4 BIG TIMBER ! BERTRAND W. SINCLAIR OpyrUht. 1916, fcjr Uttl*. %e*wn 6 Co, 1 ' ' (Continued) "All right. Don't hike into the 'woods and get lost though." She circled the segment of bay, climbed a low. rocky point and found herself a seat on a fallen tree. Out fide the lake heaved uneasily, still ■lotted with whltecaps whipped up by the southerly gale. At her feet 1 surge after surge hammered the 1 gravelly shore. Far through the woods beh,ind her the wind whistled jand hummed among swaying tops of 1 giant fir and cedar.. There was a heavy freshness ill that rollicking wind, an odor resinous and pungent mingled with that elusive smell of green growing stuff along the shore. Beginning where she sat, tree trunks rose in Immense brown' pillars, run . ning back in great forest naves, shadowy always, floored with green moss laid in a rich, soft carpet for Lesson in Scientific Complexion Renewing Everyone has a beautiful skin un- ■ derneath the one exposed to view. ! • Bear that in mind and it will be easier I to understand the correct principal in acquiring a lovely complexion. Na ture is constantly shedding the top skin in flaky particles like dandruff, only much smaller in sire. In abnor mal conditions, or in advancing age, these particles are not shed as rapid ly as in robust youth. The longer they remain the more soiled or faded they become—that's the immediate cause of a "bad complexion." It has been discovered that ordinary mercoltzed wax, to be had at any drug store, will absorb these worn out particles. The absorption while hastening Nature's work, goes on gradually enough to cause no incon venience. In a week or two the trans formation is complete The fresh, healthy-hued. youthful underskin is then wholly in evidence. You who are not satisfied with your complex ions should get an ounce of merco lized wax and try this treatment. Use the wax nightly, like cold cream, washing it off mornings.—Advertise- ment. Your Property— Does it need repairs? Is it in good shape to go through a haid winter without show ing signs of deprecia tion? Now is the tune to make repairs. Lumber prices have not advanced greatly. But we look for increases in pnee before long. We have a good size stock of lumber on hand. Later when coal, grain, fruit and vegetables be gin to move we expect serious trouble getting shipments. United Ice & Coal Co. Forster & Cowden Sts. Sanpan Has Worked Wonders says Mr. Roy French, 311 Adams , street, Steelton, Pa. "1 suffered for the past year with i constipation and stomach trouble, after eating would bloat and the pressure from gas caused pains un der my ribs, my stomach never felt right, I was troubled a lot with headaches. "When I awoke in the morning, I was sore all over, my eyes burned and were swollen, I felt all tuckered out and often during the day felt drowsy and sleepy. "My head and throat were clogged up, I could not reason clearly, this made me Irritable and I looked upon every little thing as a big task. "I tried all these advertised so called great remedies but nothing helped. I then thought I would take just one mere chance and try the ony one I had not tried, and to my surprise it straightened me out in short order. "Sanpan is the medicine that did it, it worked wonder in my case." Sanpan is being explained at Kel ler's Drug Store, 405 Market street, Harrlsburg. where the Sanpan man it meeting the people.—Adv. t' Kodakeryl and BI! Photographic Materials alI °wance on old Kodaks and Cameras In exchange. Jas. Lett Jl. Second St. SATURDAY EVENING, HARRISBTJRG TELEGRAPH! , - SEPTEMBER 8, 1917. Bringing Up Father -> copyright 1917, International News Service - -> WELL -HOW Sf ™ Et>e '-RE B WHERE 00 VES-THE RICH BUT THEY <|\|& TROE ■ A .mrv-,g ARE ~tO U THES.E n <oo ° rT % k | J — - "• 1 ' 1 * " _' ~ —— 1 1 —-—— -1 1, ——— mmmm ——————■ i■ I ————sL£||MM the wood sprites' feet. Far beyond the long gradual lower slope lifted a range of saw backed mountains, the sanctuary of wild goat and bear, and across the rolling lake lifted other mountains sheer from the water's edge, peaks rising above timber line in majestic contour, their pinnacle crests grazing the clouds that scuddod before the south wind. Beauty? Yes. A wild, Imposing grandeur that stirred some respon sive chord in her. If one only could live amid such surrounding vith a contented mind, she thought, the wilderness would have compen% sations of its own. She had an un easy feeling that isolation from everything that had played an im portant part in her life might be the least depressing factor in this new existence. She could not view the rough and ready standards of the woods with much equanimity— not as she had that day seen them set forth. These things were bound to be a part of her daily life, and all the brief span of her years had gone to forming habits of speech and thought and manner diame trically opposed to what she had so far encountered. It was too late to mourn over lost opportunities now, but she did wish there was some one thing she could do and do well, some service of value that would guarantee self support. If she could only pound a typewriter or keep a set of books or even make a passable attempt at sewing she would have felt vastly more at ease in this rude logging camp, knowing that she could leave it if she desired. So far as she could see things she looked at them with measurable clearness, without any vain illusions FOR YOUR LIFE Duty Demands Robust Health Fight to get it and keep it Fight—fight day in and day out to prevent being overtaken by ills and nils. Keep wrinkles from marring the cheek and the body from losing Its youthful appearance and buoy ancy. Fight when ill-health is com ing with its pallor and pains, defects and declining powers. Fight to stay Its course and drive It off. But fight intelligently. Don't fight without weapons that can win the d&y, for without the intelligent use of effective weapons the pallor epreads and weakness grows and a seemingly strong man or woman oft times becomes a prey to Ills after all. You will not find this class of per sons in the hypoferrin ranks. No unhealthy, dull, draggy, droopy per sons in that line. It is a hale, hearty, robust aggregation of quick-steppers who view life in a Joyous frame of mind and are mentally and physically equal to any emergency. Hypoferrin stands for sound body and sound mind—it Is the Invigorating tonic of the times—powerful and unsurpassed as a health restorer, vitalizer and health preserver. Fight to hold the vigor of a sound body with hypo ferrin or to stay the process of decay and restore health and strength—you win. This tonic of amazing, wonder working properties has been ap proved by physicians as a restorer and safeguard of health. It is a thoroughly scientific preparation of the very elements necessary to tone up the stomach and nerves, to build strong, vital tissue, make pure blood, firm flesh and solid, active, tireless muscles. Hypoferrin contains those mighty strength-producing agents, leclthin and-iron peptonate, in a form best adapted to benefit the body and Its organs. Its ingredients are absolute ly necessary to the blood. In nlns cases out of ten a run-down condi tion. sallow, pale complexions that "all in" feeling and frail bodies are due to lack of leclthln-and-iron pep tonate in the system. Your mental and physical strength and endurance depends upon a lecithln-an-iron peptonate laden blood: steady, dependable nerves and a healthy stomach. With these you can meet life at any angle. This wonder tonic. hypoferrin, which is as perfect as science can get to nature, meets every essential demand of the human organism. It Is safe and sure and a boon to run down. worn-out men and women. Hypoferrin means nature's own way of bringing color to the cheeks, strength to the body and keeping the vigor and buoyancy of youth. The powder and paint way of effecting beauty Is Hot needed by hypoferrin women and girls. Their blood, filled with nature's beauty stores, creates conditions that give firmness and grace to the body and the glow of health to the cheelts. No need of going through life sick ly and always feeling miserable In this age of medical science. Join the hypoferrin ranks. It puts into you the springy snap and vigor you ought to have and puts life Into your body and mind that Inspires the con fidence that you confront the world on an equal footing with anyone. Hypoferrin may be had at your druggist's or direct from us for It.oo per package. It Is well worth the price. The SenUnel Remedies Co.. Cincinnati. Ohio. concerning her ability to march triumphant over unknown fields of endeavor. Along practical lines she had everything to learn. Culture | furnishes an excellent pair of wings ] wherewith to soar in skies of ab , straction, but is a poor vehicle to j carry one over rough roads. She i might have remained in Philadel phia. a guest among friends. Pride I forbade that. Incidentally, such an j arrangement would have enabled ! her to stalk a husband, a moneyed | husband, which did not occur to her 'at all. There remained only to join j Charlie. If his fortunes mended, | well and good. Perhaps she could j even help in minor ways. ! But it was all so radically dlffer j ent brother and all from what ' she had pictured that she was filled with dismay and not a little forebod ing of the future. Sufficient, how everr unto the day was the evil thereof, she told herself at last, and tried to make that assurance work a change of heart. She was very ; lonely and depressed and full of a ' futile wish that she were a man. I Over across the bay some one was j playing an accordion, and to ita strains a stout lunged lumberjack i was roaring out a song, with all his I fellows joining strong in the chorus: | Oh, the Saginaw Kid was a cook in a ' camp way up on the Ocon-to-o-o, And the cook in a camp in them old days had a —— hard row to hoe-i-oh! Had a hard row to hoe. There was a fine, rollicking air to it. The careless note in their i-oices, the jovial lilt of their song made her envious. They at least had their destiny, limited as it might be and cast along rude ways, largely under their own control. Her wandering gaze at length came to rest on a tent top showing in the brush northward from the camp. She saw two canoes drawn up on the beach above the lash of the waves, two small figures play ing on the gravel and sundry dogs prowling alongshore. Smoke went eddying away in the wind. An In idian camp. Miss Benton supposed. She had an impulse to skirt the bay and view the Indian camp at closer range, a notion born of cur iosity. She debated this casually, and just as she was about to rise her movement was arrested by a faint crackle in the woods behind. She looked away through the deep ening shadow among the trees and saw nothing at first. But the sound was repeated at odd intervals. She sat still. Thoughts of forest animals slipped Into her mind without mak ing her afraid. At last she caught sight of a man striding through the timber, soundlessly on the thick moss, coming almost straight toward her. He was scarcely fifty yards away. Across his shoulder he bore a red dish gray burden, and in his right hand was a gun. She did not move. Bowed slightly under the weight, the man passed within twenty feet of her, so close that she could see the sweat beads glisten on that side of his face, and saw also that the load he carried was the carcass of a deer. Daily Dot Puzzle 19 T 19 • •%, I? ' >2l 16. • 23 IS' 24 25 •14- # 27 ,9# I ' *lB AZ T • 11 ? '8 *¥ 5o • T . "7 5 . * . '<<. *47 35 • 6 * 38 . .*4 *4o • 34 So 33 4* # .42 4S 44 Piffle's mother-in-law is here. Fifty straight lines will show the dear. Draw from one to two and so on I to the end. All's Well That -v Ends Well By JANE McLEAN They were talking it over. Uncle Ed. from Kansas, kind-hearted, but] stern visaged. Aunt Eliza from Maine, the cousins from Chicago and Mrs. Weldon's only brother and his wife. There was only one person outside of the family present and she had taken no part in the discus sion. She sat a little apart, in fact, and fingered the pages of a maga zine as though she were not inter ested. She was a woman about forty, interesting looking, with a face that told of a firm grip on life, and although she pretehded to take no part, she was in reality listening carefully to everything that was said. Yesterday Mrs. Weldon had been buried, and Bernice, her only child, the eccentric eighteen-year-old girl, whom none of the relatives under stood because she had never been in the least ruled by authority, was being discussed with much interest. "Of course, we'll take the child back with us," Uncle Ed. was saying in his bluff, hearty manner. "She'll like It out on the farm, and I'll give her a riding horse and see if we can't get some color into that white little face of hers." "Her mother always enjoyed my house in Portland," said Aunt Eliza stiffly, although there was a world of feeling behind the words. Aunt Eliza lived alone and was often very lonely. The thought of a young girl's voice round the house some how stirred her heart vaguely. She would really enjoy the pr.oblem of doing for Bernice, although the child was strange and unfriendly. "Don't you think she'd be happy with other young folks?" asked one of the cousins from Chicago. "What she needs now is plenty of diver sion to make her forget the past." The woman who sat by listening to the conversation smiled faintly. The relatives were all eager to have Bernice, but would they be as eauer if Bernice had not been well pro vided for, if the girl had not been left a comfortable fortune of her own, and if the caring for her meant anything at all in the way of ex penditure? Neither the silent woman or the busy chattering relatives were con scious of the lonely little figure in the next room, the girl who crouch ed low over her mother's picture, and fought back the storm of tears with every bit of will power there was In her. She wanted to storm out at them all, those men and women who cared so little about the fact that hurt her so intolerably, the awful fact that she would never see her mother again. They were talking again, be tween them they were about to de cide her future. Evidently what she wanted or desired made no dif ference at all—she was simply to be disposed of without being con sidered. The girl in her grief had a distorted view of things, she did not take into consideration the kindly efforts of these well mean ing people; all she wanted was to be left alone, to stay where she was and to live her life in her own way. She wondered dully why Miss Heminway was so quiet and FREE TO Asthma Sufferers A Haw Home Cure That Anyone Can Hie Without Discomfort or Lou of Tim*. Wt hare a New Method that cures Ath ma. and we want you to try it nt our expena*. No matter whether your raae is-of Jong standing or recent development, whether It ia present aa Hay Fever or chronic Asth ma. you ahould send for a free trial of our method. No matter in what climate you live, no matter what your age or occupa tion, if you are troubled with asthma, our method ahould relieve you promptly. We especially want to eend it to thosa anpnreutly hopeless cases, where all forms of inhalers, douches, opium preparation*, fumes, "patent smokes," etc., have failed. We want to show everyone at our own ex penae. that thla new method ia designed to end all difficult breathing, all wheeling, and all those * terrible paroxysms at once and for all time. Tbla free offer It too important to neg- ® singlo day. Write today and be gin the method at once. Send no money, oimply msil coupon below. Do It 7>>day, FREE ASTHMA COUPON FRONTIER ASTHMA CO.. Room S7SB Magara and liudaon Bt., Buffalo, N. Y. Send free trial of jour method t6i • I had nothing to say about the sub ject, and then unable to bear it any longer she softly opened the door and stepped out into the Sun light. There was silence as the black gowned figure came forward, and <ir PHE world canntt afford to con sider peace with Germany until the people rule. The sooner United States and her Allies tell this to the German people officially, Wie sooner we shall have peace. Permanent peace will follow the establishment of a Republic t W.ACKERMAN wrote the above three ■ months ago for the title page of his new book V/ "Germany, The Next Republic". His words were prophetic, for today the world stands in admiration of President Wilson's note with its direct appeal to the German people. The Evening Ledger will publish exclusively in Philadelphia "Germany, The Next Republic." The first installment will appear in TODAY'S Evening Ledger, and will be continued daily thereafter. This series of articles will help you to a full understanding of why Germany hates and fears America. It is written by a man who has had exceptional facilities for learning the real facts about Germany, and who is convinced that the goal of the United States and her Allies must be "Germany, The Next Republic." Read the first installment in TODAY'S Etrniing Sleiigrr then there was suddenly a great) patter of small talk, nn obvious j effort to cover an uncomfortable! silence, an attempt to reconcile themselves with Berntce-as to tlie t genuineness of their offers. "Here she is," said Uncle Ed. "Dear child," said Aunt Eliza. "We want you to come to Chicago' for a long visit," gusted one of the! cousins. Bernice raised her white face slowly, and her eyes looked almost green as she spoke. 'You are all very kind," she said, slowly, "but I am going to remain here for the present." "Here, in this house, all alone?" gasped her mother's brother's wife, "that's impossible!" "You seem to forget. Aunt Mabel, that it's my house, and it's my life, ] and for the present I am going to j stay here. Of course I should like i to visit you all, btjt I am not going ! to live with any of you." i Miss Heminway had stopped fin | the leaves of the magazine 1 and was listening intently. "Don't any of you understand?" I the girl burst out passionately. "I II want to live my own life, surely I ! have a right to do that. I can't s have you decide it for me, and I j can't bo taken off somewhere, Just after she's left me for good. I ,! want to get used to it, and I want , to stay here." Then the quiet woman spoke for the first time. "You are old enough , to do as you think best, Bernice," she said in her deep contralto voice , that somehow soothed the girl . wonderfully. Bernice turned and 11 met the kind eyes of this womi ' j who had been the beat friend of t' I woman who had died. Then t .; green eyes softened into gray, ai 11 a little smile hovered about t' ! girl's tense mouth. I "Thank you," she said simp; | "you're like her, you understand." ! J.S.Belsinger 212 Locust St. New Location Optometrists Opticians j Eyes Examined (No Drops) 1 1 Bclsinger Glasses as low as $2. \\wmm mil !■ ■
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers