4 OF INTEREST T STEALING i By DOROTHY DIX I get a great many very pathetic let ters from wives who complain that other women have stolen their husbands away from them, and who ask me If 1 do not think that these matrimonial thieves are the most iniquitous crea tures on earth. It is, of course, natural in such cases to blame the other woman wholly, and to accuse her of being a siren, who has exercised some sort of occult art over a. helpless and hypnotized man In order to drag him away, against his inclin ation. from his home and fireside. There is a cheering and comforting view for the wife to take of the situa tion. It is not without reason that the wife invariably blames the other woman. It saves her face. It is one thing to forgive a man and take him back, if he was shanghaied and taken unconscious and doped aboard the pleasure craft, and another to overlook his side stepping if he sidestepped of his own accord because he enjoyed do ing It, and was tired and bored at home. Now, any whole heart goes out to the woman whose husband has wear led of her and deserted her. I could weep tears of blood on her breast, but the truth remains that every case .of husband stealing is what the police can "an Inside Job." No woman can steal a man away from his wife un- I less he wants to be stolen. Before the ! heart thief can get In, a man has to j leave all the doors unlocked, and all the windows with "the burglar alarms off. While I.ove I.tvfi As long as a man is In love with . his wife he Is Inoculated against all < other charmers, charm they never so well nor so wisely. The other woman, ! no matter how beautiful and attractive she Is does not exist as an entity. She is merely Just a part of the female population, another skirt among skirts, ! *nd he is in no more danger or getting, Into a flirtation with her than he is j R-ith his grandmother. Resinol (SR stops itching and burning I / you are suffering with eczema, ringworm, . r 35 or ot " e r tormenting skin-eruption, try Res- Vi V *: ln ?' Ointment and Resinol Soap. You will be sur- M V * j\ prised how quickly the itching and burning stop 1 \v'*" WU and the skin becomes clear and healthy again \ v V \ Resinol Ointment ind Resinol Soap \ \ \ J have been prescribed by physicians for \ A £ 1 over twenty years. Sold by all drug. V WJ J' J i *s. lor free trial sise o( each write to V y. * y Dept. LJ-R, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. 1 Rtiitwi Shavinf Stick maJkss daCy I shavutr tasy for Undtrjactd mtn. -ggj Mi put it xipfo Dentists Long before SENRECO was offered to you toe submitted it to hundred* of dentists, requesting that they put it to every test. Told them that we believed Senreco to be an unusually good dentifrice, especially as to its cleansing qualities and its remedial action on sore, soft, bleeding gums; in the treatment of Pyorrhea, etc. Submitted the formula and asked them their opinion• They tested Senreco from every angle; some going even so far as to make a chemical analysis— ArvdTkeu ' giSlli Voted With practically one accord—said: "Senreco appeals to me more than any dentifrice / have ever seen. "/ cannot Bay too much for Senreco. It's one of the best / haveuted." "I cart recommend Senreco at the but." "Make, the teeth gluten ond is free from injurious ingredients, including pumice and grit." "/ am in deed glad to get * tooth paste that does the work." "Congratulate you on formulating a dentifrice that gioee ona a new idea of mouth cleanliness, etc." JiThese quotations are from tha dentists' reports• Originals on file at our office.) m m With such endorsements from the men who know; why not go to your iT'Tj 9 * l ** arxd **' a tobe of SENRECO 2sc. Keep your iceth REALLY CLEAN, and protect yourself against Pyorrhea and decay• A copy of tha Mder. "The Most General Diseasa in tha World" together with a liberal trial sise tube of SENRECO will be mailed you for 4c in stamp*. Tha Santanel Remedies Co., Inc. Dept. B, Masonic Temple, Cincinnati, Ohio. o url^"ty\s akc 'use ED.PINAUOS& A new, exquisite complexion cream from the world's most famous par fumeur. A wonderful beauty preparation, rose odor. Ask your druggist or send 25c to our American offices for a tube. PARPUMERIE ED, PINAUD, DEPT. M. ED. PINAUD ■LOO. NEW YORK Oven /o 2a3/e. CUHL'S BREAD Quality in every loaf . brings wagoa 1 _ RVJHL3 PEN6ROOK BAKERY Try Telegraph Want Ads MONDAY EVENING. HUSBAND And women know this intuitively, and they waste no time nor smiles upon him. He has got "taken" brand ed across his forehead, and even a feminine love pirate respects it. Therefore, when a husband's af fections have been stolen, you may be very sure that he has been guilty of, at least, contributory negllgenco In the matter. 1 He has left them lying around loose In the way of any woman with predatory instincts and light fingers who chanced to pass that" way, and sh<* is not wholly to blame if she took them. If husband had been safe at home, where he belonged, no lady burglar could have broken down the door and purloined him from his own hearth. In their fatuous belief that the other woman is a highway robber, who has held , a man up at the point of a gun and forcibly taken his heart away from him, many wives are silly enough to actually appeal to the women to re turn their property to them. They talk as if love were a peck of potatoes, or a diamond ring, that one could keep or restore at pleasure. How absurd! If a man has really ceased to care for his wife and come to love another woman, the other woman is as helpless In the matter as his wife. A Hopritu Appeal | If she is a bad woman she can hu ! mlliate and mock the wife for not be ing able to hold her own. If she is a ; good woman she can pity the wife, but jail of that does not rekindle the flame |of affection for his wife In the hus ! band's breast. j In reality there Is no such thing as a husband stealer. When a woman is !in possession of the affections of an -1 other woman's husband he has made her a present of his heart. She hasn't filched it, and the only way a wife can : take out a burglar policy against hav- I ing her husband stolen Is to keep him jso interested he doesn't want to be | stolen. A STYLISH MODEL IN CLOTH SKIRT I ' : , Odd Shaped Pockets at Side Give a Special Touch of Quaintness By MAY MANTON | 9*66 (With BasHutLin* and .Added Seam Allowance) Three-Piece Skirt with Yoke, 24 to 32 waist. The pattern No. 9166 is cut in sizes from 24 to 32 inches waist measure. It will be maileo to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper, oa receipt of tdn cent*. Seth Low, Former Mayor of New York, Is Dead New York, Sept. 18.—Seth Low, for mer mayor of New York, twice mayor j of Brooklyn and for eleven years presi dent of Columbia University, died yes -1 terday at his country home. Broad Bro -1 : Farm. Bedford Hills, N. Y., at the age of 66 years. He had been ! ill several months of complication of j diseases. | Mr. Low s most recent activities were I exerted in an effort to find a solution jof the differences between the rail ! road brotherhoods and the railroads, jHe had long been consulted by heads jof the brotherhoods. j LUNCHEON FOR BRIDE-ELECT Halifax, Pa.. Sept. 18. One of the most delightful social events of the season was a luncheon given on Saturday afternoon by Mrs. J. c. Lyter and her daughter. Mrs. Charles C. Baker in honor of Miss Kathryn Brubaker Pike, whose engagement to J. Dale Dlehl, of York, was recently announced. Covers were laid for twelve. The favors were cut glass bud holders. The guests were Misses Kathryn Brubaker Pike, Carolyn Shoop, Esther Brubaker, Virginia Shoop. Marie Smith, Millie Offenbach, Caroline Millard and Mrs. C. M. Rlchter, Mrs. Hass, Mrs. Claude Ryan j and Mrs. W. A. Millard of Plymouth. Turks Making Further Efforts to Gain Control of Armenian Church' Washington, Sept. 18.—Further steps by the Turkish government to destroy the Democratic organization or Arme nian Church in Turkey and place it more securely under Moslem direction are reported in dispatches received in effl clal quarters lu.'e. Appointment of the bishops of the Armenian Church of Ottoman nation ality Is one of the latest re'orms or dered, and the so-called " national as- ; sembly" of the church, established in 1279 and elected by popular vote among the Armenians, has been supplanted by a new "spiritual assembly" with limi ted power over affairs pertaining only to management of religious, education al and charitable institutions. The Ottoman Government reserves the right to veto election or any of the bishops composing the new "spiritual assembly." The State Department is studying ] the effect of the nw decrees and while ! It cpuld not protest against religious , decree the regulations may be taken into consideration when the American Ambassador Elkus takes up with the Turkish Government the general ques tion of Its treatment of Americans. BOY'S ARM TORN OFF Blaln, Pa., Sept. 18. Donald Sew ell. 13 years old, whose home is at Baltimore, Md., at present is an in mate of the Tressler's Orphans' Home, at Loysville, had his left arm torn off at the shoulder while working in the printing office on Saturday morning. The boy attempted to put a belt on a pulley and was caught. BUCKET BRIGADE SAVES HOUSE .Fire yesterday destroyed a small stable owned by Joseph Smueker Co lumbia avenue, Edgemont. and for a time threatened the home of the owner, a distance of only about twelve feet away. The house was saved by a number of men who formed a bucket brigade. The blaze is said to have been started by a son of Smueker who had been playing with matches. RASHY PIMPLY COMPLEXIONS QUICKLY CLEARED BY CUM HOW TO DO IT:—Smear the affected part with Cuticura Ointment and let it remain five minutes. Wash off with Cuti cura Soap and hot water, bathing some minutes. Absolutely nothing better. Sample Each Free by Mall "Cuticura. Dept. 19, Boston.'* Sold everywhere. HARRXSBXJHG tfjjfflfl WORAPH HBG. RIFLE ASSN. HAS STATE RECORD Activities Rife Among Members of Local Branch of National Organization A letter recently received from the War Depurtment by the Harrlsburg Rifle Association confirms the report that the local association, comprising fifty-seven members, who are more or less expert with the rifle, has made the highest record of shooting in the state of Pennsylvania. Inasmuch as there are thiity-seven branches of the Na | tional Rifle Association in the state, the record of the Harrlsburg branch |is exceptionally gooa. Out of those who have shot the militia course, i which requires forty shots from the 300-yard range, rapid and slow flre, prone, kneeling and sitting, the club is represented by twelve sharpshoot ers and twtnty-seven marksmen. There are no "bolo" men, which is a term equivalent to the "booby" prize, nor on the other hand are there any ex perts, but the latter is the exception even among crack army shots. Activities among the Harrisburg Rifle Association, which was organized last Spring with a large percentage of its membership composed of men on re called to-day to handle a crowd of deposi tors which continued the run on the State bank of Sch.iff and Compan.fr de spite the assurance of the officials that the Institution is solvent. The run started yesterday because of alarm spread by the collapse of three private banks last week. Offi cials of the Schlff bank said that $50,000 was paid out yesterday and the demand of every depositor would be met. The bank has resources of $1,000,000 ac cording to an audit Sunday. The pri vate bank of M. Oinsburg and Sons, which closed Saturday did not open to-day. Depositors clamored for their savings. "Old Skins" Says Rector ' | of His Disagreeing Flock * New York, Sept. 18. Classifying his < parishioners who disagreed with his t views of "old skins" and stating they I were so 'dead" that what Martha said of Lazarus when he had been buried three days, "he stinketh," was true or „ them. The Rev. Mercer Green John- ' son preached his farewell sermon yes- t terday morning as rector of Old Trinity Kpiscopal Church, Newark, N. j. Toward the end of his most unusual ; discourse Mr. Johnston accused the ! Rev. Edwin S. Lines, Bishop of Newark ' of having entered into a "covenant'' with the vestry oi Trinity Church to s oppose him. r The clergyman and his yife will leava r Newark Tuesday for Baltimore, whefu they will live in the magnificent sum mer home of William F. Cochran ai 11 Sherwood Forest, a suburb of Balti- P more. Mr. Cochran is known as the s Socialist millionaire. He made his i money from his carpet works, and he V Is reputed to be worth $8,000,000 Until a few years ago he lived In Yonkers. WOODMEN TO INITIATE t Members of Harrisburg Camn No t 5250, Modern Woodmen of America will initiate a class of fifteen new 1 members at the camp hall, 1365 How- 3 ard street, to-morrow evening for the r camp recently organized at Middle town. r STEELWORKER BURNED Michael Murnane, 1052 South Ninth q street, was badly burned about the 1 lace and arms while working at a blast furnace of the Central Iron and Steel ' Company last night. CLl'B FOR COP Charles Wlihelm, ex-chief of police presented Officer Parsons with a club which the former official used while on the force. Officer Parsons broke his club over a prisoner's head a few ° days ago. UAMBIiERS LEAVE TOWN v Officer Carson while patroling his 1 district yesterday found a gambling S wheel at Seventh and Herr streets and t brought it to police headquarter*. L- Silver Sandals A Detective Story o! Mys tery, Love and Adventure. By Clinton H. Stagg Copyright. \V. J. Watt & Co., International News Service. (Continued From Yesterday.) Suddenly the problemist forgot the crytogram and the motionless woman at the table. His ears had caught a sound in the empty house. His acute hearing strained to tne utmost, he lis tened. Some one was stealthily mak ing his way along the dark halls. Mc mann? Had the polled picked up the trail again? Were tney going to spoil it beore Colton had gotten the thing for which he had come? He knew McMann would find the place, there was too much bull-dog In the police officer ever to give up because he had been lost by the big car and the daring Michael. But Colton wanted to beat him to just one thing. The listener was outside the room door now. "Why did you murder your broth er?" Colton shot the question. The old woman did not even raise her head. "Because he deserved It! Because " The crash of the flung-open door shook the big house. A voice came to the blind man's ears: "So you did do it! You did! You killed the father of that girl! You Colton's smooth voice cut in: "Sit down. Bracken! I've been waiting for • you!" The problemist heard the man whirl to face him. "Who are y,ou? Colton, eh? The blind man! You got here first, did >ou?" "I've been waiting some time." Thornley Colton spoke patiently. "Where's Ruth?" 'Again Colton heard the man whirl as ht> turned to ward the woman, but the blind man answered the question: "Your wife Is at tny house." "Your house?" "Yes. Sit down, as I told you. Silver Sandals Is working on the cryptogram that means the girl's for tune." The blind man's ears heard the sharp intake of breath. "Where did you get it?" Again the question was addressed to the silent woman. Again Colton answered: "I gave it to her. She must have time to solve It. The girl's future is on that papyrus." "Her future." All the snarl, the wrath was gone from the man's voice. Colton could picture him, staring at the woman, who gave no sign of his existence: whose whole mind was fixed on the thing before her. Again Silver Sandals was deaf and dumb to the world. Colton, who appeared to be watching so intently, was blind. The man who stood in the center of the room in the big, empty house was the one Colton had accused of murder. "She said that she killed him?" he asked. "She said that?" The second repetition was a hard-voiced demand. "She has confessed," Colton assur ed him. "The confession is a lie!" Bracken almost shouted the words. "A lie, understand!" he leaned forward so that the very words seemed to strike the blind man in the face. "I killed Neitton!" "X know It." Colton nodded sol emnly. "Yes, I killed him!" The husband of the girl who was locked In the room at Thornley Colton's house was walk ing back and forth before the blind man like a caged tiger. "The girl never had a chance. She was his slave. She wouldn't leave him to his fool books and theories. He gave me the opportunity. It was simple. Now she's free!", "Is she?" Colton demanded, his voice curiously quiet. "Doesn't the million dollars that the solving of the cryptogram means go to her? I found evidence that pointed to her presence in the suite—a hair on the floor!." "She wasn't near the suite!" Bracken's voice fairly trembled with fear, and in it, too, the problemist detected the shock of surprise. That was a possibility Bracken had not suspected. "That's a lie, and you know It!" The blind man's knees felt the touch of Bracken's knees, so close was he. The hot breath of the man struck his face. "You know that 1 am the only one who could have killed him! I was with him! I knew his plans!" Colton did not answer. He leaned far back in the chair. His face, with the tortoise-rimmed glasses pushed high on his forehead, was raised, the brown eyes appeared to be reading the innermost thoughts of the man who stood over him. He could feel the tremble in Bracken's knpes. He cold hear the steady breathing of the woman. He knew that she had not betrayed, by move of a muscle, that she had heard. He knew that her head was still bent in study over the papyrus figures. "Why don't you arrest me?" de manded Bracken hoarsely. "Take me away!" "I'm not a policeman," Colton answered smoothly. He had lowered his head, so that the man standing over him could not see the new lines that came around the brown eyes; lines that the strain of listening to some far-off sound had brought. "You're worse than a policeman!" The tone was bitter. "You've spoiled the whole game from the start with your infernal " "Spoiling the games of murderers is a sort of hobby with me," Colton interrupted. "Isn't it, Silver Sandals?" "Don't bother her!" Bracken fairly snarled the command. "Call your police. The 'phone's In the next room!" "Unnecessary." Colton waved his hand. "In a moment you'll hear the police at the front door. A Fairfield sixty, with Captain McMann, is com ing up the long driveway to the house." "I'll go out to meet them!" Bracken turned to the silent woman, glanced at her a minute, but did not speak to interrupt her work. He took a step toward the door. Colton's hand shot out to grasp his arm. "We'll wait here!" he said sharply. "The police are on the porch." They could hear the heavy footsteps now. Then the Insistent clang at the front door. The woman rose, and Colton spoke quickly: "The front door is unlocked. I slipped the catch in the instant you Bring Out Your Hidden Beauty Beneath that soiled, discolored, ftulort or aged complexion Is one fair to look upon. Mercolized wax will gradually, gently absorb the devitalized surtpcu skin, revealing the youthful fresh, white and beautiful skin underneath. Used by refined women who prefer com plexions of true naturalness. Mercolized wax in one ounce package, with direc tions for use, is sold by all druggists. .—lAdverUiemenL. < SEPTEMBER 18, 1916. See the /r \ The Automatiq 'Automatic Market \ ,| Secret, Street Accurate You Get INSTANT Service On the Automatic our telephone stands there on your desk but before you can use it with the "wait-ordcr-wait" manual exchange sys tem you have to ask permission from the operator. Without her co-operation it is useless. And you never can be abso lutely sure she will be able to serVe you just when you wish. How would you feel if it was necessary to notifiy the power station every time you want to use your electric lights? A simple pressure on the button gives you the service you need and gives it to you when you want it. Always Ready to Serve I So it is with the Automatic Telephone—it is always ready to serve. You must ask no one's permission to make a call. | Just a twist of the wrist—six seconds at most—and you are I ringing the bell at the telephone of the person to whom you | want to speak. iH Can there be any comparison between the manual and I automatic service? | Cumberland Valley Telephone Company of Pa. HARRISBURG, PA. j \ ———— —i—— turned your back to lead the way to this room." He heard her resume her seat. His hand, gripped on Bracken's arm felt a trembling: shake his body. They heard the front door open, then slam shut. Came the heavy footsteps of running men. The door was pushed open. Police Captain McMann stood in the doorway. "Got them both!" he shouted in triumph. Then to Colton: "Thought you'd lost me with your slick work! Thought I'd given up! But Jimmy McMann never given up!" (To Be Continued.) n INDEPENDENTS WILL INITIATE Mt. Vernon Council, No. 333, Order 01 Independent Americans, will initiate several candidates to-morrow (Tues day) evening, at the hall, 1312 Derry street. The unwritten work will be in charge of State Representative Robert P. Miller and Captain of the Guards E. E. Garrow will have charge of the patriotic degree "ceremonies. DIMMERS ARE USED Chief of Police Wetzel reported to Mayor Meals, this morning, that, ac cording to reports from the night de tail of officers, the dimmer ordinance was proving a success, and that few machines appeared in the streets with glaring lights. These drivers were no tified and promised to use dimmers. |' ' HMITTLE " Stay Young! 1 ■% ff pan Don't let your Liver make jpon | 3,j Iyf gV old before your time. Keep tft [§l i h nils i e lively- and relieve Constipation Ejl J* I■■ law with Carter's Little liver KOa. j| Genu/ne bears Signature | & ■*— ► | * i Visit BAWFmike Canadian Pacific RocSdesl . , J Magnificent at this time of the year I ■ Mountain climbing, riding, coaching, golf, sulphur pools, and social Ufa I iT-1 in a sumptuous hotal of Canadian Pacific standard ■ I . , Govia Great Lake* Steamships I tWn pleasant variation from the all rail route, only $9 above all rail round trip fare M For thc shorter trip visit Montreal and Quebec with the ■ gO unsurpassed hotels, Place Viger and Chateau Frontenac. ■ JJJ For detailed information address H rfl F - "• PERRY, Can'l Agt., Paas. Dept., CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY I ( 1231 BROADWAY, NEW YORK CITY ■ — , ' ' SIX KILLED WHEN TRAIN HITS AUTO* Two Families Wiped Out With Exception of Baby Left Behind Philadelphia, Sept 18.—Two fami lies of Bethlehem were wiped out, with the exception of a baby *that had been left at home, when a Philadelphia and Reading special train from Niagara Falls for this city struck an automo bile yesterday afternoon and killed two men, two women and two boys. Tha victims were: William Hunszlker, 42 years. Mrs. William Hunszlker, S3 years. Andrew Kneff, 40 years. Mrs. Andrew KnefT, 36 years. George Kneff, 12 years. Charles Knelt, 6 years. Baby Left With Neighbors The Hunszikers' daughter, Gertrude, two years old, had been left at the home of neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stauffer. The Kneft family was com pletely wiped out.