new home to which the groom is going to take the bride as in a trip. And only false pride drives the young couple into making some sort of a honey moon tour which they do not really want and can not afford. "The gift of the groom" is love and loyalty, and any girl who is marrying a young man in moderate circumstances and who' insists on some present of jewelry is merely sacrificing the mutual welfare of the new partnership to a desire for show. Wedding customs are simple, sa cred institutions dictated by com mon sense and reverence for the sanctity of love and marriage. SOFT DRAPERIES FOR THE EVENING Beautiful Design of Lace and Silk Caught at Belt With a Rose By MAY MANTON 9136 (JVith Basting Line end Added Seam Allowance) Evening Bodice, 34 to 44 bust. 9099 (With Basting Line and Added Seam Allowance) Gathered Skirt with or without Over-Portion, 24 to 30 waist, Both the smartness and grace of this gown are apparent at a glance. The tunic completely covers the back of the skirt while it is short at the front and forms jabot-like folds at the sides. The straight skirt beneath is joined to the straight yoke. The bodice is all of the lace with the over portion matching the tunic. It is a very fascinating costume and at the same time It is one that comes easily within the scope of the home dressmaker. Satin and lace are the materials shown here and the blouse is made from lace banding with lace edging for the sleeve frills. For the medium size will be needed, yards of lace 15 inches wide with 2}/% yards 5 inches wide for the blouse and $4 of a yard 36 inches wide or 44 for the over portion, and for the skirt, 4 yards of fiouning 36 inches wide with % yard of material 36 for the yoke and 3 yards 36 or 44 inches wide for the tunic. The pattern of the blouse No. 9136 may be had in sizes from 34 to 44 inches bust measure and of the skirt No. 9099 in sizes from 24 to 30 inches waist measure. They will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper, on receipt of ten cents for each. LET BABIES KEN NAKED Child Hygiene Expert Says It's More Healthful in Summer New York, Aug. 9.—Dr. S. Josephine Baker, director of the Bureau of Child Hygiene, to-day put the official stamp of approval on permitting babies to run about the house naked during the hot summer months. A letter was received by Dr. Baker in which soma well-meaning person complained that a mother on the East Side permitted her children, 1 and 3 years old, to run naked about the house and even in the halls. "There's a sensible mother for you," exclaimed Dr. l aker. "In this hot weather little children should be per mitted to run around stark naked. It is a perfectly natural way for them to live and they will keep much cooler." Dr. Baker also recommended sponge baths twice a day, plenty of cool water and pure milk and no solid food for the babies. GIRL THROWN FROM MOTORCYCLE Elizabeth Carson, 210 Chestnut street, while riding on a motorcycle yesterday afternoon was thrown 10 the street She sustained a fractured shoulder and a badly lacerated left arm. She wag taken to the Harrisburg hospital f6r treatment. MOTHER OF FOUR CHILDREN How Lydia E.Pinkham'sVeg etable Compound Kept Her Well and Strong. " Lincoln, Illinois.—"l have used Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for ten years with good 1 1! ill result and I nave ; IKJ ! four healthy chil ' c * ren * This summer Bit ~ I was in a very run Mfa 2 down condition and *" iHP levei yh° twe ather i npffr**.- seemed more than I i could stand, but I |!! | commenced taking ] 1' your Compound in ~ une and " om then " until September 19 *O7? Mtf - 25th, when my last —————baby was born, I got along much better than I had before. My baby was a girl and weighed 14 pounds at birth, and I recovered very rapidly which I am sure was due to your medicine. lam well and strong now, nurse my baby and do all my work. I had the same good results with your medicine when needed before my other children came and they are all healthy. My mother has taken your medicine with equal satisfaction. She had her last child when nearly 44 years old and feels confident she never would have carried him through without your help, as her health was very poor.'—Mrs. T. F. CLOYD, 1355 North Gulick Ave, De catur, 111. Espectant mothers should profit by Mrs. Cloyd's experience, and trust to Ly dia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Free confidential advice had by ad dressing Lydia E. Pinkham Meaicine Co., Lynn, Mass. H-AJRRI&BTTRG TELEGRAPH 17 C% Tfc W they build or A \J U JLF O DESTROY AMAZING BUT RARELY SUSPECTED TRUTHS ABOUT THE THINGS YOU EAT By ALFRED W. McCANN CHAPTER 02 The Facta Concerning th# Manufacture of Uoliuti, Involving the Use of Sulphurous Acid, Are Sufficient In Themselves to Inspire a Nation-Wide Demand For the Old-Fashioned. Open-Kettle Product That lud to lie Labeled ".New Orleans." hut Which la Now Uupurchaaable In the Whole sale Markets of the I'nlted States In the sophistication of molasses, which contains so much mineral mat ter added in the process of •'purifica tion" that it affords a serious subject for investigation at the hands of a non commercial body of scientists, many different grades and qualities of the finished product are put upon the mar "First molasses contains large quan tities of sugar. This sugar brings a higher price than the molasses. Hence it must be rescued. The centrifuge is the chief rescuing ageot employed in recovering this sugar. It can be said also that the centrifuge is the chief agent employed In the production of poor molasses. Molasses as it was known to our grandmothers compares with the mo lasses of to-day as whole milk would compare with the stuff produced by skimming off all of the cream, a large percentage of the milk solids, and then adding to the thin fluid resulting from such manipulation a preposterous quan tity of chemicals. This is not a word picture designed to frighten the public. It is an ac curate description of what has happen ed through commercial achievement to our great national sweet, old-fashioned molasses. "First molasses" is too good to be sold to the retail grocer. It is too good for the customer. Its food value, due to the presence of natural sugars, is too high to warrant any such luxury as. would be involved In its consumption by the kiddies of the nation. • Hence it is put through a second sapping process, which results in a yield of more sugar. This second yield Is called "second sugar." and the mo lasses obtained from the robbery is called "second molasses." With an eye to business the molasses manufacturer, pursuing the commer cial ideals of efficiency to the very last, takes this "second molasses" and again treats It In order to recover the little sugar that is left. This last treatment yields a molasses known as "third molasses." "Third molasses' Is the molasses now known to the American public. As the sugar is removed in the first, second and third denaturing process the impurities due to the methods em- BOILERS MUST BE UNDERSTATE RULE Department of Labor and In dustry Getting Them Under Inspection Plan Now All steam boilers and appurtenances in all sections of Pennsylvania carry ing pressure greater than fifteen pounds per square Inch are to be thor oughly inspected every year, both in ternally and externally and under op erating conditions, according to rules made recently by the Industrial Board of the Department of Labor and In dustry. The boilers exempted from Inspec tion, according to an announcement made to-day by Commissioner John Price Jackson, of the labor depart ment, are those of railroad locomo tives, subject to Inspection under Fed eral laws, boilers on automobiles and boilers of steam fire engines brought into Pennsylvania for temporary use In times of emergency for the purpose of checking conflagrations. Boilers carrying pressure of less than fifteen pounds per square Inch must be equipped with safety devices approved by the Industrial Board. The boiler code adopted recently by the Industrial Board applies to boilers contracted for on or after July 1, 1916, and to boilers contracted for before that date and to be delivered after January 1, 1917. This code deals spe cifically with the details of construc tion approved for steam boilers. The rules and regulations adopted by the board for the administration of the boiler code set forth that no person shall bo authorized to act for the Commonwealth as a boiler in spector unless ho has passed an exami nation described and approved by the board. At recent examinations held by the Department of Labor and In dustry In various sections of the State 118 inspectors p&ssed examinations en titling them to receive commissions as boiler inspectors. Commissions of inspectors may be revoked by the Commissioner of the Department of Labor and Industry for cause, and in such revocations an ap peal may be made to the Industrial Board for a final hearing. Regular examinations for boiler in spectors employed by insurance com panies, or acting as >.individuals, will be held at Harnsburg and other points four times each year, on the first Tues day In February, May, August and No vember. Persons appljing for examination as boiler Inspectors must obtain blank forms from the Division of Boiler In spection of tho Department of Labor and Industry and any applicant failing to pa3S an examination may be ac corded another test at the expiration of ninety £ays. Qualified inspectors, finding boilers unsafe from any cause, must notify the owners or persons in charge and make a report to the Bureau of Inspection of the Department of Labor and Industry and the boiler may not -be operated until a proper certificate Is granted that the boiler is in sufe condition. Any owner or user who moves a stationary boiler required to be In spected must make a report to the Bureau of Inspection of the Depart ment of Labor and Industry, giving the new location of the boiler, and It must pass inspection before It may again be operated. Certificates issued by Inspectors must be placed where they may be easily read in the engine room or boiler room of the plant where the boiler is located and a certificate of ingpectlon for a portable boiler must be kept near the boiler and accessible at all times. Inspectors shall give at least four teen days' notice to owners or users prior to the boiler inspection, and the owner or user muU prepare the boiler for the Inspection at the designated time by drawing water from the boiler, removing the manhole and handhole plates and thoroughly cleaning the boiler and Its sotting No notice need bo given for inspection of operating conditions. All boilers contracted for after July 1 must be distinctly stamped an conforming with the safety stand ards of the Industrial Board. Inspect ors so stamping boilers may not be directly or tndlrectly Interested in their manufacture or sale nor an em ploye of an owner or user of such boiler. Complete copies of the boiler code and the rules and regulations (or its administration may be obtained upon application to the Industrial Board of the Department of Labor and Indus try. Tho Industrial Board includes Commissioner John Price Jackson, chairman. Otto T. Mallery, Mrs. Sam uel Sample and William Young. / ployed become greater and greater un til the final yield Is a thick, viscous mass which no longer crystallize. This thick viscous mass is the mo lasses until a demand is made for the talty maker, the bakeshop, the grocery store, and the home pantry. It contains from 8 to 10 per cent, of scale and other ash and from 8 to 10 per cent, of gums, organic acids, amino compounds, and other products of the laboratory the conduct of which in the living bodies of children, when con sumed over a period of years, is ut terly unknown to scientists. In fact, no study has ever been made of the good or bad effects following the in gestion of these things. It is quite evident that the public will have to bo satisfied with such mo lasses until a remand is made for the restoration of the old-fashioned article which is so much better than cane sugar syrup, so much better than blends ot cane and maple, so much better than corn syrup or glucose and other com mercial table syrups, as far as the diet of children is concerned, that to me, at least, the Indifference of parents who are so well satisfied to take without question what is handed them Is little short of tragic. Good molasses would be cheap at twice Its present price. Old-fashioned home-made molasses, produced on farms by corporations with sufficient vision to appreciate the meaning of the old-fashioned product, will be put on sale in this country as soon as toe peo ple demand It with sincerity and per sistency. but no sooner. I get my old-fashioned molasses from a Tennessee farmer. You can get yours when you are sure you want it. In the meantime we must face cer tain ludicrcnis contrasts which are pre sented by these facts. Some dietitians, as we have seen, tell us that natural whole, unrefined wheat, containing the bran and germ, contains too much mineral matter (natural to the grains of the field), and that, there fore, the sifting and bolting which re moves three-fourths of the original 2 per cent, of mineral salts and colloids found in the whole grain is desirable. The same dietitians are strangely silent with regard to consuming mo lasses that contains from 8 to 10 per cent, of mineral scale and chemical contaminations added by the labora tory, not introduced by nature's pro cesses. They say nothing about the body's ability or inabiljtv to utilize this arti ficial mineral dose. In the meantime they also keep strangely quiet about the presence of sulphurous acid, which all modern mo lasses contains. tpAlvß]SE|gfMENTsgt , feature picture entitled "Hy pocrisy, released by the Fox studios, 5 " 10 Colonial to-day and at the to-morrow, in conjunction Colonial. with the first chapter of a » ... ne T. se >"lal. "The Grip of nJoii' wh,( \ h will be shown each Wed- Thursday for fourteen weeks. The Grip of Evil" is a subject pased on the story of how a young man in an effort to relieve the sufferings of the underworld finds an underground connection between the evils of the with those people and conditions which seem far removed from taint. An unusual photoplay In five acts, entitled "Comrade John," featuring . £ ut h Roland ana "Comrade' John" William Elliot is the at the lctoriu attraction at the To-day. Victoria to-day. This ♦ >,. _ i . drama is taken from tne novel of the same name and is a sensational story of love, hate, romance and happiness. To-day also the con cluding chapter "The Mysteries of Myra featuring Howard Eastabrook and Jean Southern. To-morrow for the first time In this city "The Valiants of Ji. a . S( i Fr ancls X. Bushman in A Brother s Loyalty." ''Sl'ka and Satins," in which Mar guerite Clark stars, will be presented .<£•> l. . at the Regent to- Silks nnd Satins" day and to-mor nt the Regent. row, is a reflection . . of every youthful dream ever dreamed. This delightful photoplay presents a romance that be gins with the present, goes back to medieval times and returns to modern ity for its climax. The story opens on the day previous to Felicite Cameron's marriage to Felix Breton, a conceited dandy. The young man Is the choice or her father, but not of her liking, for love lies in the heart of Jack Des- I* I ??TTh.?? h .? fln ds a diary in an old table. Felicite quickly picks them up and runs to her boudoir to explore the long departed relative. The ond part of the story deals with tIK romantic revelations of the diary, which was written by one of Felicite s progenitors when she found herself in much the same predicament which our little heroine is facing. It is a thrilling story of sword play and .*wag:Kf>rlnpT bullies, with the doughty hero coming to the rescue of the fair maiden, and in it little Felicite finds the key to her own happiness. AMTSKMEXTS Virginia Pearson in the 5-Reel Fox Production "HYPOCRISY" Also the First Chapter of "The Grip of Evil" Always Kool and (Comfortable To-day nnd to-morrow, the dainty, delightful, diminutive, MAK GI'EKITE CLARK, In a novel ro mantic photoplay, "SILKS \ND SATIN'S." Also Paramount Plctograplia. Extra Added Attractions coming Friday and Saturday, CHARLIE CHAPLIN, In his latest Komvdy, "ONE A. M.» and Eighth Chapter of L "GLORIA'S ROMANCE." Brao'liCipic tvwee BkJ C 9 la /fes&pc: ' J Bff TO-DAY ONLY b • WILLIAM ELLIOT and kUK# RUTH ROLAND WM In a 5-act play, "COMRADE JOHN" jWijL taken from the book of wMlw the same name. Also the Concluding Chapter of "THE MYSTERIICS OF MYRA" To-morrow i FRANCIS X. BUSHMAN AUGUST 9, 1916. /Escape F WK/ TOOTH /y|lroubles —by keeping your teeth REALLY CLEAN. "But," you say, "I brush my teeth regularly, yet they decay." Yes, you brush them, but do you REALLY CLEAN them? Tonight, after brushing your teeth, examine them closely. You will likely find an accumulation of tartar on the enamel and bits of food deposit hiding in the crevices. Decay, as well as the dangerous gum disease called Pyorrhea, usually de velops only in the mouth where germ-laden tartar is present. SENRECO, the formula of a dental specialist, keeps the teeth REALLY CLEAN. It embodies specially prepared soluble granules unusually effective in cleaning away food deposits. Moreover, it is particularly destructive to the germ of Pyorrhea. Go to your dealer today and get a tube of Senreco—keep gfJfc your teeth REALLY CLEAN and protect yourself against Pyorrhea and decay. Send 4c to Senreco, 304 Walnut St, f Cincinnati, Ohio, for liberal-eized trial package. VV n See your crntut twice yearly \ M J Lac Senreco twice daily. W /J\\ Y The tooth past* that REALLY CLEANS V/j \ A. \\ give style, comfort; and superbly fitting gown; are economical because long wearing, and assure the utmost in a corset at a 1 1 | j II j! / \ most moderate price. i !| I ill \ W. B. NUFORM STYLE 419 (See jj j! j j ljj\^ large illustration). Medium low bust:; 111 I, I j \ clastic inserts. Splendid wearing /// jj jj jl |i| A \ coutil, embroidery trimmed. . $1.50. I I 111 ji|i / / W. B. NUFORM STYLE I II I| lj !ij i I / 440 (See small illustration.) trl !j 11 111 I I II J For average full figures. Me f[l f' J f —IJ! i 'oAf dium bust. Double hip con -1 ;li jj J> •fjl j j //f) struction assures double _T /g\ i j |'j Jj lj y wear, with smooth fit. Long \\ v i m 'I ' !! '! vrearing Coutil, embroidery Ja\,!» \\ jßLiiii-ill lii trimmed. . . $2.00 jfel ifwil j i OtherW.B.Modelssl.oo up. \vjiy |\\ /--I W. B. BRASSIERES worn fl\l\\ I/"" I with W.B. Corsets,give fash- /fllf lEv/ / rc\ \\ (/ I ionable figure-lines and add jffil I 1 tvt-\ I ''W\{ gown.fit. . 50c and up. 11l jj 'a,! J \ " AT YOUR DEALER l| jgl Send for Free Illuitrated Folder to LMLMW « ' en Weingarten Bros., Inc« J| 1 $1.50 New York Chicago San Francisco^ [MetSeund ©untwilllS Combines the attractions °t mountain and sea " . Scenically beautiful—commercially prosperous—an ideal pleasure ground for tourists. From Seattle andTacoma many de- lightful short journeys can be made by boat through the beautiful shel tered waters of the Sound, within constant sight of rugged snow capped mountains. . . j Scattered through the Sound are the picturesque San Juan Islands—then, but a short trip away is the mountain |B»psßߣlPjl wonderland —Rainier National Park. On the way to the Puget Sound Country is the big attraction — v electrification— that stupendous achievement that has turned the eyes of electricians and scientists the world over toward America. You will be absorbed in this, the realization of the dreams of ages, as you smoothly ride ' ' f rSfi behind a powerful electric locomotive over the Rocky Mountains. No trailing smoke to mar T the vision—no cinders or gas fumes to annoy. '' ' v.jfjj CHICAGO iSfHE Keep Advertising and Advertising ill Keep Yck? Escape 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers