18 OF INTEREST TO THE WOMEN Watch Daughters Friends Dy Ilorothy III* Here is a tip to mothers: , Watch your young daughters' friends. 'Scrutinize carefully her men friends, tor many wolves there be in sheep's clothng. Keep a wary eye on Iter girl friends, because birds of a feather are supposed to Hock together, and one Billy, loud, indiscreet yg,ung person can compromise all who associate with her. Hut as you value your daughter's eafety, turn a searchlight of investiga tion upon the character and antece dents of her middle-aged women ac quaintances. These women have grown old and Ifat Their joints are stiff. They have lost their good looks. They •an no longer attract men. of .themselves. Mqn Jio more are willing to blow in their money on them for luncheons, and lit tle dinners, and theaters, nnd '••ba rets and suppers. But the women .ire still avid for masculine attention, and for good times. So the heartless, conscienceless wo man looks about her and picks out some fretty, fresh, innocent young gtrl that she can use for bait. Generally the selects a girl who Is in a humbler social set than her own, and less well *<>ll—a girl to whom the gift of a pretty If rock or two will mean much, and who *ls enchanted at riding In a limousine lend sitting in a box at the opera. Apparently Mrs. Smartley has be 'come the patroness of little Miss l>owuy, and little Miss Dowdy Is so jjleased and grate'ful, and llttlo Miss OJowdy's mother Is so flat tared, and A>rags about it to all of her friends, tend tells how Mrs. Sinnrtley Just can.t <lo anything without Mamie, and what t privilege it Is for a girl to have as u Trlend a middle-aged woman who takes lier about with her everywhere. Yes. Mrs. Smartley is looking after Mamie, as the cat looks after 'he mouse she Is playing with. Mrs. Smartley takes Marie with her for the potent *eason that Mamie Is the lure that tolls men back to her. No man will Invite Mrs. Smartley alone out to lunch or drag her avoirdupois about a dance floor. . ' Mrs. Smartley is perfectly aware of this, and so she goes to the telephone and calls up some man and says: "I've got the prettiest young girl you ever saw with me. Regular living picture. ; Just twenty, and fresh as a rose. And dancv3 like a bit of thistledown. Don't you want to meet us somewhere for luncheon, and afterward we can go to a dance?" And the man goes because of the young girl. He and Mrs. Smartley ■understand each other perfectly. And ! because she gets the old woman the i Zfoeted IfoimeM! Get the Round Package * Ask For and GET S Used for % Century. nuif uvik 9 ™ e ORIGINAL Wi MALTED MILK Made from clean, ricli milk with the ex tract of select malted grain, malted in our own Malt Houses under sanitary conditions, f Infanta end children thrive on it. Agrees with wea^e!t stomach of the invalid or the aged. \ /A Needs no cooking nor addition of milh. N urishes and sustains more than tea, coffee, etc. Should be kept at home or when traveling. A nu- tritious food-drink may be prepared in a moment. " A glassful hot before retiring induces refreshing rGi* s fn sleep. Also in lunch tablet form for business men. ' Substitutes Cost YOU Same Price Tstka a Package Horn® SEVERE COLDS AND COUGHS SHOULD NOT BE TRIFLED WITH A Stab-like l'aln, a Chill and a Sore Then because Forkola is so pure you Place In Your Side Tells of I'neu- • can take a small piece the size of a monla—\o Time to Tritle Now , sized pea and allow it to slowly The following prescription is being ' mo 't .i n your mouth. Its powerful heal widely used for breaking up severe •?& Coughs and Colds. Get from your drug- \ life, loosen up a dry, hoarse 01- tight gist a small jar of Famous Forkola and I cough and by stopping the formation of thoroughly spread over throat and j phlegm In the throat, end the persistent chest covering with a piece of warm loos<- cough and promote a healthy flannel. The warmth of the body healing. quickly releases certain ingredients (let a small jar from your druggist that are part of the Famous Forkola and begin the treatment to-night. It prescription in the form of medicated will work wonders by the morning vapors that are inhaled all night long Kv. rv sufferer from Catarrh of the through the air passages, while the na- throat and nose in any form should tural oils and fats are quickly absorbed give Famous Forkola a trial, through the pores reducing all intlam- Your druggist or H. C. Kennedy can mation. supply you.—Advertisement. —r I HI limaßEgßßTi Absolutely No Pain ty Mr latest Improved appll- j£r >• nee, Including? an oxeyjeca- EXAMINATION r - n jgr 0 r teeth ...5.bU FREE \ V. Jy ° old %. jfir Flllinir* In .liver lUsiaterrd A Gold crown* nnd Graduate V brfdee work $3, $4 ( S3 Ajmukmtmmim 7 Office open dally 8t:iO vAr 22K crold cr0wn...|.1.00 A w v to 0 p. m.t >lon s Wed. and Sal., till 0 p. m.| Sob- JT Market St. (Oirer the Hob) tfarrisburg, Pa. it didat hvrt ■ Mt I - - THE Wm. PENN GARAGE NOW OPEN CORNER COI'RT AND CRANBERRY STREETS In the heart of the Hotel, Business and Residential Section STEAM HEATED CAPACITY, 100 CARS X * Use Telegraph Want Ads FRIDAY EVENING. i pleasures that she desires and can ; not get for herself the girl Is taken to places no young girl should fre quent. She is Introduced to nwn she should never meet. She is taught to drink things she should never taste, und lessons in life that innocence should I never learn. ] Many a young girl Is started on the I road to perdition, by ust such an older ; woman. And many a -girl who stops I short of taking the llnal plunge has her life ruined by such association because she has been given false ideals, and acquired a taste for the bright lights that makes domesticity ever afterward seem dull and monotonous. .lust because these women are more sophisticated and worldly wise than a girl's own mother, tlielr influence is ' greater than hers and because they | frankly preach the doctrine of living ! while you live, they make the most ' dangerous appeal possible to tho youth ! ful imagination and thus becomo the | greatest possible peril to girlhood. Because of this danger, mothers, be I suspicious of your little girl's fiiond- I snip with older women. Don't let { your innocent little daughter be used !as a decoy dove. ADVICE IX) THE I.OVFVI.OKX liy Beatrice Fairfax, Tlivre Are ()ther \\ ays. Dear .Miss Fairfax: "\Yo are two i young working people. An argument | has arisen between us unil we liave ' decided to let you settle it. For some time 1 lnivo been aecept i ing the attention, kindness and invi tations of a young man. Tho other ; day 1 suggested that owo In a rare i while he let me Invito him to the theater. In other words, to let me j treat once in a while instead of al | ways being treated. Of course ho con tends that this Is not "proper," "all wrong," etc., und 1 argue that It j would make me feel happier, less of a grafter, and seeing that we both must earn our own living, only fair ! play. A READER. I like your spirit. Evidently you 1 aro not one of those girls who like to accept all and return nothing. But your idea of how to do your share of tho entertaining Is all wrong. First of ail when you give your interested friendship, you are honoring this young man. Secondly, the place for a girl to entertain Is In her own home. If you wish to Invite him to a meal or to tea, well and good. 1f 1 : this is out of the question, you might make him something for Christmas— I monogrammed handkerchiefs you have marked will show your friendly | appreciation of what he has done for < you. BLANKET MAKES WARM BATHROBE i This Model Has Fulness Enough lo Make It Comfortable For Lounging By MA Y AIANTON | 9266 (Willi Basting Line and Added | Seam Allowance) Bath Kobe. Misses 34 or 36, Women 30 or 38, 40 or 42, 44 or 46 bust. 1 Every woman likes to have a really comfortable, satisfactory bath robe. This one is ample and roomy and means warmth and satisfaction. " It is easy to slip on and off and it really fills its pur pose perfectly well. Here, it is made of plain terry cloth and is trimmed with a fancy material cut to form a border, but the model is a pood one for the blankets that are so much used, for the wool bath robe flannels, for the cotton bath robe flannels and for the terry cloth that is such a pronounced favorite, and which can be found in white and in colors and in fancy effects as well as plain. Yellow and white striped terry cloth is exceed ingly handsome with tlie collar and cuffs of white linen. There is an inverted plait at the back and a plait at each side of the front, at the neck edge. Tor the medium size will be needed, 6 3 -1 yards of material 27 inches wide, yards 36, 3 3 i yards 44 or one blanket 66 inches wide. The pattern No. 9266 is cut in sizes for misses 34 or 36, women 36 or 38, 40 or 42, 44 or 46 bust. It will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this pa.ier, on receipt of fifteen cents. 175 Skunks Escape From j Mifflin County Farm I-ewistown, Pa.. Jan. 12.—For some time Franklin Peicht, of near Allens i ville, this county, has been conducting a skunk farm with several hundred in | captivity. A night or two ago soine- I body made a break in the wire fence j enclosure and about 175 skuns cs , caped. The skunks on this farm were fed 1 011 a daily ration of fried mush. The ! hides bring front about $2 td $6, ac ! cording to markings. I,EAGLE KLEOTS OFFICERS Mechanlcsburg, Pa., Jan. 12.—East j evening tho annual meeting of the Business Men's I>eaguc was held and the election of officers for the ensuing | year resulted as follows: President, | F. S. Mumma; vice-president. M. Grant Mohler; secretary, George W. Owen; treasurer, M. E. Anderson; board of governors for three years, Frank M. j Slyder, Murray L. Dick and J. E. Shelley. HIS INDIGESTION IS VANQUISHED llal IJeeii Enable to Eat Without Suf fering Eor Many Years "HAS DONE WONDERS" HE SAYS "Words cannot begin to describe j the torments and the misery that l! huve gone through in recent years" says Joht> S. Pierce, a well-known' truck farmer, whose place Is at! Twelfth and Sycamore streets, Har risburg. Pa. "I was a dyspeptic, a victim off cronic indigestion and for years I had ' been unable to eat a mouthful with out paying the penalty with hours of; suffering. My food simply lay in my! stomach and fermented, filling me I with gas until 1 felt as if 1 would j burst and often I could get no relief! until a fit of vomiting would bring it i all up. "I had fearful headaches all the j time and 1 felt tired, listless, and sol generally forlorn that it was an effort] | for me to be about my daily work. "Of course 1 tried dozens ofi remedies in hopes of finding some thing that would afford me some re lief but none of them seemed to touch ; tt.e spot until I began taking Tanlac. "Tanlrtc is a real medicine and it has done wonders for me. It gave me relief from the very beginning and It seemed to go right to the seat of my trouble with its healing power. "Now my stomach trouble has been | vanquished and 1 am a well man to ; day, thanks to Tanlac. 1 can eat! heartily and enjoy my meals without fear of suffering; my headaches left me long ago and I feel invigorated and refreshed throughout my whole sys tem." Tanlac, tho famous master medi cine, is now being Introduced here at Gorgas Drug Store, where the Tanlac man is meeting the people and ex plaining the merits of this master I fnnJMua ■ — : —> ——- HARRISBURG GFH&H TELEGRAPH Smile! and the World Smiles With You! An Old Saying That Has Been Proved by Every One of These Triangle Stars They Are: Upper Row, Louise Fazenc! Seena C '<■ ' 'XXBOOOC IU There's a reason for every smile in the picture. Louise Fazenda has just signed a new Keystone contract. Bes sie Love has heard that folks like her newest play, "The Heiress at Coffee Pan's." Seena Owen—Well, Seena just smiles all day lons. She's Mrs. George Walsh off the screen, and there's a MATRIMONIAL FABLES By DOROTHY 1)1 X Once upon a time there were two Golf Widows who met under the Shade of the Sheltering Palms at a Tea Fight, and began to toll each other the Stories of their Lives. "Woe is me," cried the first Woman Beating upon her Breast, "for in this Wretched Creature, that you see be fore you, you behold a Woman whose Heart lias been broken and her Home wrecked by the Accursed Game of Golf. I was Once a Happy Wife, with a Noble and Devoted Husband, who lived an Exemplary Life, going to his Oftlce at nine' a. m. and return ing at live-thirty p. m., to be the Lit tle Sunshine of the House. "On Sundays and Holidays we took Delightful little Excursions together, and we spent our Evenings in Heart to Heart Talks and trying out the new Records on the Phonograph. "All was Merry as a Marriage Bell in our humble Home until the Temp ter came and Lured my Husband out on the Links. Now on Sundays and Holidays he Arises With the Dawn and beats it out to the Golf Course, leav ing me to pass the Long Hours by my Lonely. "At Night when he comes Home from Playing forty-seven Holes he is so Tired and Hungry he is not tit for Human Companionship. All that lie wants to do is to Stuff himself, and then seek the Hay. "Moreover, during the Time when my Husband thought Canned Goods the most Interesting Subject in the World to Discuss, ho made Much Money, but now that his thoughts and Interests are centered on Golf the lit tle old Pay Envelope gets Thinner and Thinner, and I apprehend that we will end up in the Poor House. "When I Complain about finding Life Dull, with no one to Talk to, my Husband Invites me to go to-the Golf Course with him, but not being NOll - I tind no Thrill in Chasing a Pill over a Cow Pasture, nor am 1 one who Enjoys sitting with the old Cats on tho Club House Gallery, Knitting Tidies and Suspicioning the Worst about every Woman who is Younger and better Looking than I j am. "My Husband says that is no Com-1 fort to me, because I apprehend that j it is better to be a Sad Widow with a ; nice little Wad of Insurance than it! is to be a Golf Widow with no one to j Hold your Hand. "Believe me, that when wo Suf-' fragists get the Vote and make the! Laws, we will put Golf in the same i Category with Murder, Arson and : Mayhem.' "There is much in what you say," replied the Second Woman, "but even | a Golf Ball may have a Silver Lin ing." "I had the Misfortune to Draw a Perpetual Grouch in the Matrimonial Lottery. When he put his Key in the Front Door of an Evening you could i feel the Temperature of the House go down to Freezing Point, and the Cat would hike for the Cellar. "Nothing ever Pleased him, and his idea of a Pleasant Evening at Home was to Check over the Bills and Lam bast me for not Running the J louse on Air. "Sundays and Holidays were times of Torture, because he Improved the Shining Occasion by Snooping around the Pantry and the Ice Box. "In the Happy Hon rsome one Taught him how to play Golf, and now he spends all his Time on the Links, and there is great Peace and Joy in our Home. "Nor do I pine away with loneliness, for I have Discovered that there are many Interesting Men who do not care for tho Ancient and Honorable Game, and that they are good Samari tans who are Perfectly Willing to Wipe Away the Tears from a Golf Wi dow's Eyes so long as she is a Good Looker." Moral: This fable teaches that you I enn git a Golf Husband's Number by! observing his Widow's Attitude to- ! wnnt the Rnma, j Very recent little addition to the Walsh family that would make any mother proud and happy. Alice Lake Is get ting some roles in Triangle comedies that would please an even more aspir ing young comedienne than she. Dor othy Pulton and Clara Williams have been picked out by Thomas 11. Ince Man, Dead, Planned Some Odd Things Los Angeles, Jan. 12.—Only three of the sixty things James McLeod in tended to do when he camo to this city for recreation had been done when he died from natural causes. His body was found by the landlady. In his pocket was .$665 in currency and a list of the things he intended to do while sojourning here. Here I are items from the schedule of ex | periences he had planned for him | self: | Eat 10-cent breakfast at cheapest i restaurant. Noon same day at eat 25-eent lunch I at cafeteria. Same night, cat $S dinner at best | cafe in city. Visit ostrich farm and see if they I will swallow knife, my old one. See moving pictures taken. Pay for having myself taken, not over $25. Inspect new pumps and then go to Exposition Park to see paintings. Ride in jitney bus. Meet bunko man, if possible, anil see how they act. If 1 see newsboy who looked like me when a "kid," give him $5 gold piece. IIOW THE NEW \ Oltlv Mll.lv STHIKE WAS WON In Farm and Fireside there is an ar ticle explaining how the dairymen won their milk strike in New York. The writer of it says: "Organization centered about the Dairymen's League, which began in 1007 to enroll a few farmers. It was the handiest center to rally about, and has grown by leaps and bounds since August 1. From a few hundred it grew to 15.000 members, owning 300,- 000 cows. The normal milk supply of New Yorlt C'lty is 2.500,000 quarts a day. It is collected by wagons, brought to the shipping stations of the big con cerns. shipped In iced cars, pasteurized, and distributed. "Doubtless New York is the first State to adopt a state-wide movement to bring producer and consumer to gether. The .State Department of Foods and Markets, of which John J. Dillon is commissioner, is the great clearing house for all sorts of farm produce. It sells for farmers apples, eggs hay fruit, butter anything the farmer raises. THE POISON OK V <JAS BEETLE Most people think that the use of poison gas in warfare is a. purely hu man. or perhaps one should say. 'inhu man idea. Yet the plan lias been adopted by Nature. Certain kinds of beet'- nown as liombadiers. and call ed l . ntints Braehinus, make free use olsonous fumes to keep their eneniH. at bay. A typical specie known as Braehinus cerpitans is largely at tacked by certain ground beetles. These ground beetles are very active, and can easily overtake the Bombadiers Just as they get within reach, however, a very strange thing happens. The liom badier has the power of ejecting a pe culiar liquid which, when it comes into contact with the atmosphere, bursts in to a sort of pale blue-green flame. This is immediately followed by a kind of smoke. Now this smoke has a remark able effect upon the pursuer. No sooner do the fumes come into contact with the ground beetle than the creature is blinded and stupefied. A strange para lysis overtakes the insect, and it seems unable to move any farther. Quite a while elapses before the ground beetle recovers. In the meantime the Bom badler makes good his escape.—The American Boy. Girls! Keep Hair In Curl For Days • Dampness, wind or perspiration has no effect if ycu use atalpa water. Try this! Before curling or wav ing your hair with pins, papers or a heated iron, Just moisten each strand with atalpa water and you will be delighted how natural the curls and waves appear and how long they last in spite of wind, dampness or perspiration. A small bottle of! atalpa water will cost but a few cents at any drug store and there is noth ing better to help retain the curls and j waves or to soften, gloss or fluff the hair and to make it look abundant. | JANUARY 12, 1917. for stellar roles in some of the biggest plays that will lie produced under his supervision ddrilli; Hie year to come. So, as anybody can see, they are six very happy girls, and young Mr. 1917 looks good to them as they welcome him to an open page in their books of achievement. Tar: AMOUNT or su I:R, iv \ BATTLKSHIP Nearly 151.000 gross tons of steel will be needed to build the GO various new battleships, destroyers and sub marines, bids for the construction of which were taken by the United States Navy on October 25, 1916. "When these arc added to our navy they will make it one of the most formidable in the world. Some enlightening statis tics regarding these naval vessels ap pear in the January Popular Mechan ics Magazine. In each of the four new battle cruisers thero will be 15,025 tons of steel; in each of the four new battleships there will be 13,761 tons of steel; in the 20 new destroyers, 325 lons of steel each, and in the 30 new submarines 186 tons each. A hospital ship and an ammunition ship will need 4.000 tons of steel each. Taking S7O per ton as the average price of steel at present, these vessels mean an outlay of not loss than $10,000,000 Tor the steel only. GOI.IJI:\ TIII:\SI HI: KRO\ E IN \ TOKIO HACKt Mil) A heavy Iraaso of Buddah judged to he 400 years old was found by an eight year-old Kirl in the garden of her home at Sakama-eho, in a hill just west of I'.veno Park. Tokio. last month. When the earth was scraped off, the image was found to he solid gold. It was twenty inches in height. The garden is on the site of a temple which foil in to ruin several centuries ago and has now entirely disappeared. Many old pieces of earthenware and sculpture were found nearby by excavators sev eral years ago. Are You Worn Qui? Does night find you exhausted — | nerves unsettled —too tired to rest? is the food-tonic that corrects there troubles. Its pure cod liver oil is a ce!l-bu:!ding food to purify and enrich the blood and nourish the nerve-centers. Your 'Suv strength will respond to Scott's Emulsion- but see lilt that you get SCOTT'S. 41JL Scott & Boir.o, 2:oomfield, N. J, 16-19 Bargain Counter Eye Glasses Kyeglasses may be purchased for a dime at stores that specialize on goods at 10 cents. This being the case, It would seem to be rank extravagance to pay a dollar or two elsewhere if the difference in money value was the only consideration. The funny part of the proposition is the glasses that cost a dime might prove more satisfactory than those offered at a couple of dol lars by some "bargaln' -giving opti cian. It's all' a matter of "hit ot miss" unless you go to a recognized, reput able optometrist, who will test your eyes carefully and sclentillcally. anil who will not tit you with glasses unless he knows that they are adapted to your eyes and will benefit you. I ad here strictly to the ethics of reputable optometrists. I don't sell cheap or trashy glasses—neither do I charge more than a fair price. I give you the benefit of 25 years' experience and guarantee that my services and prices will prove satisfactory. With 11. C. Cluster 302 Market St. CROSS, FEVERISH CHILD IS BILIOUS OR CONSTIPATED Look, Mother! See if tongue is coated, breath hot or stomach sour. "California Syrup of Figs" can't harm tender stomach, liver, bowels. TCvery mother realizes, after giving her children "California Syrup of Figs," that this is their Ideal laxa [ five, because they love its pleasant | taste ami it thoroughly cleanses tho tender little stomach, liver and bow els without griping. When cross, irritable, feverish, or breath is bad, stomach sour, look at I the tongue, mother! If coated, give j a tcaspoonful of this harmless "fruit j laxative," and in a few hours all the | foul, constipated waste, sour bile and I undigested food passes out of the j bowels, and you have a well, playful child again. When the little system is full of cold, throat sore, has stom ach-ache, diarrhoea, indigestion, colic remember, a good "inside cleansing" should always be the first treatment given. Millions of mothers keep "California I Syrup ot Figs" handy; they know a j teaspoonful to-day saves a sick child I to-morrow. Ask your druggist for a I 50-eent bottle of "California Syrup of j figs," which lias directions for ba bies, children of all ages and grown ups printed on- the bottle. Beware of } counterfeits sold here, so don't bo I fooled. Get the genuine, made by i "California Fig Syrup Company." ihe Coal Outlook Is SERIOUS TIIE 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 rind 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. KELLEV CO. Office. 1 North Third Yiirri.s, Tent It it ml Stale Saturday Specials Grandiflora and Orchid SWEET PEAS SI.OO and $2.00 Per Hundred Madonna and Calla LILLIES $2.50 Per Dozen Keeney's Flower Shops 81(1 NORTH THIRD ST. ............ f H N ! Is Surprising to Many Thin, t Weak Persons. | | ...t CLASSIFIED BUSINESS PiNtiECTOrtY ItIIAUS kUb A-\U \<,iu.nlu iu UUl' lIIKM Arlllt<ml l.liuba aud Truaara Braces for all deformities, aDdoinlnal aupporters. Capital City Art. i.uut> Co, 41* Market fcl. Bell I'Oone. I'reucb Cleaning aud Ujtlng Goodman h, tailoring and repairing, all guaranteed. Call and deliver. Bell | ptiuiie t>. U'Oliii N. Six til Fire Insurance and Ileal liaiatn I. E. Ulpple—Fire Insurance—Heal Ka .dte —Kent Collecting. I*6l Market dt, bell plione. TalOra George K. Shope. Hill Tailor, 1241 Mar> Ket. Kali Kooda are now radr. Slitna and Ki.uinel l.ottrra I'oulton, 307 Market street. Bell phon*. Prompt and efrtclent aervica. Use Telegraph Want Ads
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers