MOTHER LOVE IS SON IN TRENCHES It Brings Belief TD Boy Standing His Watch Deep In Mud. Once upon a time, only .1 few month* alter tills terrible world war had begun, Private Bailey, a solider in the ranks had stood for days in the trenches "somewhere in France." The cold rains soaked him to the skin; the mud was deep. He had had no rest- Weary and aching with rheuma tic he recalled the faith his mother had in Sloan's Liniment. He asked for it in his nexr letter home. A large bottle was immediately sent him and a few applications killed the pain, once more he was able to stand the severe exposure. He shared this wonderful muscle-soother with his \ comrades, and they all agreed it was j the greatest "reinforcement" that had ( ever come to their rescue. At your i druggist, 25c, 50c, ajid f1.,00 a bottle. | ASTHMA Simple lfnriitlcM* Hcmody llriviKN J <luicL Relief Many cases of immediate relief and rapid recovery from Bronchial Asthma of long: standing and other diseases of throat and lung's are being credited to a discovery made by Dr. Kugene How ard of Worcester, Mass. lr. Howard's prescription, which is totally different from all usual methods of treatment for theM afflictions, is called Oxidase and comes in the foi m of a t a blet whjich the patient allows to dissolve nlowly in the mouth. Its curative. Healing juices thus mingle with the saliva and enter ever:* crevice of the irritat ed bronchial nfeiribranes, release the muscular constriction of the bronchial tubes, open up the air pAssages and regulate the spasmodic lnng action. These tableW, though pleasant to the taste, are so powerful and rapid in tlieir • action that many users who for years were obliged to sit up in bed gasping for breath and unable to sleep report that they now put a single Oxidaze tablet in their mouth when going to bed and can then lie down ami breathe easily and naturally and get a good night's restful sleep. Am Gotgas and many other local drug gists who handle Oxidaze tablets sell it on the positive guarantee of money back if it does not give immediate relief. HOW I TOOK MY WRINKLES OUT After Facial Cream* And Beauty l)oet*ir* Had Fulled. By Winifred Grace Forrest. Trouble, worry and 111-health brought i mo (Jeep lines and wrinkles. 1 real- j lzed that they not only greatly marred : my appearance and made me look i murli older, hut that they would great- j ly interfere with my success because a woman's success, either socially or fin- ' ancially, depends very largely on her j appearance, The honusly woman, with deep lines and furrows in her face, tight an unequal battle with her and better looking sister. I therefore, bought various brands of cold creams and skin foods and mass aged my face with most constant regu larity. lioping to regain my former ap pearance. But the wrinkles simply would not go. On the contrary they seemed to wet deeper. Next I went to | a Beauty Specialist who told me she j could easily rid me of my wrinkles. I paid my money and took the treatment, j Sometimes 1 though they got luss, | but after spending all the money 1 j could afford for such treatment 1 found 1 still had my wrinkles. So 1 gave tip j in despair and concluded 1 must carry ( them to my grave. One day a friend I who had travelled extensively in j in France told me of an old French ' Beauty* Secret which I tried with most 1 astonisTnng results. At last I felt that I 1 was on the right track. I kept on with the treatment following the sim- ; pie instructions and in a few nights my wrinkles were entirely gone. Naturally I was over-joyed with my i experiment and 1 want everyone to , know how to obtain the same happy j results, 1 have already given It to ! many of my Immediate friends and lo' i tin y have obtained the same remark- , able transformation. The process con- I slsts of laying a warm cloth on the face I each night for about half a minute and j then when the cloth is removed a little \ ordinary unionized cocoa cream is up- I plied over the entire face and neck. I This Is left on for about two minutes | and then what has not been absorbed by the skin is wiped off with a soft dry cloth. Not more than live minutes is required for this simple operation. Vet one treatment will show you most astonishing results. No word short of "Marvellous" can explain how young and fresh this will make a woman look. 1 am sure that any lady with wrinkles can easily make herself look from 10 to 20 years younger. Any good drug gist can supply you with pure uni onized cocoa cream and it is so easy to apply that you cannot help but won der at It;, remarkable action. These treatments are also line for the com plexion as they nourish the skin keep ing It fair, pink and healthy. Kvery woman who wants toloolc young, fresh and charming should by all means give tills treatment a trial. How to Get Rid of Catarrh, Catarrhal Deafness or Head Noises If you have catarrh, catarrhal deaf ness or head noises caused by catarrh, or if phlegm drops in your throat and has! caused catarrh of the stomach or bowels you will be glad to know that these distressing symptoms can be entirely overcome In many instances by the foljowing treatment which you ; ean easily prepare in your own home i at little cost. Secure from your drug- I gist 1 ounce of Parmint (Double j Strength). This will not cost you ' more than 75c. Take this home and add to it Vi pint of hot water and I ounces of granulated sugar: stir until dissolved. Take one tablespoonful four times a day. A decided improve ment is sometimes noted after the first day's treatment. Breathing becomes easy, while the distressing head noises, ! headache, dullness cloudy thinking etc. j gradually disappear under the tonic I action of the treatment. Loss of smell, taste, defective hearing and mucus mopping in the back of the throat are other symptoms which suggest the presence of catarrh anil which are often overcome by this efficacious treatment. ■Nearly ninety per cent, of all ear troubles are said to bo directly caused by catarrh, therefore, there must be many people whose hearing can be restored by tills simple home treatment. FVNERAI- DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER. k N. SIXTH Use Telegraph Want Ads / TUESDAY EVENING, D Bl *' I RWiqqenwQi A Copyright, 1914, by th- Bobbs-Morrill Co. & & P i - (Continued.) j "Save your compliments: Mr. Mey j rick, my partner is now at the Mail | office destroying today's issue of the Mail. We've already ruined the first I page form, the cut of the policy and I the negative. And we're going north \as fast as the I.ord will let us. You | can do what you please. Arrest our J little lemoti tinted employer If you want to." Spencer Meyrick stood, considering. "However, I've done you a favor," O'Neill went on. "You can do me one. I I.et Mannel off—on one condition." | "Name It." I "That he hands me nt once S2OO, SIOO for myself, the other for my part ner. It's legitimate salary money due us. "VYe need it. A long walk to New \ York." "I myself"— began Meyrick. "Don't want your money," said O'Neill; "want Gonzale's." "Gonzalc's you shall have," agreed Meyrick. "Yoti pay him!" "Never!" cried the Spaniard, "Then It's the police," hinted O'Neill. Gonzale took two yellow bills from a wallet. He tossed them at O'Neill. "There, you cur"— "Careful," cried O'Neill, "or 111 punch you yet!" lie started forward, bnt Gonzale hastily withdrew. O'Neill and the millionaire followed to the street. "Well, my boy," answered Spencer j Meyrick, "if I can ever do anything for you In New York come and see me." "You may have to make good on that," laughed O'Neill, and they parted. O'Neill hastened to the Mail office, lie waved yellow bills before the lanky Ilowe. "In the nick of time," he cried. "Me, : the fair haired hero. And here's the ! fare, Harry—the good old railroad I fare." ; "Heaven be praised," said nowe. ; "I've finished the job, Bob. Not a trace of this morning's Issue left.. The fare! North in parlor cars! My to bacco heart sings. Can't you hear the elevated"— "Music, Harry, music." "And the newsboys on Park row"— "Caruso can't touch them. Where can we find a time table, I wonder?" Meanwhile. In a corner of the plaza, Manuel Gonzale spoko sad words in | the ear of Martin Wall. "It's the jinx," moaned Wall, with conviction. "The star player in every- I thing I do down here. I'm going to ' burn the sand hotfooting It away. | But whither. Manuel, whither?" "In Porto Rico," replied Gonzale, "I j have not yet plied my trade. I go i there." "Palm Beach," sighed Wall, "has dia monds that can be observed to spar- j kle as far away as the New York so- ! elety columns. But, alas, I lack the ! wherewithal to support me In the style to which my victims are accustomed." i "Try I'orto Rico," suggested Gonzale. "The air is mild—so are the police. I j will stake you." "Thanks. Porto Rico it is. How the | devil do we get there?" Up the main avenue of San Marco j Spencer Meyrick walked as a man go- j ing to avenge. With every determined ! ■<tep h!s face grew redder, his eye more I dangerous. He looked at his watch, j Eleven. The eleventh hour! But much might I happen between the eleventh hour and ] high noon. In the Harrowby suit the holder of j the title, a handsome and distinguish- j cd figure, adorned for his wedding, I wnlkod nervously the rather worn car- j pet. His brother, hastily pressed into j service as best man, sat puffing at a ! ?lgar with a persistency which indl- ! rated a somewhat perturbed state of mind on his own part. "Brace up, Alli!?i,' lie .irged. "It'll be before you realize it. Uemetn- | ber my own wedding. Gad, wasn't I frightened? Always that way with a mun. No sense to it, but lie just can't help it. Never forget that little par lor, with the flower of Marlon society ' all about, and me with my teeth chat tering and my knees knocking to gether." "It is a bit of an ordeal," suld Allan weakly.. "Chap feels ail sort of—gone —inside"— The telephone, ringing sharply, inter- j rupted. George Harrowby rose and j stepped to it. "Allan? You wish Allan? Very well. I'll tell him." Ho turned away from the telephone i and faced his brother. "It was old Meyrick, kid. Seemed somewhat hot under the collar. Wants to see you in their suit at once." "What—what do you Imagine he | wants?" "Going to make you a present of Rlversido drive, I fancy. Go ahead, boy. I'll wait for you here." Allan Harrowby went out, along the dusky corridor to the Meyrick door. Not without misgivings, ho knocked. A voice boomed, "Come!" He pushed I open the door. He saw Spencer Meyrick sitting pur pie at a table and beside hlui Cynthia i Meyrick In the loveliest gown of all | the lovely gowns sho had ever worn. The beauty of the girl staggeri A'flar rowby u bit. Never demonstrative, he had a sudden feeling thut ho should be at her feet, "You—you sent for me?" he asked, coming into the room. As be moved closer to the girl he was to marry he saw that her face was whiter than her j gown and her brown eyes strained and i miserable. "We did," sakl Meyrick, rising. He held out a paper. "Will you please look at that?" Ills lordship took the sheet In un steady hands. Ho glanced down. Slowly the meaning of the story that met Ills gaze filtered through his dazed brain. "Martin Wall did this," he thought to himself. He tried to speak, but could not. Dumbly he stared at Spencer Meyrick. "Wo want no scene, Harrowby," said the old man wearily. "We mere ly want to know if there is in existence | a policy such as the one mentioned j here?" i The paper slipped from his lordship's J lifeless hands. He turned miserably j away. Not daring to face either fa ther or daughter, he answered very faintly: "There is." Spencer Meyrick sighed. "That's all we want to know. There will be no wedding, Harrowby." "Wha-wbat!" His lordship faced about. "Why, sir* the guests must be downstairs!" "It is unfortunate, but there will be ] no wedding." The old man turned to | his daughter. "Cynthia," he asked, "have you nothing to say?" "Yes." White, trembling, the girl faced his lordship. "It seems, Allan, that you have regarded our marriage as a business proposition. You have gambled on the stability of the mar ket. Well, you win. I have changed my mind. This is final. I shall nut change it again." "Cynthia!" And any who had con sidered Lord Harrowby unfeeling must have been surprised at the an guish in Ills voice. "I have loved you— I love you now. I adore you. What can I say in explanation of this? We | j | "Cynthia," ho ssked, "have you nothing to say?" ! gamble, ail of us. It is a passion breil | in the family. That is why I took out S this absurd policy. My dearest, it j doesn't mean that there was no love jon my side. There is—there always j will be, whatever happens. Can't you ! understand"— The girl laid her hand on his arm and i Jlrew him away to the window. "It's no use, Allan," she said, for Ills .?ars nlone. "Perhaps I could have for given, but somehow I don't care as 1 ' thought I did. It is better, embar rassing as It may be for us both, thuf. there should be no wedding after all." "Cynthia, you can't mean that. You Jon't believe me. Let me send for m> brother. He will tell you of the pas sion for gambling in our family. He ; will tell you that 1 love you too." ! He moved toward the telephone. "No use." said Cynthia Meyrick, shaking her head. "It would only pro long a painful scene, l'ieasi don't Allan!" "I'll send for Minot, too!" Harrowby cried. "Mr. Minot?" The girl's eyes nar rowed. "And what has Mr. Minot to | do with this?" i "Everything. He came down here ;ns the representative of Boyd's, lie catne down to make suJ that you didn't change your mind. He will tell you that I love you." A ipieei' expression hovered about Miss Meyrlek's lips- Spencer Meyrick i Interrupted. "Nonsense!" he cried. "There is no j need !o" "On- moment." Cynthia Meyrh?k> I eves shone strangely. "Send for yg.ii brother. Allan, and—for—Mr. Minot " [To be continued.] HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH w IF % m U. &' * v # .sk§™ a 2 %OPEN EVEMNGg# g IV/ , Store Hours 'Till Xmas ?*) R J 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. [, '0 § Choosing the | | Christmas Gifts | y. Is An Enjoyable and Easy $ £ Task in This Great 3 v Crowded? Yes, every day finds y y the aisles filled with busy shoppers, |y, 9 but even when the crowds are the ro greatest and the activity is at its height, there <qj fo is no confusion—that's because our salesforce has been thoroughly organized to serve you— S V quickly, quietly and well. y y Four days more— not much time if ? S you have delayed—but even last- r V minute shoppers will have much to select from, 1 y j for gift merchandise was bought in quantities "0 that seem enough for all. And still, don't you vi| think you will be better satisfied if you shop . t^ie morn ' n^ s^^^ Letter List LIST OF LETTERS REMAINING IN the Post Oflicc-, at Har-rlsburg, Pa., for the week ending December 16, 1916: Ladies' List Mrs. Emma I\ Baker, Mrs. Marie Ball, Lucy Burlaw, Miss Helen Bartruff, Mrs. J. H. Clinendinst, Mrs. D. W. Done, Miss Eunice Gray, Clara Hoffman, Mrs. Prank P. Hope, Mrs. Bessie Hughes, Miss M. L Man ning, Mrs. Mollis McCleary. Mrs. Floy Miller, Miss Helen Miller, Mrs. John Miller, Mrs. Bert Moyer, Mrs. Dorothy Price, Seymour Randolph, Miss Caro line Rletz, Mrs. Mary B. Robinson, Miss Nannie Itutter (3), Miss Louise B. Selden, Mrs. May Shuler, Kllen C. Spangler, Miss Mary Thomption, Mrs. Georgia A. Tolliver, Mrs. John Walters, Miss K. Williams, Mrs. Albitha Wise. Gentlemen's List Wm. L. Alcorn, Henry B. Allan, Russel H. Allstadt, J. H. Attick, J. L. Baum, D. A. Baxter, J. T. Brown, John P. Burns, Fred Clar, .-am. Colman, S. H. Cowdeti. Wm. Fay lor, Harry Kornwalt, R. V. Funk, G. S. Gludfelter, Charlie Gutschull. W. H. Hanetter, J. M. Herbert, Geo. Hill, Clyde Honodle, Lucius Howard, Albert Ingram (2), M- G. Jones, Charles Keller, Robert Kelier, Kdward Knight, Jr., Jos. Knox, B. J. Kohr, Walter Lenhan, Wm. Messimer, Com. C. Miller, R. B. Miller, D. J. Moats, John W. Neidinger, George Norman, J. W. Nusbaum, Donald Pal mer. George Parker, Jacques Pis, Elmer Rlune, M. Proctor, Walter Radle, Wil liam Rlelly, W. R. Rlddington, Jo Rob insOn, W. K. Royston, E. T. Rudy, David Samuels, ,T. Blair Sennerl, W. 11. Ship ley, Henry Smith, Sowers, R. H. Staine, M. W. Storried. W. T. Thompson, James Tobias, Harvey B. Wagner, A. J. Wallace, Edw. Washington, Ebu Wheal ton, James Williams (2), Robert Wil son. Firms Driver Harris Manufactur ing Co., Hoffman Co. (2). Foreign—George Talyijan. Persons should invariably have their mail matter addressed to their street and number, thereby Insuring prompt delivery by the carriers. FRANK C. SITES, Postmaster. I>ANCE AT DAtJPHIN Dauphin, Pa., Dec. 18. An in formal dance was held Saturday eve ning by the Dancing Club in their new hall. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Harry Miller, Miss Margaret Landts, Miss Eleanor Emmert, Miss Ruth Shaffer, Houck, Miss Ora Ulckel, Miss Susan Jackson, Miss Ethel For ney, Miss Sarah Margaret Hawthorne, Miss Sabra Clark, Bion C. Welker, Charles S. Gerberich, Edgar W. For ney and Ernest Shaffer. LIGHT FOR SCHOOL BUILDING Dauphin, Pa., Dec. 19.-—The school building of the borough will be lighted by electric lights in the near future. The Harrisburg Light and Power Company has received the contract. r 1 r ,r HEADQUARTERS FOB SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES ,i ■ . . * * *. / DECEMBER 19, 1916. TO DISCUSS I*l XK BLISTICK Washington, Dec. 19. White pine blister disease is the principal sub ject for discussion by the American Forestry Association at its national conference to be held here January 18 and 19. Many foresters will at tend to plan a combined tight on the disease, which is said to threaten The New Life and Disability Contract jj Many Life Insurance Conipanys ha,vc put disability clauses !; in their policies, providing waiver of premium and in some || instances, allowing optional settlements. The Penn Mutual ;! however, has made one more progressive step, by adding a '' clause which, first waives the premium; second, pays 10 per j| cent, of the face of the policy as an annuity, in monthly instal- !! ments; third, pays the full face of the policy to the beneficiary !' at death of insured, regardless of the length of time the insured 1| was disabled. It is worth while investigating. ]| Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company E. R. ECKENRODE, General Agent. 604 KUNKEL BLDG. $365,000,000 worth of pine timber in the United States and State Governors have been asked to send delegates. Allied organizations which will meet here at the same time are the Society of American Foresters, Eastern For esters' Association and the committee for suppression of the white pine blis ter disease. 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers