Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, November 06, 1916, Page 15, Image 15

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    OF INTEREST TO THE WOMEN
"THEIR MARRIED LIFE"
CaprrtsM hy (atnuHoiil Haws Itnte*
Helen, shivering In hor berth, lay
back and tried to thinlt. The fact that
it was so late was alone sufficient cause
to worry her. Warren so seldom did
things of this kind, and then his actions
ever since that afternoon had been so
strange. What could It all mean?
Helen had packed her watch in her
traveling- bag, but she decided to try
and get it out just to satisfy herself
as to the time, and she reached down
and lifted the bag up to her berth. The
light which she had snapped on hur
riedly cast a dim, unearthly glow about
her. Somehow the unshaded electric
bulb seemed unfriendly, and she hur
ried in her search so that she might
turn it out again.
A hasty look through her bag
brought the watch, but the tiny hands
had stopped at seven-flfteen, and she
put it back with a little sigh of des
pair. If she wanted to learn the time
now she would have to ring for the
porter, and she hated to do that. It was
like arousing the car to see what sta
tion they were stopping at, and she lay
back again in her berth and tried to
think what to do. Above all. she must
not be foolish and get hysterical. That
would only irritate Warren more than
ever.
A slight sound at the end of the
car made Helen's heart beat faster.
Could it be Warren coming at last?
The footsteps came nearer, paused a
moment, and then stopped Anally, and
someone began to fumble at the cur
tains. Helen had snapped off the lights
again, but she sat up Immediately and
said l softly:
"Is that you. Warren?"
"Yes." came a voice back, and at
that Helen once more turned on the
lights, as Warren pushed the curtains
aside and sat down on the side of the
berth.
"What is it, dear?" Helen ques- I
tioned involuntarily. • And then she I
drew back. Warren had been drink
ing.
"Nothing at all," he returned irri- I
tably. "Still making a fuss about i
trifles? Let me have my things and I
I'll get ready for bed. Be back in a !
few minutes."
"TV hat time is it," Warren?"
"About halfpast 2." Warren took '
his things that Helen had' handed him j
and was about to leave as he sppke, but t
Helen put out her hand detainingly. j
"Just a minute; aren't you going to <
tell me what is wrong?"
"There's nothing wrong, I tell you. '
Here, give me my things and I'll have |
the porter make up a berth somewhere i
else."
Helen In Terror
"Oh. no. Warren," pleaded- Helen.
Please don't, dear, I won't ask you
anything more."
She would rather give in to War
ren to any extent than to have such
a humiliating thing as that happen.
What should she do?
"Please come back here and sleep,
%£4<3reatest
mm "enemies
i \ofyourTEETH
wmmmmmmmmmmmmnmmm
—are Pyorrhea and decay. Benreco, the formula of a dental spec*
... „ , , , . ialist, REALLY CLEANS. It em-
Bo usual y develop m bodies specially prepared, soluble
the mouth Where germ-laden granules unusually effective in clean*
tartar is present. ing away food deposits. Moreover, it
"But I brush my teeth," you destructive to the germ
say; Yes, you brftsh them, ° °" *"*
but do you REALLY CLEAN ? t0 J°° r dealer J O41 * 7 " nd et •
3 tube of Senreco—keep your teeth
tncmf REALLY CLEAN and protect your.
Tonight, after brushing your teeth, go self against Pyorrhea and decay,
to the mii Tor and examine them. In all Send 4c to Senreco,
probability you will find an accumola- 304 Walnut Street,
tion of tartar on the enamel and bits Cincinnati, Ohio, for
of focxT deposit hiding in the crevices, trial package. fc^|
dentiat twice yearly \ fjSfl
WW Uae Senreco twice daily * UT /(w
W y Tht tooth past* that REALLY CLEANS ~f \
INI ■IIIIMHMBC
It Is SAFE to
/ Talk Confidentially
\ Businessmen from bitter
ft experience have learned it is
/' unsafe to talk confidential mat
ters over the old-fashioned
manual telephone.
The chances for "leaks" are
too great to discuss business af
fairs of importance. But—
It is absolutely safe to dis
cuss the biggest deals
—Over the Automatic—
False connections are impossible on the AUTOMATIC
telephone.
When you rotate the dial and
get your man. you are certain
you can talk to him In hundreds or
In millions wlUiout danger of some /
one "tapping" In. /
Drop into the Automatic Ex- /
hibit to-day. J mt
Be convinced that here "at last" * / [C i
is the telephone you can safely use / |( 9Cp, : [j
in your business.
"At the Sign of the Dial" 7 mf' )
Cumberland Valley j
Telephone Co. of Pa. / |
FEDERAL SQUARE
MONDAY EVENING,
Warren, the berth Is all ready for
you."
"Oh, so you have the upper berth
made up, eh?" Warren said. "All right,
I'll come back and go to bed. Leave
the light burning, will you?"
Helen was in an agony for fear their
conversation would be overheard, and
she said quickly:
"All right, I will: hurry, dear, won't
you? It's so late, and you won't want
to get up to-morrow morning."
She tried to speak casually so as to
calm Warren's excitement, for she saw
plainly that he had been drinking
enough to make him quarrelsome.
Warren never did anything of the kind,
and she had always flattered herself
that whatever else she had' to worry
her, at least she was free of that anx
iety. Decidedly something had hap
pened to make him do an unprece
dented thing of this kind.
She waited until Warren's footsteps
down the aisle had stopped, and then
she threw her kimono over her should
ers. and reached up to climb up the
ladder that the porter had left. She
hated to sleep in an upper berth, but
somehow she could not have Warren
climbing up there to-night, and hur
riedly soothing out the coverings of her
own berth, she gathered a few things
in her arms and hastily climbed up to
the berth above and lay down. She
heard Warren come back down the
aisle and open the curtains.
"Warren," she whispered, "I am up
here. You take the lower berth to
night, it's all ready for you."
Warren mumbled something, but she
could not distinguish the words, and
she heard him got into bed and settle
down for the night. For a long time
she lay awake waiting for Warren to
j sleep, and at last her weary eyelids
drooped, and when she awakened again.
she could hear other people bustling
about the car and knew that it was
morning.
They would reach Glenville about
ten o'clock, and she hastily prepared
to get down and go out to the dress
ing room. The night had seemed hor
rible, and as she climbed down the lad
der she saw that Warren was still
sleeping heavily. A hasty look at his
watch showed Helen that It was eight
o'clock, and she slipped out to the dress
ing room to lave her face in cold wa
ter and get into her clothes. When
she was dressed she felt better, al
though her eyes were heavy and she
looked pale. She had a little box of
rouge in her traveling bag, and she
used a little Then she
went back to their section to wake
Warren.
Whatever the day was to bring forth
she was determined to keep from her
father and mother the fact that any
thing was the matter. And there was
still the joy of seeing Winifred left to
her at any rate.
(Watch for the next Instalment of
thin Interesting merle*. It will appear
here noon.)
AUTUMN COSTUME
IN MIDDY STYLE
White Collar and Bandings
Give Quite a Touch of
Smartness
By MAY~MANTON
9172 (With Basting Line and Added*
Seam Allowance) Middy Blouse, 34 to
42 bust.
9156 (IVith Basting Line and Added
Seam Allowance ) Five Gored Skirt,
24 to 34 waist.
This is a very smart suit and at the
lame time a simple suit. It consists of a
Jive-piece skirt and a blouse that is made
in middy style, but the blouse is finished
with a new cape and has entirely dis
tinctive pockets so that it is quite novel
and essentially of the season. If the
middy closing is not liked, it can be made
with a full length opening at the front
and either with the cape collar or with a
tailor collar.
For the medium size the blouse will
require, yards of material 36 inches
wide, 3% yards 44 or 2 1 / i yards 54, with
yard 36 inches wide, for the trim
ming. For thi skirt will be needed,
yards 36, 3Yi yards or 2% yards 54,
tor serge or any material without up and
down; yards 36, syardssyards 44 or
yards 54, if material has figure or nap; the
width at the lower edge is 3% yards.
The blouse pattern No. 9172 is cut in
sizes from 34 to 42 inches bust measure
and the skirt No. 9156 in sizes from 24 to
34 inches waist measure. They will be
mailed to any address by the Fashion
Department of this paper, on receipt of
15 cents for each.
| OCTOBER FREIGHT BUSINESS
The loaded freight car movement
passing the eight junction points on
Pennsylvania Railroad lines east of
Pittsburgh for the month of October
showed a decrease of 85,619 cars, or 8.2
per cent., compared with the same
month last year.
At Lewistown Junction, generally
held to furnish the best indications of
traffic movements, the figures showed
112,427 cars moved, a decrease of 10,-
678, or 8.7 per cent. Decreases at this
point shown in bituminous coal and
miscellaneous freight eastbound with
coke showing a material'gain. West
bound miscellaneous freight aggregat
ed 27,019 cars, a gain of 2,524, or 10.3
per cent.
WANTS TAFT TO AID PEACE
New York, Nov. 6. Theodore Mar
burg, who was United States Minister
to Belgium in 1912-13 and who is now
chairman of the committee on foreign
organization of the League to Enforce
Peace, in an address at the Mount Mor
ris Baptist Church, yesterday morning,
suggested that ex-President Taft be
sent abroad to ask the allies to declare
themselves now for the principle em
bodied in the program of the league.
HEAT FLASHES,
DIZZY. HEBtDUS
Mrs. Wynn Telia How Lydia
EL Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound Helped Her
During Change of Life.
• Richmond, Va. "After taking
■even bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's
I'll iliiiiiniiiihin Vegetable Com
-111 mm I pound I feel like a
- wHyl new woman. I al
ways had a headache
J&t during the Change
f of Life and was also
troubled with other
UX-i" bad feelings com
mon at that time
.. dizzy spells, nervous
feelings and heat
flashes. Now lam
i n better health
than I ever was and recommend your
remedies to all my friends. Mrs.LENA
"WYNN, 2812 E. O Street, Richmond, Va.
While Change of Life is a most crit
ical period of a woman's existence, the
annoying symptoms which accompany
it may be controlled, and normal health
restored by the timely use of Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
Such warning symptoms are a sense
of suffocation, hot flashes, headaches,
backaches, dread of impending evil,
timidity, sounds in the ears, palpitation
of the heart, sparks before the eyes,
irregularities, constipation, variable ap
petite, weakness and inquietude, and
dizziness.
For these abnormal conditions do not
fail to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege
table JSompound.
_____
HAKEUSBURG TELEGRAPH!
FUnnC THEY BUILD OR
A V/ 1/ mJW DESTROY
AMAZING BUT RARELY SUSPECTED
TRUTHS ABOUT THE THINGS YOU EAT
&SSWUB&J By ALFRED W. McCANN
Years of Neglect by Federal tuid State
Officials Resulted. Sept. 29, 1015, In
the Most Far-Reaching of the
Many Exposures Which Have Been
Visited From Time to Time Upon
the Serious Evils and Abuses of the
Butter Industry of America—Com
mercial Enterprise. Usually at the
Bottom of Food Indecencies, Was
on This Occasion Responsible for
the Beneficial Cluuigcs Which on a
Small but Significant Scale Were
Brought About by un Appeal to the
Enlightened Selfishness of a Few
Decent Butter Makers.
Sept. 29, 1915, the butter consumer
leitrned for the hundredth time that
the butter industry maintained condi
tions so gross that a description of
their details was scarcely credible in
the eyes of the uninformed.
After years of persistent protest, in
which the editors of trade papers de
voted to the butter-making industries
made many curious efforts to deter
mine for their clients just how strong
the movement for safe, pasteurized
butter might really be, the makers of
"slunk butter" began to realize that
the exposure of Sept. 29, 1915, meant
voluntary reform from within or
forced reform from without.
With the miserable truths concern
ing the unsuspected rottenness of
modern butter-making, the chemical
trickery employed in renovating de
composing cream by the use of white
wash, soda ash and Dominion
cleanser, and the spread of disease
to children, of which there are thou
sands oi' recorded cases traceable to
infected butter, was found, when the
exposure came, a group of authori
ties in high places who had not pos
sessed the courage to perform their
plain duty in the face of the un
savory facts with which they were
Intimately familiar.
Not only were authorities in high
places involved in the exposure, but
temples of light, such, for instance, as
the University of Wisconsin, were
forced to issue a curious assortment
of feeble explanations which did not
explain.
The truth about butter, which had
been withheld so long from the com
mon people, was known to the mem
bers of the Legislatures of five States,
members of the State health depart
ments of flvo States, members of the
health department of the City of New
York, the food and dairy commission
ers of four States, the butter jobbers
of the entire country, the hundreds of
centralizing plants and renovating
plants of lowa, Wisconsin, Illinois and
■Minnesota, the thousands of wayside
creameries of the five principal butter
States of the Union, and the principal
advisers of at least two governors.
„ F° r three years prior to Sept! 29,
1915, The New York Globe, a daily
newspaper, had financed an effort on
my part to obtain safe, good butter
for New York City.
For three years I failed to provide
FERTILIZERS
CAUSING ARREST
State Agents Find Some
Samples Not Up to Guarantees
and Not Registered
Twenty-two prosecutions for the
sale of commercial fertilizers that had
not been registered and seven prose
cutions for the sale of fertilizers that
did not meet the manufacturer's
guarantee upon analysis have been
ordered at the State department of
Agriculture.
When the analysis of 936 samples
of commercial lime and fertilizers, col
lected by the agents of the Pennsyl
vania Department of Agriculture, was
made by the State chemist it was
found that seven samples showed de
ficiencies in guaranteed nitrogen and
phosphoric acid. The samples came
from Lancaster, Luzerne, Bucks, Erie,
Susquehanna, Chester and Dauphin
counties and in all cases were fertiliz
ers of Pennsylvania manufacture.
Fertilizer manufacturers and deal
ers were warned in the Spring about
selling any brands that had not been
registered with the State, but twenty
two cases have resulted from the Fall
inspection work. Seventeen of the
unregistered brands picked up by the
agents of the Department wese manu
factured by firms outside of the State
and five are made by firms in Penn
sylvania. The prosecutions have been
brought against the dealers selling un
registered brands as follows: Cumber
land county, 4; Tioga, 4; Lancaster,
2; dams, A 2; Chester 2: Bucks, 2;
Somerset, Clinton, Lebanon, Perry,
Carbon and Snyder.
Fertilizers to be legally sold in the
State must be registered with the
Pennsylvania Department of Agricul
ture before they are sold, offered or
exposed for sale. The depot has ruled
"We must insist upon complete regis
tration before fertilizers are offered
for sale or orders solicited so as to
avoid our making defendants of our
Pennsylvania citizens when these
violations occur."
f Yesterday Was the
Birthday Anniversary of—
W. L. FORIU
The Telegraph extends congratula
tions to the proprietor of a well
known men's furnishing store.
that butter. Not only was the public
Indifferent to the facts, but the offi
cials themselves, including the deans
of agricultural schools, refused to
heed.
It seemed that nothing could bo
accomplished. Every effort ended in
discouragement approaching despair.
The only noteworthy advance
achieved in all these years of struggle
was the appointment by Governor
Glynn, of New York, of the Commis
sion on Bovine Tuberculosis, of which
the chairman was Dr. Theobold
Smith, of the Rockefeller Institute,
liven this advance, promising though
it was took on the nature of a setback.
The recommendations made by the
commission to the Legislature at Al
bany were dismissed without action.
With the exception of proving that
the dairy herds of New York were
suffering with bovine tuberculosis to
an extent even as great as that found
in the dairy herds of Illinois, Wis
consin, lowa and Minnesota, and that
even the certified herds supplying New
York City with so-called medical
milk were actually polluted with
tuberculosis, nothing of constructive
value had been noted outside of a
symptom here and there of an awak
ening interest in safe dairy products.
Two years prior to the belated ex
posure of Sept. 29, 1915, the Acker,
Merrall & Condit Co., operating a
chain of grocery stores in the metro
politan district, asked me to find
them a butter which would conform
to the standards of common decency
and safety that meant so little to the
butter industry. I could not find such
butter.
Then came the Borden Condensed
Milk Company, January, 1916, with
this offer: "We shall place 1,600
wagons at your disposal for the pur
pose of making house-to-house de
liveries of the kind of butter in which
the wholesale grocers manifest so lit
tle interest and which the retail groc
| ers are unable to obtain provided you
| can induce the butter-makers of any
| State to manufacture a product made
|of clean, pasteurized cream, free
! from the abuses that now disgrace the
Industry.
"If such butter can be found our
wagons will distribute it throughout
all parts of New York, Brooklyn and
vicinity. If co-operation of this kind
with honest effort in the butter-mak
ing sections of the country, will pro
duce safe and good butter that chil
dren can cat without running the risk
of gland or joint infection with
bovine tuberculosis or infection with
other milk-borne diseases, we are
ready to provide the instruments
whereby such reform can bo brought
about."
These are the outstanding facts
that finally led to a brief revolution
in the buttermaking industry, the
I astonishing details of which are about
| to bo recorded here for the benefit of
the butter consumers of the United
1 States.
THE HIGH-SPIRITED
QUEEN Ol' RUMANIA
Queen Mario, of Rumania, an
English princess, is, like the Greek,
Sophia, an alien sovereign, but, unlike
the Greek queen, she is very popular
with her subjects. The unwritten
archives of diplomacy contain some
spirited anecdotes about this gracious,
high-tempered lady. She has been
exceedingly handsome and still, at
forty, a face and a figure.
Such opinions as prevail in the royal
household are those of the Queen,
who is so strongly pro-English that,
when one day she slapped her royal
son's face and was reproved by old
King Carol, she immediately replied
that she would do the same for him
if he dared to speak, as her son had
done, slightingly of her English cous
ins. George Marvin, in the Novem
ber World's Work.
WOUNDED HUNTER RECOVERS
Harry Williamson, of Hlglisplre, is
rapidly recovering from the effects of
?;,.?.® re,ess s,,ot b y a follow hunter.
Williamson was badly peppered in the
hack while hunting near Bainbridge,
Pa.
YOUR SIK CHILD
IS CONSTIPATED!
LOOK AT TONGUE
Hurry, Mother! Remove poisons
from little stomach, liver,
bowels.
Give "California Syrup of Figs"
if cross, bilious or
feverish.
No matter what aila your child, a
gentle, thorough laxative should al
ways be the first treatment given.
If your little one Is out-of-sorts,
half-sick, Isn't resting, eating and a.ct-
Ing naturally—look, Mother! see if
tongue is coated. This is a sure sign
that the little stomach, liver and bow
els are clogged with waste. When
cross, irritable, feverish, stomach sour,
breath bad or has stomach-ache,
diarrhoea, sore throat, full of cold,
give a teaspoonful of "California
Syrup of Figs," and in a few hours
all the constipated poison, undigested
food and sour bile gently moves out
of the little bowels without griping,
and you have a well, playful child
Again.
Mothers can rest easy after giving
this harmless "fruit laxative," be
cause it never fails to cleanse the little
one's liver and bowels and sweeten
the stomach and they dearly love its
pleasant taate. Full directions for
babies, children of all ages and for
grown-ups printed on each bottle.
Beware of counterfeit fig syrups.
Ask your druggist for a 50-cerit bottle
of "California Syrup of Figs," then
see that it is made by the "California
[Fig Syrup Company,"
. NOVEMBER 6, 1916.
What Makes It Whirl?
7 P. M. to 9 P. M. Daily, Nov. 4th to 11th
We will exhibit in a cabinet in our window, a regulation Miller
Tire that mysteriously revolves without any apparent means
of support. This weird illusion was perfected by
Thurston, the Great Magician
As an extra attraction we will present a brand new Miller
Geared-to-the-Road Tire to fit the car of the first lucky motor
ist who records the nearest estimate of the actual number of
revolutions made by the tire in a run of ten hours.
Sterling Auto Tire Co.
Distributors of Miller Tires
109 SOUTH SECOND ST., HARRISBURG, PA.
Three hundred iind tlfty feet from Market Square.
Does Your Husband Drink ?
Druggist Tells How to Cure
the Liquor Habit at Home
Free Prescription Can Be Filled At
Any Drug Store and Given Secretly
H. J. Brown, 409 West Superior Ave.,
Cleveland, Ohio, was for many years a i
confirmed drunkard. His friends and J
relatives despaired of ever redeeming
hin. His sister sought the best medi
cal men in Europe In the hope that she
might find something which would cure
him. Finally she was recommended to
an eminent chemist who gave her a
private formula (the same as appears
below) and told her how to use it. She.
had it filled at the drug store and gave it
to him secretly. The results were start
ling. In a few weeks he was com
pletely cured That was over eight
years ago and he has not touched a
drop since. He now occupies a position
of trust and is enthusiastic in his ef
forts to help others overcome the liquor
habit. He feels that he can best do
this by making public the same for
mula which cured him. Here is the
prescription: Go to any first class drug
store and get 14 Tescum powdqjs. Drop
one powder twice a day, in whse. tea
Labor Shortage
and
Car Shortage
Made a Coal Shortage
A nation-wide alarm is felt concerning
the coal supply and panicky efforts are be
ing made to cover needs.
There has not been a time in twenty years, until
this year, when cars were scarce all through sum
mer. Such a thing has not been known. Yet we
had a car shortage all summer.
It has been known for nearly a year that America
was short of labor. If the coal mines are to produce
any such amount of coal as there is an apparent de
mand for now —they must have at least 10 per cent,
more men. However, these men arc not to be had.
The mining regions lost last year, and this year a
certain number of men went to the armies of
Europe. They lost a certain other number of men
to other lines of industry.
The Anthracite and Bituminous situation is seri
ous. The demand for coal has gotten beyond the
health state; in fact it'is bordering on a panicky
state.
United Ice & Coal .
Forster & Cowden Third & Boas
15th & Chestnut Hummel & Mulberry
Also, Stcelton, Fa.
. RUHL'S BREAD 4 B c II pkom
Quality in. every loaf * brings
fTTT R\JHL3 PENBROOK RAKFBV —^
Workmen's Compensation
Act Blanks
We are prepared to ship promptly any or all of the blanks
made necessary by the Workmen's Compensation Act which took
effect January 1. Let us hear from you promptly as the law re
quire* that you should now have these blanks In your possession.
The Telegraph Printing Co. I
Printing—Binding—Designing— Photo- Engraving
HARIUSBURG, PA.
i
s .i m
or any liquid. It Is harmless, taste
less. odorless and cannot be detected.
®u can use it without the knowledge
of anyone. A lady who recently tried
it on her husband reports: "My hus-
J band was on a spree when I got the
powders, and he usually stays drunk
from three to four weeks at a time.
After putting the powder in his coffee
for four days, he sobered up and has
not taken a drink since and says he Is
through with it forever. He also com
plained that whisky did not taste the
same. I shall not tell him what did it
but I am grateful for this help and f
shall recommend It whenever possible."
NOTE—A lending druggist when
shown tlie above urtlcle suldi Ye,
teseuui IM n very remarkable remedy
for the drink habit. It Is harmless, iron
derfully effective nnil is having an enoi>
■nous sale. I ndvise everyone who
wishes to destroy tlie liquor habit to
give it a trial." It is sold In this city
by H. C Kennedy, and all other first
class druggists, who .guarantee It to do
the work or refund the money.—Adver
tisement.
15