Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, January 10, 1917, Page 8, Image 8

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    8
OF INTEREST TO
WOMEN OVE
By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX.
Copyright. 1016, Star Company.
A woman in business is very much
flistressed by having the statement
made to her that the word of our sex
was not held in high esteem in the
legal world, and that from almost
pvery standpoint woman wa s regarded
by man as a rattier Irresponsible bi W,.
Until the last quarter of a century
woman was what man made her with
his laws and restrictions and tiadl
tions. Yet even with all those
caps she has left a remarkable recoi
upon the books of history.
In every walk of life, in
and sphere, woman has made her shin
ing mark. During the last twenty-jive
years lier progress lias been Jess im
peded by the debris of old traditions,
and she has sped forward upo;i the
broadening road of progress with
astonishing rapidity.
Comments and criticisms such as my
correspondent repeats are scarcely
worth remembering or refuting. Man
compelled woman to prevaricate about
herself for so many centuries that u
ehe has still the tendency to withhold
the truth or to distort it at times we
need not wonder.
Man hid her away from all knowl
edge of the great issues of life so lon
nnd kept her in ignorance for fear she
'would know herself and him too well
that we should not be surprised if she
is still unable to grasp real conditions
of life as readily as he is.
Jtcallzntioii of I'ernonnl Henponnlblllty
Has Onlv Begun to Daivn on Woman
A realization of personal respon
sibility has only begun to dawn upon
woman. She still thinks of herself,
to a great extent, as the privileged
being where self-dependence is con
cerned that man educated her to be
lieve was God's intent when she was
'formed. .
Without question, woman does not
keep appointments of a business na
ture as promptly or regard obligations
as seriouslv as the majority of men
do. Few businesswomen are as thor
oughly as men in their work, and their
methods are less direct, less positive.
'Women are usually more nervous than
men, and consequently less agreeable
'to deal with.
It is only the exceptional woman who
■possesses the power of concentration,
which is one of the first qualities a
inan develops in business. Women
scatter their forces In a thousand ave
nues where men conserve them. Wom
en have not yet learned to know the
value of time in business matters as
men perceive its value.
Tactful and agreeable in social life,
5n business woman rarely shows these
blundering man exhibits, them in his
dealings with his fellows.
She is often brusque with her own
sex and indifferent with the other, mis
taking both attitudes for poise in the
Railroad Expert Will
Address Businessmen
Alfred P. Thom, of Washington, D.
general counsel for the Railway
Kxecutive Advisory committee, and
also general counsel for the Southern
Railway, will address a luncheon
meeting of the Harrisburg Chamber
of Commerce.
Mr. Thom will give an address out
lining the plans he presented to the
New lands Joint Congressional Rail
road committee, concerning the regu
lation of railways. He is one of the
best orators among the legal profes
sion. Mr. Thom will give a complete
review of the plan he suggested favor
ing government regulation; federal in
corporation of all railroads engaged
Everyone Needs a Tonic to
Withstand the Rigors of Winter
A Few Bottles of S. S. S. Will
Thoroughly Tone Up the
Entire System.
Keeping well and In thorough phys
ical trim is simply a matter of resist
ing disease to which the system is sub
ject every day.
You can readily'see, therefore, the
of keeping the system in
;propcr condition, strong and vigorous,
and free from all manner of impuri
ties.
Pure blood is the first essential to
•perfect health, for the blood is the
source of all vitality. Keep your blood
absolutely free from all impurities,
and your health is assured.
"A in'tlttheTruth
(From an article by the advocates of manual telephone serv
ice in The Star-Independent of January 4.)
• ' rphg wron g number and
the busy signal are often unpardonable
faults in the work of the operator It is easy
—and very human—for a girl to give a
wrong number. Finding the desired party
almost by instinct, the slightest mistake in
reach or calculation means that the connec
tion has been made with the wrong party."
We told you the manual telephone system is in
efficient and unreliable. We told you it is easy for
the operator to give you a "wrong number" or a false
"busy" report. Now they admit it!
Use TJieDial
You always get the number you dial. ' '
No false busy reports.
The Automatic operator makes no wrong connec
tions.
It Costs Less
Cumberland Valley
Telephone Company
of Pa. m
FEDERAL SQUARE
WEDNESDAY EVENING, HAKRISBURG TELEGRAPH JANUARY 10, 1917.
TAKING MEN
business world. Woman sUll expects
privileges and benefits to be granted
her because she is a woman.
But all these peculiarities will be
outgrown with the passage of time and
the increasing opportunities allowed
her for the cultivation of her full pow
ers. Here are a few suggestions for
every woman who has started upon a
business career and who wilhes to
prove herself as successful as her male
C °Let Ct her %ut down in her notebook
these qualities as worthy of cultl-
A sense of responsibility to fill her
position with dignity and exactness.
A realization of the value of time,
her own and that of others.
Promptness in keeping engagements.
A purely business point of view re
garding debts, with no idea of sex
privileges or benefits.
The value of affability and the neces
sity for tact in business affairs.
The need of controlling the nerves
and nervous actions.
A tine sense of honor, of truthful
ness. and a desire for thoroughness.
Meantime here is what is reported
by Mile. Borst, a French philosopher,
who has been experimenting with men
and women in the matter of credibility
of evidence. The experimenter used
twenty-four persons, twelve of eacn
sex, in her investigation.
After ending the tests, which cov
ered several weeks, as the subjects
were examined repeatedly, Mile. Borst
tabulated the results.
She noted false answers, correct ans
wers, answers certain and uncertain,
correct or wrong answers given under
oath. She thus discovered the extent
of evidence given, its faithfulness, the
assurance of the witness, the influence
of the oath upon him or her.
These are her chief conclusions:
Womau Sees More lletallH Than Man
and ltememlierH Them Better
Entirely faithful evidence is the ex
ception, every witness supplying from
Ills or her imagination the omissions
of memory. ,
About 10 per cent, of the statements
in a voluntary deposition are wrong.
Depositions brought about by sug
gestions are longer than voluntary
ones fuller, that is, of detail but
less reliable.
Evidence improve by practice.
Women are more truthful witnesses
than men.
About one-twelfth of the statements
in a deposition under oath are lncor
'' Mile. Borst's investigation simply
bears out, in a scientific manner, the
idea that woman sees more details than
man, and remembers them better.
It is an interesting discovery.
This would indicate that "the wom
an in business" has been misinformed
regarding the legal status of woman s
word the world over.
in interstate or foreign commerce; re
organization of the Interstate Com
merce Commission and creation of the
new Federal Railroad Commission
with subordinate divisions. The plan
also would give the Interstate Com
merce Commission power to prescribe
minimum rates, confining the power
to suspend rates to sixty days from
the time the tariff is tiled, instead of
ten months, as at present; and giving
the government exclusive right to su
pervise the issuance of securities by
interstate carriers
TO INSTALL OFFICERS
Officers for the coming year will be
installed this evening at the regular
meeting of Painters' and Decorators'
Union, No. 411, in the lodgerooms at
221 Market street.
The rigors of winter are unusually
severe, on the average system, and it
is just now that assistance is needed.
A few bottles of S. S. S. will do you
a wonderful amount of good by thor
oughly cleansing and purifying the
blood and putting the entire system in
tip-top condition. It will improve
your appetite, and by increasing your
supply of rich, red blood throughout
the circulation, new life and vigor will
take the place of that weak and good
for nothing feeling.
S. S. S. is sold by druggists every
where, who will tell you that it has
been on the market for more than 50
years and is thoroughly reliable. Val
uable books and free medical advice
can be had by writing to Swift Specific
Co., 3 0 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga.
SOUTACHE BRAID
IS MOST POPULAR
Brj MAY~~MANTON
8983 (\Vithsßaslin[ Line and Added
Seam Allowance ) Plain Blouse
with Over-Portion for Misses and
Small Women, 16 and 18 years.
9237 (JVilh Basting Line and Added
Seam Allowance) Two-Piece Skirt
for Misses and Small Women, 16
and 18 vears.
The May iVlanton pattern of the
blouse No. 8985 and the skirt No. 9237
60th are cut in izes for 16 and 18
fears. They will be mailed to any ad
dress by the Fashion Department of
tlus paper, on receipt cf fifteen ccnti
it* aarh.
Fight For "Dry" National
Capital Now Up to House
Washington, D. C.. Jan. 10.—The
fight for a "dry" national capital was
transferred to the House to-day from
the Senate, where the Sheppard pro
hibition bill for the District of Colum
bia was passed yesterday. Advocates
of the measure apparently are con
fident of favorable action in the House.
The committee to which the meas
ure is referred, however, is generally
regarded as "wet," and the only hope
those opposed to prohibition have of
preventing the enactment of the meas
ure is through "pigeon-holing" it for
the rest of the session of Congress,
which ends on March 4. If it should
not be disposed of by that time, the
Senate would have to act on the bill
again.
m-TROOPEItS TO MEET
A meeting of the Ex-Members' Asso
ciation of the Governor's Troop will
be held at the Armory, State street, to
morrow night at 8 o'clock. Plans will
be discussed for the assisting in the
welcome to the troopers who left El
Paso yesterday. The committee appoint
ed recently to act in conjunction with
the Chamber of Commerce and other
committees will report.
FIRST NATIONAL, ELKCTS
At a meeting this afternoon of the
director of the First National Bank
William Jennings was elected presi
dent, E. J. Glancey, cashier, and A. S.
Lianmiller, assistant cashier.
WEAK, AILING CHILD
Made Strong By Delicious Vinol
Lakeport, N. H.—"Our little girl 8
years of age was in a debilitated, run
down condition and had a stubborn
cough so she was weak and ailing all
the time. Nothing helped her until
wo tried Vinol. Then her appetite in
creased and she is strong and well,
and I wish other parents of weak,
delicate children would try Vinol."
Geo. A. Collins.
This is because Vinol contains the
beef and cod liver peptones, iron and
manganese peptonates, and glycero
phosphates which a weak and run
down system needs.
Oeorge A Gorgas, Druggist; Ken
nedy's Medicine Store, 321 Market
street; C. F. Kramer. Third and Broad
streets; Kltzmiller's Pharmacy, 1326
Derry street, Harrlsburg. Also at the
leading drug stores in all Pennsylvania
towns.
mHHHHi
The Coal Outlook Is
SERIOUS
THE situation is the worst
in the history of the
trade, and those who need
coal and fail to take advant
age of the present supply,
low as it is, may find it im
possible to get any later if a
severe Winter sets in.
Deliveries from the mines
are few and far between
owing to an unprecedented
shortage of cars.
There are less men than
ever working in the mines.
And stocks in yards are be
low normal.
Can you live without coal
in cold weather? If you can't
get it, what then?
Buy it now—NOW.
H. M. KELLEY & CO.
Office. 1 North Third
Yard*, Tenth nnd State
Use Telegraph Want Ads
THE ENEMY
—BY—
GWDRGE RANDOLPH CHESTER & LILLIAN CHESTER
AathoM of "THE BALL. OF FIRE," etc.
cy*
Copyright, 1915, Newspaper Rights,
Hearst International Library. International Feature Service.
Continued.
For a moment an eternity in
seeming, seconds In reality his eyes
lingered upon the scene, and it sear
ed into his brain. Tne late afternoon
sun, golden with the warm glow of
Spring, had slanted Into the little of
fice, had touched with a mellow lus
ter the soft brown graining of Billy's
desk, had cast a refulgence like a
halo upon the sprig of apple blos
soms in the glass, and had blessed,
with an aureole-like radiance, Billy
and Tavy, as they stood near the
window, Tavy still sheltered In Billy's
arm, and broad-shouldered Billy turn
ed sternly towards the intruder. Tavy!
In her eyes was growing that same
smouldering passion of defense, which
he remembered so well in Jean. Tavy
had taken Billy to be her own!
Abruptly the old man turned and was
gone from the room! Billy ran after
him into the hall, but heard only the
click of a descending elevator.
"What was it, Billy? What did
he mean?" Tavy's voice was trem
bling.
"I can't understand it. Hal and I
are good friends. There is no reason
for what he said!" Billy was more
hurt than angry.
"Of course not!" The answer was
prompt, and full of resentment. "But
why should he presume to interfere?
What right has he to even spoak to me
concerning you! Who is he that he
can take such liberties?"
"He must be unbalanced to-day."
Billy suggested this explanation in
answer to his own perplexity as much
as to hers. Who was John Doe?
Tavy's father, after all! What had
Billy done for which he could be
criticised. The only thing was that
little matter of drinking. Hal had
spoken to him 'several times about
that, but surely he could not hold it of
such importance as to wish his daugh
ter' dead rather than married to
Billy.
"That's it!" Tavy's troubled eyes
both cleared and softened. "Do you
remember how strangely he acted
that first day he saw me? He must
have loved his daughter very much."
"Yes, Tavy," Billy's voice was very
gentle as he drew her to him; and he
was very thoughtful of her, and of
Hal, and of many things, as they
walked across to the desk. He look
ed at his watch, and took up the
'phone. "Suppose we tell Mummy
Stuart about that impromptu dinner
party."
"Oh yes; do!" All brightness now,
and happiness, nothing In her voice
but the joy of living. So soon are
the tragedies of life forgotten, when
one is young.
Billy asked for the new number,
which was already so familiar. Tavy
stood near him, and, as he held the
'phone, he reached out and stole his
arm around her slender waist. Her
cheeks flushed as she nestled against
him, but she slid her arm across his
shoulder, and fluffed his hair. She
had always wanted to rumple his hair.
It was so wayward in its waviness, so
stiff and uncompromising.
"Hello, Mumfny Stuart," he called
into the 'phone. "We want you to
drive out to Woodbriar for dinner.
Will you be ready when we come?
Tavy's at the office with me. We
found her gold piece. Say; we've
something we want to tell you! The
biggest bit of news in the world!
We "
A small palm was clapped over his
mouth. He looked up laughing, and
the cheeks of Tavy were flaming red.
He drew her hand away, and the
playful struggle which ensued ended
with Tavy once more in Billy's arms,
and being kissed again and again
and again, and being told over and
over and over how Billy loved her and
loved her and loved her!
A voice, a woman's voice, faint and
far distant and strangely metallic,
finally penetrated into their con
scienceness. It was the voice of Mrs.
Stuart, plaintively saying "Hello"
through the telephone at regular in
tervals.
"Cut off," glibly apologized Billy,
with a wink at Tavy and a pat of the
hand which had done the cutting.
"We'll be home in twenty niinutes."
Billy fully meant that, but it took
five minutes to put on Tavy's coat and
to fasten it beneath her piquant chin;
it took five minutes more to explain
just how it felt when Tavy looked
at him that first day at the door; and
it took ah uncountable length of time
for them to say "good-by," as they
left the little office, although no one
could possibly explain why they
should need to say good-by when they
were both leaving at once, and to
gether, and bound for the same des
tination. Queer; wasn't it? Neither
of them thought of John Doe again.
What a wonderful ride that was
to the new Stuart apartments! The
world was such a delightful place,
so cheerful, and bright and happy!
Kverybody in the streets seemed gay,
and in the very air there was a sort
of limpid ecstacy, much as if the
glory of the millennium had suddenly
burst open the earth and made all
humanity kind. How balmy was the
breeze of Spring! How beautiful was
the evening sky, reddening now to
a glorified dusk! On the river, as
they whirled up the Drive, were the
white hulls of a hundred craft, trail
ing their wraith-like streamers of
pearl gray smoke against the soft
roseate of the west, and reflecting
their fraceful outlines in the glisten
ing river, itself aglow with dancing
coral tints. It was a fairlyland, and
even those tall, prosaic smoke stacks
on the Jersey shore were a part of
the enchanted scene. That is what it
is to be in love, when one is young!
Why, in all the world there is noth
ing but beauty! just beauty!
Here is the enchanted apartment
house, with an enchanted doorman
in an enchanted marble lobby; and
here is the enchanted elevator, run by
an enchanted elevator boy, with
twenty-four brass buttons on his coat,
and a blue bruise, probably put there
by enchantment, under one eye. Here
is the enchanted suite, and here, too,
is the enchanted Mummy Stuart, al
ready dressed for her drive in her new
gray silk, which Is so becoming to
that high-piled gray coiffeur. A rath
er stately woman, is Mrs. Stuart, and
one whom any fastidious young man
might well be proud to have as his
guest at Woodbriar. Money is not
such a bad thing after all. It cannot
be altogether bad when it will coax
the delicate tint of health to pallid
cheeks, when it will smooth away lines
of worry from careworn brow, when
it will bring the sparkle of renewed
anticipation to eyes which have been
all too patient.
"You're late," accused Mummy
Stuart, smiling on the two truants as
they came bubbling into the pretty
little parlor. "What have you been
doing all this time?"
That was so direct a question, so
apropos, so remindful of so many
many things, that Billy and Tavy,
much against their wills, looked at
each other, and laughed aloud, and
both blushed. Then Tavy suddenly
hid her face on her mother's shoulder. |
Mrs. Stuart paled, and glanced
swiftly at Billy, and clasped her
daughter in her arms, and smoothed
her tight black curls. Billy Lane
found himself left out of that tableau,
wheh was not as it should be; so
Mrs. Stuart, with her cheek bent
against that curly head, suddenly felt
a strong arm steal around her, and
glanced swiftly up to find the clear,
manly gaze of Billy beaming fondly
down upon them both.
"Kiss your future son, Mummy,"
invited the brazen Billy, with his
most friendly grin, but only his
words were flippant; tone and look
were tender. Into Mrs. Stuart's eyes
had again come that patience, and
there was moisture on her lashes; but
she smiled to Billy. She patted his
hand as she unwound his arm from
her waist. She liked Billy. She had
liked him from the first, very much.
He was the sort of young man who
could be trusted. She walked away
with Tavy into the adjoining room,
and closed the door. Tavy did not
look back. She was very, very quiet,
and held closely to her mother. They
had been much more than mother
and daughter, these two, in the past
fifteen years; they had been com
panions, and partners, and friends,
very close and very dear friends.
They were gone a long, long time,
and before they returned, Billy, all
alone in the dainty gray and pink
parlor, began to feel disproportionate
ly big, and brutal, and generally con
temptible. It was all very gay and
exhilarating to win a sweet and beau
tiful girl like Tavy, but, after all,
there was a serious side to it. He
couldn't expect Mrs. Stuart to look
on him with a happy eye. She'd be
left alone, even if she came to live
with them; as of course she would.
Dog-gone it, he was selfishi and yet —I
Suddenly he laughed. Why, Mrs.
Stuart would shortly be about the
happiest woman in the world! When
Harrison Stuart was quite sure of
himself, Billy would have the extreme
pleasure of leading that finely re
habilitated gentleman to the door, and
presenting him, as Billy's own gift, to
Tavy's mother. He guessed that would
square accounts! He could have
Tavy with a clear conscience.
(To Be Continued.)
REVIVAL AT GHACB M. E.
Dr. John Fox, pastor of the Grace
Methodist Church, who is conducting
revival services, will speak on "What
Is the Remedy For Indifference" at the
services this evening. His subjects for
Thursday and Friday are: Thursday,
"Have the People a Mind to Work?";
Friday, "How Can We Best Use Our
Influence?"
Use Cocoanut Oil
For Washing Hair
If you want to keep your hair in
good condition, be cardful what you
wash it with.
Most soaps and prepared shampoos
contain too much alkali. This dries
the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and
is very harmful. Just mulsitied
cocoanut oil (which is pure and en
tirely greaseless), is much better than
the most expensive soap or anything
else you can use for shampooing,
as this can't possibly injure the hair.
Simply moisten your hair with
water and rub it in. One or two tea
spoonfuls will make an abundance of
rich, creamy lather, and cleanses the
hair and scalp thoroughly. The lath
er rinses out easily, and removes every
particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and
excessive oil. The hair dries quickly
and evenly, and it leaves it fine anil
silky, bright, fluffy and easy to man
age. t
You can get mulsified cocoanut oil
at most any drug store. It is very
cheap, and a few ounces is enough
to last everyone in the family for
months.
SAYS WE BECOME
CRANKS ON HOT
WATER DRINKING
Hopes every man and women
adopts this splendid
morning habit.
Why is man and woman, half the
time, feeling nervous, despondent,
worried; some days headachy, dull
and unstrung; some days really in
capacitated by illness?
If we all would practice inside
bathing, what a gratifying change
would take place. Instead of thou
sands of half-sick, anaemic-looking
souls with pasty, muddy complexions,
we should see crowds of happy,
healthy, rosy-cheeked people every
where. The reason Is that the human
3yatem does not rid itself each day of
all the waste which it accumulates
under our present mode of living. For
every ounce of food and drink taken
into the system nearly an ounce of
waste mate-rial must be carried out,
else it ferments and forms ptomaine
like poisons, which are absorbed into
the blood.
Just as necessary as it is to clean
the ashes from the furnace each day,
before the lire will burn bright and
hot, so we must each morning clear
the inside organs of the previous day's
accumulation of indigestible waste and
body toxins. Men and women, whether
sick or well, are advised to drink each
morning, before breakfast, a glass of
real hot water with a teaspoonful of
limestone phosphate in it, as a harm
less means of washing out of the
stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the
indigestible material, waste, sour bile
and toxins; thus cleansing, sweeten
ing and purifying the entire alimentary
canal before putting more food into
the stomach.
Millions of people who had their
turn at constipation, bilious attacks,
acid stomach, nervous days and sleep
less nights have become real cranks
about the morning inside-bath. A
quarter-pound of limestone phosphate
will not cost much at the drug store,
but Is sufficient to demonstrate to
anyone Its cleansing, sweetening and
.freshening effect upon the system.
Miss Tarbell's Refusal to
Serve on Tariff Board
Disappoints President
Washington; Jan. 10. At the
White House to-day It was said that
President Wilson was not only disap
pointed, but somewhat perplexed, by
the refusal of Miss Ida M. Tarbell to
serve on the tariff commission. In
fact, the President's plans with regard
to the commission have been material
ly disarranged and his announcement
of its personnel has been delayed.
For several reasons the President
desired that Miss Tarbell should be a
member of the commission. Through
her ability, he considered that she
would be able to demonstrate that her
sex was competent to deal with the
most important public affairs. Again,
her appointment was to have been
made as a Pennsylvanian and, as the
President still desires that her State
shall be represented on the commis
sion, he is considering the choice of a
man to take her place.
HOY AI, riIU'.MION BANQUET
About seventy members of the Royal
Fire Company attended the annual ban
quet of the company, held last night in
the enginehouse, Twenty-first and
Derry streets. Dr. C. K. L. Keene was
toastmaster and among those to re
spond were the Rev. J. D. W. Deavor,
the Hcv. M. B. Shaffer, William Kitchen,
of the State Fire Marshal's department;
ex-Sheriff Samuel F. Dunkle and K. N.
Lebo. Tiie turkey dinner was served
by the following women: Misses Anna
Cover, Ksther Stouffer, Mary Cover,
Grace Sprout, Edythe Ilouck, Mary
Lutz, Mrs. Mountain, Mrs. Sprout, Mrs.
Holland, Miss Burns and Mrs. Wise.
MAGISTRATES TO MEET
The annual meeting of the State
Magistrades' Association will be held
in the office of Alderman George Her
bert, to-morrow. Officers for the year
will bo elected. Delegates from York,
Lancaster, Reading, Allentown. Wilkes-
Barre and Scranton will attend the
meeting.
n amuna mi l a ■nin.n'n.mn.ni.|
{Valued Home Remedies!
• (Clip Out and Save.)
To End Coughs
The following formula, easily mixed
at home, makes one of the quickest
cough remedies obtainable, often curing
the worst cough in a day. Take a tea
spoonful as often as necessary.
Glycerine 2 ounces
Whiskey (or sugar syrup) pint
Globe Pine Comp'd Aromatic.ounce
("Concentrated Pine' )
If sugar syrup is used instead of
whiskey it can be easily made by dis
solving 6 heaping tablespoonfuls of
granulated sugar in % cup of water.
Be sure to use Globe Pino Compound
which is sold only in %-oz. screw top
cases with Aromatic printed in red on
outside label.
How To Relieve Rheumatism
After each meal and at bedtime take
a tablespoonful of the following home
made medicine now used all over the
United States and noted for its remark
able results. Relief begins at once.
Syrup of Sarsaparilla 1 ounce
Toris Compound 1 ounce
Whiskey or Simple Elixir % pint
Frost-bites, Corns, Sore Feet
Bathe the feet in warm water to
which has been added two tablespoon
fuls of Calocide compound. This gives
instant relief for aching, burning or
perspiring feet; corns, callouses, sore
bunions; also for frost-bites or chil
blains. The Calocide acts through the
pores, removing the cause of the
trouble. Its use also keeps the feet in a
firm, healthy condition, free from swell
ing and puffing.
These formulas are published by the
Medical Formula Laboratories, Dayton,
Ohio. The ingredients specified can be
procured from any good drug store.
Lumber
Buyers
Should Know
something - about the
value of the different
grades.
All lumber looks
good when fresh. The
real test comes with
time.
Will it "check" and
"split" when exposed
to the weather?
Lots of money could
be saved by the aver
age lumber buyer if
more attention was
paid to such details as
kind, quality and
grades.
We will take pleas
ure in advising you
the kind that will give
the best results for the
job you have in mind.
United Ice & Coal Co.
Forster & Cowden Sts.
CLASSIFIED
BUSINESS
PIREOTOKY
tUh\U9 lot, VIAM AAU
W iifc.UK TO taUii 1 iUUB
Artificial Limbs and Truaaea
Braces lor all deformities, aodomlnai
aupportera. Capital City Art. Liuib Cs
412 Market St. Bell Phone.
French Cleaning and Dyeing
Goodman's, tailoring and ropalrlng, all
guaranteed. Call and deliver. BU
phono iS2. N. Sixth SL
Fire Insurance and Iteal Eatate
1 E. Glpple—Fire Insurance—Keal Ka
late —Rent Collecting. 1261 Market St,
Bell
Tailors
George F. Shope. Hill Tailor. 1241 Mar
ket. Fall goods ars now ready.
Signs and Enamel Lettera
Poulton. 307 Market street Bell phona
Prompt and efficient service.
(GEORGE H. SQURBIER |
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
(310 North Third Strait
Bell I*hone. Auto Service. I
Very Itchy Red
Spots On Foce
Turned Into Pimples. Were In
Blotches. Scaled Over and Came
To a Head. Lost Sleep. Cuticura
.lealed In Nine Weeks.
"My trouble began with red spots on '
my face which were very itchy, and later
turned into pimples. The pimples were
veiy large and very red,
and were in blotches. They
I scaled over and came to a
X/ head and itched so that I lost
I many a night's sleep.
J "I used creams but they
/did n ot help me, and after
iJVV' suffering for nine weeks I
used Cuticura Soap and Oint
ment. Now I am healed." (Signed)
Ben Cohen, 2549 S. Fairhill St., Phila
delphia, Pa., October 20, 1916.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment are not
only most valuable for the treatment of
pimples, blackheads, redness and rough
ness, dandruff and irritated scalps, but
their great mission is to prevent such
conditions by daily use.
For Free Sample Each by Return
Mail address post-card: "Cuticura,
Dept. H, Boston." Sold everywhere.
\
0-paac
Quickest —
Surest
Remedy For
COLDS
AND
GRIPPE
Knocks a cold
over night.
Small tablets
250 the box
GORGAS' Drug Store
16 N. Third St.
Penna. Station.
■>
AUTO STORAGE—
First class, fireproof garage,
open day and night. Rates
reasonable.
Auto Trans. Garage
—'illils * ° , " t 1 •
|lj , | Cameron
llr®%
dUMMltnilM
FLORIDA
"BY SEA"
Baltimore to
JACKSONVILLE
(Calling at Savannah)
Delightful Sail
Fine Simmers. Low Farm. Heat Service.
Plan Your Trip to Include
"Finest Coastwise Trips in the World"
IlluMtrnted Booklet on Itequest.
311 CItCI IA .\ TS A MI.MCItS TKANS. CO.
W. 11.I 1 . TIIIIN EH, G. P. A. Hallo.. Sid.
fKSSA
35U?8TRttT
Bet. sth Ave. & Broadway.
Fireproof—Modern—Central, r ,
I 300 ROOMS WITH BATHS. |
ii.calc Table d'Hote and ala Carte ||
WHITE FOR nOOKJ.KT.
TV I'. RITI'HEY. I'ltflP- II
r__^
Non-si easy Toilet Cream Keeps
the Skin Soft and Velvety in Hough
Weather. An Exquisite Toilet Prep
aration, 25c.
GOItGAS' DRUG STOKES
10 N. Third St.. and P. It. It. Station
V_ _ _
EDUCATIONAL
School of Commerce
Troup Building 15 So. Market Sq.
Day & Night School
Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Sti-notypy,
Typewriting and Penmnnshlp
Bell W Cumberland -IU-Y
The
OFFICE TRAINING SCHOOL
Kaufman Bldg. 4 S. Market SQ.
Training That Secures
Salary Increasing Positions
In the Office
Call or send to-day for interesting
booklet. "The Art of Getting Along In
the World." Bull phone tS-ia-R.
Harrisburg Business College
A Reliable School, 31st Yeai*
3-U Market St. Harrlaburg, Pa.
YOUNG MEN'S BUSINESS
INSTITUTE
Hershey Building
Front and Market Streets
The School That Specializes
Day and Night Sessions
Bell Phone 4361
Use Telegraph Want Ads