Joint American and Mexican Conference to Be Held in Long Island Hotel By Associated Press New York, Sept. 4.—A big hotel overlooking Long Island sound at New London. Conn., will be the scene of the conferences of the American and Mexican Joint Commission. The three Americans and three Mexicans com posing this commission have decided upon the place, but are not yet certain of what day they will begin their deliberations. It has been suggested to the Mexi cans that the whole party go to New Lonaon to-morrow on the presidential yacht Mayflower, but it was said to day that the Mexicans may ask to stay in New York a day or two longer to give Luis Cabrera, the Mexican minis ter of finance, one of their number, an opportunity for further conferences wiih Dr. Alfredo Caturegll, financial agent of the Carranza government, and with local financiers interested in Mexi can railroads. The commissioners met at a luncheon to-day given by Secretary of Slate Lansing. Negotiations, accord ing to Secretary Lane, of the Depart ment of the Interior, who is one of the American commissioners, will be con ducted as informally as possible. Mr. r > Use Zemo for Eczema * Never mind how often you have tried and failed, you can stop burning. Itch ing eczema quickly by applying a little zemo furnished by any druggist for 25c. Extra large bottle, SI.OO. Healing begins the moment zemo is applied. In a short time usually every trace of pimples, blackheads, rash, eczema, tet ter and similar skin diseases will be removed. For clearing the skin and making It vigorously healthy, zemo is an excep tional remedy. It is not greasy, sticky or watery and it does not stain. When others fail it is the one dependable treatment for all skin troubles. Zemo. Cleveland. CagCtatlou and Estimates Clvn Free J. M. SMITH Hard Wood Floors LAID AND FINISHED OLD FLOOHS RENOVATED •TAIRS COVEKEI) WITH HARDWOOD FLOORS KEPT IN CONDITION Bell Pb »ci 1381 U. EZIS Brooknuod St. Harrlabors. Pa, Resorts ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. HOTEL KINGSTON pkouf Ocean Ave., Ist hotel (100 feet) from Beach. Cap. 250; elevator; bathing from hotel; distinctive table and service; 12.50 up daily; sl2 up weekly. Special family rates. Garage. Booklet. M. A. LEYRER. y£~o/n Ove/2 fo 7c/6/e. == . RUHL'S BREAD ■K. A Quality in every loaf brings wagon. HL 3 PEN BROOK Rakpkv HONEST VALUE Is what every man gets when he smokes a KING OSCAR * 5c CIGAR The best tobacco money can buy is put in this 25 year old quality brand. JOHN C. HERMAN & CO. Makers MONDAY EVENING, Lane believes that such a plan will be feasible because the three Mexican commissioners speak English fluently. SPECIAL WAR RELIEF DAYS By act of Congress the President has appointed October 21-22 as days for the relief of the suffering among the Armenians and Syrians. The Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America will send out the appeal to all the churches for a generous response. LOOKS LIKE CHAMBERSBFRG Sfecial to the Telegraph Martinsburg, W. Va., Sept. 4.—The championship race between Chambers burg and Martinsburg in the Blue Ridge League is not as yet decided, and probably will require both teams to-day to definitely determine the win ner of the pennant. By winning Sat urday from the Maroons in Chambers burg Martinsburg is still a pennant possibility. However, the chances are favorable to Chambersburg. as she can win the championship by taking one game to-day or by tying either game, while losing the other. Martinsburg can only win by taking both games from Hanover, while Chambersburg is losing both to Frederick. While this is an extremely long shot, local fans are pinning their hopes to the fact that Frederick is traveling at a great clip, and has always found Chambersburg rather easy, while Martinsburg will be playing on her own grounds with a team that she has had little difficulty beating all season. NEW RSE FOR POWDER RAGS Special to the Telegraph Evanston, 111., Sept. 4.—A new use for powder rags has been found by Evanston girls since tennis has be come a nocturnal sport in the suburb. Golf is relegated to a secondary po sition in Evanston's sporting calendar. Electric lights with big reflectors have been installed at the tennis courts on the Lincoln school playground. The merry whang of racquet on ball re sounds through the neighborhood long after quiet citizens are abed. The girls powder the tennis balls the better to see them in the glare from the lamps. I ■ A Beauty Secret To have clear skin, bright eyes and a healthy appearance, your digestion must be good—your bowels and liver kept active and regular. Assist nature-take BEECHAM'S PILLS luarf est Sale of Any Medicine in the World. Sold everywhere, la boxes, 10c., 25c. VILLA ON PATH TAKES GARRISON With Force of 1,000 Captures, San Antonio; Pershing Notified Special to the Telegraph El Paso, Texas, Sept. 4.—Routing j the garrison, Francisco Villa, with a j force of 1000 men, is in possession of San Antonio south of Namiquipa, ac cording to information received here by code message from Chihuahua City yesterday. Moving northward, the Villa army yesterday attacked the San Antonio garrison of 200 men and either killed or captured the majority of the sol diers. A handful of men fled to the mountains. Had Arms in Hiding Advices received here from the south indicate that Villa will reach i Namiquipa some time on Tuesday and ! will enter the mouth of the Santa Clara Canyon where, it is believed, he has a large amount of ammunition,! rifles and several machine guns cached. The prisoners captured at Santa Ysabel and San Antonio have Joined his forces and are being armed by the bandit chieftain. Villa is expected to have marshaled together more than 1500 men, many of whom are sUll un armed. Both General John J. Pershing and General Jacinto Trevlno have been notified of the Villa movement. Whether they will attempt to trap the bandit at the mouth of the Santa Clara Canyon is not known. But there has been no troop movement south ward of the punitive force, the south base of which is at Eil Valle, within striking distance of Namiquipa. The small force of troops sent southward by General Trevlno to re inforce the garrison south of Nami quipa have all been defeated by Villa, | many of them deserting and joining his standard. Both State Department officials and the army fear that Villa intends forcing intervention south of El Valle. . SHACKLETON RESCI'ES MEN Explorer Brings Marooned Party Safely From Elephant Island Special to the Telegraph Punta Arenas. Chile, Sept. 4. Lieu tenant Sir Ernest H. Shackleton has rescued the members of his Antarctic expedition who were marooned on Ele phant Island. Shackleton returned here yesterday with the men all safe and well, on the rescue ship Yelcho. Sir Ernest Shackleton left Punta Arenas August 26 for a third attempt to rescue his marooned men. After the failure of his Antarctic expedition, Shackleton, with five members of his crew, managed to reach Port Stanley. Falkland Islands, on May 31. Twenty two others of the crew were left on Elephant Island on April 9. The first attempt to rescue them was made in June, and the second in July, both fall ing on account of the ice. GOOD WORK FOR SICK WOMEN i _ The Woman's Medicine Has Proved Its Worth. When Lydia E. Pinkham's remedies were first introduced, their curative powers were doubted and had to be proved. But the proof came, and grad ually the use of them spread over the whole country. Now that hundreds of thousands of women have experienced the most beneficial effects from the use of these medicines, their value has be come generally recognized, and Lydia j E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the standard medicine for women. | The following letter is only one of I the thousands on file in the Pinkh&m 1 office, at Lynn, Mass., proving that Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Com pound is an article of great merit as shown by the results it produces. Anamosa, lowa. —' 'When I began tak ing Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Com pound I suffered with a displacement, and my system was in a general run down condition. I would have the head ache for a week and my back would ! ache so bad when 1 would bend down I could hardly straighten up. My sister , was sick in bed for two months and doctored, but did not get any relief. She saw an advertisement of your med cine and tried it and got better. She told me what it had done for her, and when I had taken only two bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- I pound my head began to feel better. I continued its use and now I don't have any of those troubles." Mrs. L. J. I HANNAN, R.F.D. 1, Anamosa, lowa. i &AHRISBURG (irfSjftl TELEGRAPH WOMEN'S INTERESTS Ten Commandments Of Matrimony The first commandment of matri mony Is. Thou shalt not lie. Neither before marriage nor after marriage shalt thou deceive the part ner of thy bosom, but of most Im portance Is strict veracity on the safe side of the altar. The reason that so many marriages are failures Is because they are found ed on falsehood, and the men and wo men who have entered Into them are as much the victims of a confidence game as any trusting soul who ever invested his whole fortune In a salted mine, or purchased a gold brick from a sick Indian. Each has been taken In, flim-flam med. done for. The woman the man finds himself married to Is no more the woman he thought he was get ting for a wife than she Is be'ng from another sphere. The man the wo man finds herself married to for life no more resembles the little tin god she thought she was getting ror a husband than he does a gentleman from Mars. Even the conditions of matrimony under which they must exist have nothing in common with the way they had figured married life out to be. What wonder that both are dis appointed and disgruntled, and find marriage a failure. This does not Imply that either the husband or wife was a deep, dark, designing vtlllan who deliberately lured the other to his or her ruin. The deception was unconscious and prac tised according to the conventional j rule that makes It the correct thing to pave the way to the matrimonial ' Gehenna with white lies. This is al ! ways done in our best society, and the 1 custom of baiting the matrimonial | hook with falsehoods has been prac ! tised so long that it is doubtful if ! any catch would ever be made If the i truth should be substituted for It. Both Should be Frank Common sense dictates that the I man and woman who are about to 1 enter into a partnership in which their | every Interest and every earthly | chance of happiness are bound up, {should be perfectly frank with each other, and explain the situation ' honestly, but such candor Is nevef indulged in matrimony. No man, for instance, in popptng the question to a girl would dare to say "Mary Jane, you have no beauty to boast of, and I am under no Illusions that you will set the river on fire with i your brilliancy, or are a pinfeathered I angel, but you are healthy and whole some. and practical and domestic, ana | are the sort of a girl who makes a . good wife and a good mother. I like j you and I'd like to marry you, but I if you marry me you will have to put up with a lot of crankiness and seif j ishnpss in me. and for the next few years, while I am getting a good start, you will have to do your own house- I work, and make your own clothes, and i do without luxuries to which you have been accustomed. How does the proposition look to you?" Oh no, no man ever proposes to a girl In that fashion. On the contrary he tells her that she Is the most beautiful creature that ever lived, and SOFT SATIN COAT FOR COOLER DAYS Shirrings and Fulness at Neck and Sleeves Make Graceful Lines For Wrap By MAY MAN ION 9115 (TFtik Basting Line and Added Seam Allowance) Shirred Coat, (or Misses and Small Women, 16 and I $ year*. This is a coat that trill make any girl ' comfortable as well as happy. It is so smart and attractive that it will appeal to her love of pretty things and it is so satis i factory to wear and so cozy that it will be a real delight when the August even ! ings are cool or when the dance is at ' sufficient distance to necessitate a run in 1 the motor car. Here, it is made of a new satin that is soft and lustrous and of good weight for coats, but it can be copied in si lie or in broadcloth or in any suitable material. The full coat is joined to a i yoke and if a plainer and simpler one is, wanted, the neck can be finished with a ; collar and the cape with its frill omitted. In such case, the sleeves would be finished with cuffs. For the 16 year size will be needed, &A yards of material 36 inches wide, 5 yards 44 or 4H yard® 54* The pattern No. 9115 >» cut in sizes for 16 and 18 years. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Departn-nt of this paper, on receipt of ten cents. TROOPER RECOVERING Guy M. Beigler, 1248 Walnut street, now a member of the Governor's Troop. : now on duty along the Mexican border, Iwho was seriously injured about a week ago when he was thrown from a horse, which he was attempting: to break. Is said to be recovering from his Injuries. that he'll die If she says "no," and that if she married him, her little white hands shall never have aught to do except to smooth his fevered brow. Then, when she does marry him and finds out that matrimony Is a gas range and a sewing machine Instead of a silk cushion, there is small won der that sbe feels that she has been swindled. Both T/arlc Courage Nor are women any more honest be fore marriage with men than men I with women. Every girl who Is hus band-hunting pretends to be what she i thinks the man she desires to charm i wants her to be. She never hat> the ( courage to let even her finance see her with her complexion off, and her 1 temper and her views of life In good ; working order. Wherefore many a 1 man who thinks he is leading a mild, meek little creature to the altar, that he expects to mould to suit his own j tastes, gets the Jolt of his life when i he finds that he has been united In the holy bonds of wedlock to a virago Instead of Patient Grizelda. Undoubtedly it is more important that a man should be Truthful James, and a woman Veracious Jane before marriage than It is they should be strictly truthful with each other after wards. Indeed, if they have been can did with each other before marriage they will have no need to be afraid to tell the truth to each other. The real reason that most husbands and wives He to each other Is because they dare not tell the truth. The man who wants to stay downtown and have dinner with a friend, or play a game of cards, would prefer to tell his wife about It, but experience has taught him that she will lecture him half the night about it if he does, so Ihe tells her a whopper about being kept, by business, or having to meet j a man from Oshkosh. A woman would much rather tell 1 her husband that her new hat cost I twenty dollars instead of fifteen, ex cept that she knows that in one case : she will be berated for her extrava gance. and In the other she will get off with merely a conjugal grunt or disapproval. So, human nature being weak, and domestic peace precious, each Is forced by the other Into be i coming members of the Ananias so- I clety. Rocks for Matrimony Thus does falsehood become one of | the sunken roofs on which the Good ; Ship Matrimony founders. For in the ] end lying is one. of the things with which one never quite gets away. Sooner or later the liar is found out. j His little air castle falls in ruins at ! the first touch of reality and leaves nothing but a handful of broken : dreams and hopes. Moreover, the man who has once lied to his wife, or the wife who has ! told fibs to her husband, is forever ; after under suspicion, and love, es ! peclally conjugal love, can have no | peace unless it rests upon unques tioned faith, and that must rest upon I truth. I Remember the first commandment. Thou Shalt Not Lie. Leave the man |or woman who is not strong enough panion for some other liar. DO YOU In Switzerland the goat Is placed ahead of all other animals. If a boy plagues a goat he can be fined and sent to prison. If a person meets a goat on a path and drives It aside he can be arrested. If a goat enters the yard of a person not his owner, and is hit with a club or stone, the person guilty of the offense must pay a fine. In Paris the bronzed horse's head denotes the location of "boucheries hippophagiquea," or horsemeat shops. Since the early seventies of the last century hippophagy has grown so in popularity that there is now no con siderable town in France that has not I one or more shops for the sale of horseflesh. It has been noticed that the com- i raon peanut grows in a peculiar way j that is distinctly original. The little plant sends up its shoots, with the j | fruit on the end of a somewhat stiff stalk, and then before it ripens, the stem bends over and carefully pushes the fruit underground. Man Found Beheaded on Mountain Is Identified The identity of the beheaded man found in Robert's mountain on Au gust 13, was established on Saturday through the efforts of County Detec tive* James T. Walters and Detective Harry White of the White Detective Agency, assisted by Coroner Eckinger. The man was D. W. Stoddard, of Ilion, N. Y„ who had been employed by the Elliott-Fisher company and roomed here for some time with Mrs. Anna Metzger, 618 Delaware street. Detective White, who had been work ing on the case of the disappearance of Stoddard, asked to have the body of the man found in the mountains, exhumed and re-examined. Between the lining and the outside of the coat an Identification was found, issued by Mayor Meals, and bearing Stoddard's name. A bottle containing a liquid was found, and it is believed that Stoddard went into the mountains and committed suicide, as he had threat ened to do, according to friends. City police are endeavoring to lo cate a son who resides in Ilion. WTLSOX DREADS STRIKE "If It Goes Through I'm Ruined," 'He is Quoted Washington, D. C., Sept. 4.—"lf this strike goes through lam ruined. The situation is serious," said President Wilson (over the telephone) last Mon day night. This bit of "news" is given to the public by the Suffragist, organ of the Congressional Union for Promoting Equal Suffrage and also organ of the Woman's party. The article in the Suffragist says the President was talking over the tele phone Monday night and the interest ing statement is added that the Presi dent was heard to say, in tones that actually trembled with anxiety, the words quoted above. The disclosure was made in an edi torial in the Suffragist entitled "Emer gency Legislation." To Discard Freckles, Tan, Pimples, Wrinkles The use of creams containing animal substance sometimes causes hair to grow. You run no risk of acquiring j superfluous hair when you use ordin ary mercolized wax. There Is nothing better for a discolored skin, as the wax ■ actually absorbs the offensive cuticle. . The latter is naturally replaced by a . clear, smooth, healthy complexion, full ■ of life and expression. It's the sen sible way to discard a freckled, tan ned, over-red, blotchy or pimpled skin Get an ounce of mercolized wax at any druggist's and apply- nightly like cold cream, erasing In the morning with soap and water. It takes a week or so to complete the transformation. The ideal wrinkle remover Is made by dissolving an ounce of powdered saxollta in a half pint witch hazel. Bathing the face in the solution brings , almost instantaneous results. SEPTEMBER 4,1916. m See the The Automatic j Automatic 308 ( Jm™ J j Sure, Market I I I Swift, Street Secret Your Telephone Should SAVE Not Lose TIME When you turn to your telephone you want IMMEDI ATE action. That's why you telephone rather than send a letter or go in person. You pay for telephone service not to lose time but to save time. Sometimes over the old manual system your calls are handled with reasonable promptness, but you know too well the frequent exasperating delays. Just as at a ticket offfce the rule is "first come, first served," so in the manual tele phone exchange. There are often three or four calls ahead of yours and YOU HAVE TO WAIT YOUR TURN. If there was a girl in the central office whose sole duty it was to handle YOUR calls such delays would not occur; They do not occur when you Use the Automatic On the Automatic System there is ALWAYS an opera tor INSTANTLY ready to serve you. This operator is not a human being, but a machine. The Automatic operator never gets tired, never forgets, never gives you the wrong I number. It is MADE, not RAID to do its work. You never have to "wait in line" until the calls ahead are disposed of. There is but one answer—Use the Automatic For Prompt Service Cumberland Valley Telephone Company of Pa. IIARRISBURG, PA. Good Housekeeping Recipes |, Good food properly cooked goes far j toward insuring health and long years. As much depends on the cooking, how ever, ason the food itself. The follow ing receipts have been tested and ap proved by Good Housekeeping Insti tute, conducted by Good Housekeep- I ing, and are republished here by | special arrangement with that publi- ! cation, the nation's greatest home ] magazine. All measurements are level, stand ard half-pint measuring cups, table- , spoons and teaspoons, being used. Six teen level teaspoonfuls equal a half pint. Quantities are sufficient for six ; people unless otherwise stated. Flour j is sifted once before measuring. NUT AND ASPARAGUS SALAD Six hard cooked eggs, 2 tablespoon- | fuls chopped hickory nut meats, I cup ful cooked asparagus tips, 1 table- 1 -spoonful minced parsley, French dress- j ing, extra nut meats, parsley and as- I paragus tips. Shell the egsrs and cut in halves ; lengthwise. Mash the yolks, add the | nut meats, the cupful of asparagus tips, and the parsley, and blend with I four tablespoonfuls of French dressing j that is not very sour. Fill the egg- j halves with this mixture, arrange on j lettuce leaves, and garnish with the extra asparagus tips, parsley and nut meats. If any of the asparagus mix ture is left over it can be blended with a mayonnaise or a bland boiled dress ing and passed with the salad. JEFF DAVIS'S CAPTOR 79 General .lames H. Wilson Celebrates at His Home in Wilmington Wilmington, Del., Sept. 4.—General James Harrison Wilson, United States Army, retired, was 79 yesterday, but his form was as erect and his step as brisk as when he reached the half century mark. The captor of Jefferson Davis spent the day receiving the felicitations of friends and the formal observance was a family dinner at the Wilson home. General Wilson ventured the pre diction that the European war would continue one year longer, at least. I "The war is a battle between demo cracy and small armies on one side and autocracy and great armies on the other," he said. "It )s plain to see how little good Germany's preparedness has done tor her in the present crisis. In fact, her preparedness idea is being subjected to ! a supreme test in this war, which will [ reveal much to the world. This coun- j try, as well as the other nations, has) plenty to learn." ■A" E When the blood (the power fluid of your *~ body) i* properly nourished, your body in- f Bj ■wiwa variably radiates signs of glowing health— / / Wgg \ UTi" But it Is so easy to neglect its importance, //CI BX | I end blood disease's of malignant form, | I I I OB like Rheumatism, Catarrh, Malaria, Scro- 1 \ I ■*"* fulous poisons and skin diseases take hold V&vrtAKy/\/ D before we are aware —the result of negli- y»V/ 9 gence. \vfCCCwjs' H m &***•* Keep your blood (power fluid) running M pure by nourishing qualities of t.B.S. and ban | au*.—' ish these undesirable tenants from your body. C—T"l I i I r r V(H' rl3eaU,yS 6 a,Ce use ED.PINAUfc A new, exquisite complexion cream from the world's most famous par fumeur. A wonderful beauty preparation, rose odor. Ask your druegist or send 25c to our American offices for a tube. PAKFUMERII ED, PINAUD. Din-. M. ID. PINAUD BUDO. NEW YORK Forty-Six Pennsylvanians Now Support Suffrage Special to the Telegraph Washington, Sept. 4. —Of 49 replies from Pennsylvania candidates for Congress, 46 have answered "favor ' ably," the Congressional Committee of i the National American Woman Suff rage Association announced, summar | izing the attitude of candidates to ward the Federal suffrage amendment. One Pennsylvanian declared his op position and two were noncommittal. A total of 13 2 replies has been re ' eeived. One hundred and twelve of these, or nearly 85 per cent, declared [ themselves In favor of woman suffrage I and stated that they would vote for | the Federal suffrage amendment and would work for a favorable report on i the amendment of they should be on | the committee which has jurisdiction. | Mrs. Frank M. Roessing, chairman of the committee, is much pleased ' with the returns from Pennsylvania Iso far. She detects, the committee ds - clares, "a tremendous change o£ | heart." ; VTTAGRAPH BUYS THREE FIRMS Lubin, Sells: and Essanay Interests Are Purchased New York, Sept. 4. —The Vltagraph Company announced yesterday that it had purchased the interests of the Lubin, Selig and Essanay motion pic ture companies in the corporation known as the V-L-S-E, Inc., thereby obtaining absolute control of twenty three branch offices for the distri bution of its screen productions. The step makes it possible v for the Vita giaph Company, which operates three plants, to' control every step of the production and marketing of its pic tures. Within a few weeks there will be in stituted a campaign of national adver tising in the newspapers and maga zines announcing completed pictures and those under way with such star* of the stage as E. H. Sothern, Barney Bernard and Charles Richman and such popular screen favorites as Anif, I Stewart, Earl Williams., Edith Storey, Harry Moey, Lillian Walker and An tonio Moreno. CYCLIST HIT BY ALTO While riding on a motorcycle yester day afternoon, near Duncannon, Wil ! liam Albright, of Lucknow, was struck iby an automobile. He was thrown to the ground, sustaining bruises of the I head and body and probably internal | Injuries. He was taken to the Harris burg Hospital. 5