10 OF INTEREST T A Brother Worth Having By Beatrice Fairfax There is nothing more splendid than jfc real friendship between a brother i And a sister. It seems to me very tragic that auch friendships are rare. A little understanding, a little toleration, a little respect for each other's viewpoint *nd personality would probably make % real friendship between brother and ! ■later a foregone conclusion. No brother can prove his real In- ; Merest In his sister by taking a sus- [ plcloua attitude toward every friend •he hae or by refusing to let her share f *he pleasures which he generally ap proves of for other girls or by selfishly [ 3>eglecttng her. And no sister can cement happy re- I lations with her brother and herself by nagging at him for everything he does •nd by making demands of all sorts ' on him by prying into his affairs. The way to possess a brother worth , having Is to be a sister worth having— And of course the converse of the proposition Is equally true. There are few little things and some : large ones In which brothers and sis ters ought to defer to each other. Here Is Just an outline suggestion of them. Work them up and apply them to your own individual cases and see what har mony In your family they produce. Brothers, attention. Don't Issue or- | ders to your sister. If you see her go- ; lug about with boys and girls of whom I )*>u suspect evil, make sure you are i tight and then persuade her that you When You Open a Glass Sunshine Graham Crackers bring out W the rich flavor of jams, jellies, and of other K spreads. You'll find them appetizing whatever way you eat them, whether in sandwich form or figjf just to lunch on alone. Ask your dealer for Sunshine 2gjw Grahams. Visit his Sunshine Rack and see the W variety of other Sunshine Biscuits. There are over ||£ 350 in all, a kind for every taste and purpose, jpj JoosE-Wn- ES giscurr (OMPANY Biscuits Mg A Service Worth While We are inspecting all incandescent gas lights in Harrisbnrg— Free of Charge A corps of skilled men assigned solely to do this work are now on the first house to house inspection. Watch for our Lighting Service Man in Your Neighborhood He will clean, inspect and adjust your lights and leave them in perfect condition. When he hnds that a new mantle is required or any part of the lamp needs renewal, he will charge you for these at the regular re tail prices—the same that you would pay at our show room. The renewals will be made only after your approval. We want every gas light in Harrisburg clear and bright. Harrisburg Gas Co. 14 South Second St. Telephone—Bell 2028; Cumberland Yallev 752 New Series of Building and Loan Association Stock The Franklin Building and Loan Association, of Harrisburg Pa is now issuing stock in a new ,ouih) series. Shares can now be taken at the office o? the treasurer. S. W. Fleming. No. 2i North Third street, or at the office of the Secretary. No. 2IS Walnut street. Thia association has been doing a successful business for 23 veara. ghares can be cancelled at any tln.e; and Interest at six per cent, will be paid on all cancelled stock that Is one or more years old. This association has helped hundreds of persona to buy homes while aiding thousands of other persona to save money. J. H. MUSSER, Secretary OFFICE, *O. 213 WAUfCT STREET Use Telegraph Want Ads Use Telegraph Want Ads WEDNESDAY EVENING, [love her to much to permit her to be , criticised because of her companions, i Don't try to take all her fun away 1 from her by cutting her off from the only people she knows, but exert your self to substitute other friends. Be grateful for any little favors she does you and don't ever demand as your ! right the sewing on of buttons or the mending of socks. Be thoughtful, considerate, generous; bring some of the courtesy you show ! your sweetheart Into the treatment of 'your sister. Make a friend and confi dante of her. Show a little respect for her and a little belief in the fact that she has brains and judgment and a logical mind to which you can appeal— i even if "she is a woman." Now. girls, here's your little sermon ette. Study your brother's tastes and whims and try to please him with little bits of attention such as woman has jit In her power to offer a man. When he introduces you to his friends try to make a good Impression; remember he ; has a certain pride in his own famllly. Accept advice with the feeling and attitude that brother probably knows whereof he speaks and means It for your own good when he offers sugges i tlons! His wordly wisdom will save you from mistakes that might be fatal I to your happiness. His natural chlv- : airy will protect you in many difficult I , situations. < The point Is that brothers and sisters I ought to be chums—pals—the best of friends. I suggest that they try It- DRESDEN DESIGNS I RIGHT IN FAVOR Younger Woman Will Find j This Coquettish Pattern For Afternoon Wear 8790 (TTi lh Basting Line and Added Seam Allowance ) Blouse with Over- Portion, 34 to 40 bust. 9099 ( With Basting Line and Added Seam Alicnoance) Straight Skirt with Yoke, 24 to 30 waist. Chafmeuse satin and flowered crlpe are the materials that are shown in this illustration and a very 6.t\art and useful gown results. It shows new features and it is serviceable :or many occasions. The blouse is quite plain but the over portion makes it unusual That over portion may be made as it is on the figure or ex tended to the shoulders, forming suspender like straps at the front. Any two materials that contrast well can be used. For the medium size the blouse will require. yards of material 36 inches wide. Iyards 44. with vara 36 or 44 for the half length over-portion and 1 yard any width for the full length. For the skirt will be needed, 5 yards 36 inches wide and 3 yarda for the drapery; the width at the lower edge is 4 yards. The pattern of the blouse No. 8790 is cut in sizes from 34 to 40 inches bust measure, and the skirt No. 9099 in sizes from 24 to 3rgjnches waist measure. They will be mailed to any address by the Fash ion Department of this paper, on receipt of ten cents for each. BAD DREAMS ARE SYMPTOMS 111 Health the Cause—Many Alarming Symptoms of Wo men's Ailments-How Cured. Paterson.N. J.—" I thank you for the Lydia E.Pinkham remedies as they have 7 —; ——-i made me feel happy | , and healthy. Some mgKPQLft time ago I felt so run down, had pains in my back and side, j: hraKjl was very irregular, JW tired, nervous, had npV* 1 such bad dreams, './* did not feel like eat ■/HKC"' inff and had short m breath. I read your "Vw advertisement in 'the newspapers and decided to try a bottle of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. It worked from the first bottle, so I took a second and a third, also a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Blood Purifier, and now I am just as well as any other woman. I ad vise every woman, single or married, who is troubled with any of the afore said ailments, to try your wonderful Vegetable Compound and Blood Purifier and I am sure they will help her to get rid of her troubles." Mrs. Elsie J. Vander Sande, 7 Godwin Street, Pat erson, N. J. Women suffering with any form of female ills, or any symptoms that they do not understand, are invited to write the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. (confidential), and receiva advice wholly free of coat. DOVITAM for TYPHOID DOVITAM is readily assimilable and undergoes practically complete conversion In the alimentary tract, leaving little or nothing for decom position. DOVITAM Is prepared from week old squabs that have never left their nests to exercise and their flesh is practically TOXIN free. Hereby giving c. perfectly natural food for the stomach. Ask Your Doctor 250 Forney's Drug Store SECOND ST., NEAR WALNUT HAKFUSBURG I JSJJFTL TELEGRAM Mary Roberts Rinehart's Thrilling Mystery of "The Curve of the Catenary" (Continued From Yesterday) "It isn't necessary, anyhow, father. She la going to be married." He looked up at me. "To you?" "To Martin." I suppose he knew it had hit me pretty hard. Maybe he was relieved. I don't know. He'd rather depended on her. in a lot of ways. Anyhow, he didn't go on with it. "Martin has handed in his resigna tion," he said, afer he'd lighted a fresh cigar. "His views about some things are rather radical. I am run ning a steel mill, not an eleemosynary institution." It gave me a jolt to think of Mar tin going. We'd never been what you could call intimate. A fellow could get just so far with him, and no further. But he'd seemed to like me, in his way. He didn't approve of me, exactly, and the reason poor Sis had never had a chance with him was that he didn't approve of her. He told her once she belonged to the parasite class. I guesa she was pretty fond of him even then, for she took it awfully hard, and started a sewing class for "kids" in Qrayton. But it petered out, because she couldn't sew herself, and the "kids" got Into it. "When is he leaving?" I asked, when I got my breath. "He will stay until I've filled his place. If you take It he will work with you until you think you can man age alone." Well, I'd plenty to think of after that. There were two people I had to see, and see soon Martin and Hazel. I made up my mind to tell Martin the whole thing. I guess if you've followed this story you'll know that I wanted to protect Hazel. I was willing to com pound a felony or be an accessory after the fact, or whatever was neces sary to keep her out of trouble. But she'd selected her own champion, as you may say, and I was not it. I usually see more or less of my family on Sunday. I try to be at home for one meal. It's only right. What's going to become of family life in America if people belonging to a household only meet accidentally at dinner parties^ I d Just as soon have had luncheon out that day, however, with the Mater gazing at me when she thought I was not looking, and Sis staring at ner plate and nowhere else. I hadn't tolld them about the rob bery the night before. It involved tv " luch that wasn't my secret. But I had a queer feeling tfiat the Mater knew about it. She did, as a matter of fact. How? Well, that's what I'm coming to. Maybe you know it al ready. But there was something odd in the way she looked at me. Poor Mater, she was having her own troubles that day, and to think that no one suspected it! That's the way things stood on Sun day of that week. I was to go to the mil! on Monday, and Martin was to stand by until I was ready to take up hs work. Maybe I swelied up some about the chest at the thought of go ing back in my new capacity. But my hat measure remained stationary. I wasn't any too proud of the way things were going as to the robbery v\ hen I thought of the mess things were in my brain felt like succotash It was just as the Mater got home from church that a special delivery letter came from Lottie Murray. The *l ate / took il from 'he boy herself on the doorstep and after looking at Lot tie s writing on the envelop put it to her nose. "Cigarets!" she said grimly, and gave it to me. I II copy the note, and you can see where it put me. It was well enough when the thing came out later in the papers for the Mater to throw hys terics and demand that the whole family go abroad. Shes taught me herself always to help out a woman in trouble, and if Lottie wasn't in trouble I don't know what you call it. "Dearest Ollie," she wrote. "I'm really in a terrible way. Anderson can t dance, and sits all day with his leg on a chair and yaps. Its awful just to hear him. I ve made a real hit here—see the I inclosed clippings. Save and return them. I want to send them to Flo Ziegreld. He'll turn green. He threw me out of the "Follies" just because I ne\ er mind that . It's a long story "Here are the facts. I've been rngaged for a second week, but And ; orson can't work. I've wired to Willy Randolph, who was my dancing part , ner last season—and he will get here on Tuesday. But what about Monday night? "This is what I want, old dear. You 1 dance like a breeze. Do you remem i ber the time we tried out a lot of new ! steps together? I want you to go . on with me Monday night. "If you don't want to be recognized you needn't be. You can wear a wig. and I'll make you up so your own I people won't know you. , "Don't say no without thinking it lover. Ollie. It will be a lark to you but it's bread and butter and bookings ; to me. "Come around to the hotel and talk !it over, anyhow. I'm desperate. "L. M." What would you have done? Dol lars to cents you'd have done exactly what I did—clapped on your hat and ?one to the hotel with your lips set in a. dogged "No." And dollars to cents after an hour of Lottie curled up in a damp heap on a couch, with her hand kerchief a soggy ball in her hand, and her scrapbook of clippings on the floor, you'd have surrendered As I i did. I didn't want to do it. I give you my word. I hated myself for giving Jin. But a crying girl gets me every time. I was struck dumb with stage • right, too. When I thought of it my leart stopped. We tried out one or two of the dances then and there but ■ny knees wabbled, and Lottie looked discouraged. Anderson hobbled in about that time, looking sour as the mischief. Lottie was happ;, however, at the solution of her troubles, and she waltzed over to him and slipped her arm through his. •Forgiven me yet?" she demanded. He was pretty fond of her You could tell It by the way his eyes soft tened when he looked at her. And she knew It. But he shook her hand Oil. "I 11 tell you to-morrow," he said. And without noticing me again he turned and limped out. I didn't think of it at the time, or of Lottie's ex planation. I did something he told me not to do last night," she said. "He's been positively vicious all day." I'm not proud of the fact that I spent part of that afternoon dancing around Lottie Murray's hotel sitting room. But it isn't so hard to explain after all. I hadn't intended to get into the thing, but once In and swim ming hard, it was at least something to do, something that wasn't connect ed with murder or theft or suspicion I'd put in a pretty rotten week, one way and another, and I was glad to forget it. And I'd reached a place where I was afraid to go on. Tou get it. don't you? One way and another, I was about ready to let the whole thing drop. It all hinged on old Hareltine. Somehow I began to wonder on the way home from Lottie's that after noon whether the old man was as Innocent as Martin and the little girl thought he was. He'd shown a pretty considerable degree of inventive skill. Why couldn't he have sent up, in stead of the messenger, some sort of arrangement to cut the wire and drop it where he wanted? , I didn't think, of course, that it was the old chap himself who'd lined up the Mater and the others. But there are such things as accomplices. "Let it drop, Oliver." I said to my self. "Forget it. And forget the little girl too. She's in better hands than yours." But I couldn't forget her. That was the devil of it. It shows how far gone I was when the sight of a girl who walked like her took me a block out of my way. Things thickened up that night, as if they hadn't been bad enough al ready. The evening started out well. We all dined at home, which hadn't hap pened in a blue moon. And it was a pleasant meal, although I thought both the Mater and Sis were overdo ing it a bit. The governor was feeling very fit. He called me "partner" once or twice, and began to reminisce with the roast. Good company, the governor, when he wants t? be. But I can tell you my feet got cold when Sis observed that there was to be a box party to see Lottie Murray dance the next night. She looked at me when she said it. "You saw her dance last night," I said. "I—l should think you'd be sick of seeing a silly girl dancing things you can do better yourself." "Is she silly?" Sis asked quickly. "Well, she's nothing extraordinary, either for brains or looks. Why?" But she went on eating, or pre tending to e&t, without replying. I must say she had me guessing. At 8.30 Sis went upstairs. "I'll catch up with my sleep, fath er," she said. "You don't mind, do you?" He kissed her good-night, and she went upstairs. At 9 I went to her door and knocked. I knew there was something on her mind, something about Lottie Murray. I thought it was probably about Martin, too. I'm fond of Sis, and I thought I'd better tell her about Hazel and Mar tin, and get it over with. She's better put Martin out of her mind and begin over again. Curious, isn't it? There were the two of us—most people would have said we had everything we ought to have, and more. And the cold fact was that each of us was about as wretched as it was possible to be. Gee, it's a queer world! Well, to get on. Sis was not in her room. She wasn't in the house. I sat in her boudoir and smoked and waited, and niy imagination, having been overfed for several days, took to having convulsions. I rang for her maid, but Sis had sent her out. That made me worse. I didn't want to worry the Mater. But I knew Sis had never been out alone after 6 o'clock since the day she was born. At 10.88, after rd worn a path in the rug, she came in. She wa3 dressed for the street, and she'd come so quietly that I didn't hear her until she had opened the door and closed it behind her. "Well?" she said, when she saw me. "Where have you been?" "I'm not going to tell you." "You are going to tell me." "Don't try any big brother stuff," Ollie, she said, and took out her hat pin. By Jove, her' hands were shak ing! "Does the Mater know?" "That's not your affair, either." It's a curious thing about our fam ily. When we're worried we snap at each other. I've seen the Mater on the edge of hydrophobia when Sis was i.'l, or a new butler's shoes creaked in the diningroom. " Don't bite," I said to Sis. "I had some sort of a silly idea of helping if —if you were in any sort of trouble. That is, if anything was worrying you But I guess I'll go to bed." I turned at the door. Sis was standing in front of a mirror, and I could see that she was crying. Can you beat it? I went back. We're an undemon strative bunch, and I was a bit awk ward about it. But I got an arm around her somehow, and she put her head on my shoulder. "Tell me about it, old gtrl." I said But she wouldn't. "I'm just a fool, Ollie." she said "You go to bed and forget about me. If I'm worried, it's my own fault." She had a lot of spunk. I'd never thought she had, particularly. But afterward I had to take off my hat to her. Shed made a clutch at hap piness, as you may say, and lost it I'll skip Monday. It was a full day We hg.d a girl in Hazel's place who looked exactly like a mouse. "If I yell 'cat' she'll run," I said to the governor. "Bet you 50 cents there's cheese in that lunch she's brought." Well, there was cheese, but that has nothing to do with the story. I sent around to the dealer's In the morning for the camera, and got word in reply that the dealer wished to see me. He didn't send the camera It made a happy start for the day. There was no chance of a word alone with Martin, and what could I have said, anyhow? lie looked prettv tired. I thought. I got in something however, about hating to step into his shoes, and that the mill wouldn't be the same without him. That got him rather for he held out his hand and I shook it, and we both felt foolish Things were doing In the mill be lieve me. New men were lined up be fore the employment office, and my old friend the yard engine had gone crazy and was barking around the yard like a pup Just let out of the house. (To Be Continued.) QoaQ Q Every Niqhf For Constipation Headache Jndi^estion.etc SIRANDRETH I PtLLS Safe and Sure Q I^CEJDQUEDEECCU OCTOBER 18, 1916. I Lea & Perrins* Sauce Improves the molt delicats 1 evrr y dish from soup to salad with ■ • M on 'r original Worcestershire Sauce I Sena postal for free kitchen hunger containing I LEA & PERRINS, Hubert York City I t B ll jjgj stou/fioures | I W.B.Nuform Corsets W.B. Reduso Corsets give Style, Comfort and perfectly ma^te tip* disappear; bulky fitting Gown. Long wearing, they more gracehd; awk- i LJ . ... .. . • . . wart onst-lines smaller and *""•*• Utn,< " c °"" *' neater,and Lave the "old W most Economical Pnce. $3.00 comfort with the first fitting to sl-00. $5.00 and $3.00. WEINGARTEN BROS., Inc. New York, Chicago, San Francisco 0 —t Discovery iTOft "aboutyoyr WTEETH V mj£ Tonight, if you will closely examine your teeth after iWK brushing them, you will make a surprising discovery. fwt \ Though you have been cleaning your teeth regularly, you will find an accumulation of tartar on the enamel and bits of food de- TA~ 1 posit hiding between the crevices. Your dentifrice has not been 2> - 1\ REALLY CLEANING! Loss of teeth is usually due to one of two conditions —Pyorrhea or Decay—both of which ordinarily develop only in the mouth / J where germ-laden tartar is present. >' JF I CLEAN your teeth —REALLY CLEAN themt Senreco, a den _ ' /\ tal specialist's formula will do it. Senreco embodies specially // prepared, soluble granules utausually effective in J J cleaning away food deposits. Moreover, it is partic* A ularly destructive to the germ of Pyorrhea. fezyr Go to your dealer today and get a tube of Senreco— keep your teeth REALLY CLEAN and protect your. <r self against Pyorrhea and decay. Send 4c to Senreco 304 Walnut St., Cincinnati, Ohio, for trial package. U B See your dentist twice yearly \ f MM Ue Senreco twice daily luf / M IF Tht tooth past* that REALLY CLEANS V "lf \ ■ THE APACHE l ;J1 Stupendous canyons, ancient cliff dwellings, Roosevelt Dam and a§jg a thousand other wonders make this marvelous motor side trip Jfl one of the delights of a journey over the fl£| || SUNSET ROUTE ■ K New Orleans, Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco Ml jjjS Magie boms of ughtaeeing through Arizona's National Reaerre. New "lflH sleeping car service direct to the "Trail" in connecting with the famous BwK Ogp "Sunset Limited." Fdr full inlormaboo address 2lsf SIM F. T. BROOKS. Dbtrict Fraiaht A Paaa.aeer Avast 111 JH 10th at Cbaatnu: Philadelphia, Pa. Wf The Telegraph Bindery Will Rebind Your Bible Satisfactorily C i i ■ <• i "
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers