aivd all ike RsivJlxj jjPH The Yukon By William MacLeod Ratne (Continued) A ring at the door interrupted! her. Sheba stepped forward and let in an Indian woman with a little boy clinging to her hand. "You Miss O'Neill?" she asked. ! "Yes." From the folds of her shawl she j drew a letter. The girl glanced at' the address, then opened and read; what was written. She looked up, | puzzled, first at the comely, flat footed Indian woman and afterward nt the handsome little papoose. She turned to Gordon. "ThU> letter says I am to ask this woman who is the father of her boy. What does it mean?" Gordon knew instantly what 't' meant, thought he could not guess; who had dealt the blow. The im- ; pulse to spare her pain was stronger ; In him than the desire that she; should know the truth. "Send her away," he urged. "Don't ask any questions. She has been to hurt y.ou." A fawnlike fear flashed into the! startled eyes. "To hurt me?" "I am afraid so." "But—why? I have done nobodyi any harm." Sie seemed to hold even ! her breathing in suspense. "Perhaps some of Maedonald's! enemies," he suggested. And at that there came star-flanh j into the soft eyes and a lifted tilt | of the chin cut fine as a cameo. She turned proudly to the Indian woman. "What is it that you have to tell | me i'.bout this boy's father?" Meteetse began to speak. At the I first mention of Maedonald's name[ Sheba's eyes dilated. Her smile. hcr| sweet, glad pleasure at Gordon's ar rival, were already gone like the | 'Dime of a blown candle. Cl.Mrlyj her heart was a-flutter, in fear of; Hie knew not what. When the In- ! •lian woman told how she had first! crossed the path of Macdonald, the; onlor flamed into the cheeks of the' Irish girl, but as the story pro- [ gressed, the blood ebbed even from I her lips. • Wit ha swift movement of her fin- j gers she flashed on the hall light. Her gaze searched the brown, shiny I lace of the little chap. She read j there an affidavit of the truth of his i mother's tale.. It was impossible toj|_ 5.. him and not .recognize Colby I Macdonald reincarnated. "What is your name?" asked Sheba suddenly. . The youngster hung back shyly ftir.oi'g the folds of the Indian woman's skirt. "Colmac," he Laid in last softly. "Come!" Sheba flung open the "il down the room during her ab .')ipe, pulled up in his stride. He M ood frowning at the native woman, 1ln;:i ins eyes passed to Elliot' and listened upon him. The face of the WAKE yp FEEUNG FREMAIW r\ j. 1 n a . D-„ -X I ket Cascarets liven your liver and Up! 3 l() l.pnt uOX OT i clean your thirty feet of bowels with a IKJ V/Clll out griping. You will wake up feet- X- Vsmiv ing grand. Your head will be clear. UaSCaretS tor Your breat t h r 'K ht ' tongue Clean, stomach sweet, eyes bright, step elastic and I iwnr onrl Dnitmlo complexion rosy—they're wonderful L|VGI ariQ DOWeiS. | (}et a 10-cent box now at any drug store. Mothers can safely give a . . . . whole Cascaret to children at any J o-night sure. Take Cascarets and time when they become cross, fever enjoy ".lie nicest, gentlest liver and ish, bilious, tongue coated or consti [^^j^l^ansln)OglL£lgLgjiPgD^(.R(] | natPf ) —fnscnreU are harmless. | AnAfter-InventorySale j | of High-GradeFurniture | (Odds and Ends) Our inventory just completed revealed a M number of odds and ends which we will dis- ( H H pose of at most remarkable reductions. pj The chief reason for the low price of these || H articles is that many of them are discontinued || M patterns and cannot be duplicated. Kf Note These Saving Prices : jj $30.00 Ivory Enamel Chiffonier—Adam style— Special, at $17.50 gH $28.00 Ivory Enamel Triple Mirror Toilet Table P g? —Mahogany top—Special, at $16.50 Vp $27.50 Solid Mahogany Sanitary Wood Red— § Special, at $15.00 ff $38.50 Fumed Oak Dining Table—s4-inch top— 8-ft. extension Limbert make Special, at Wa m „ . $20.00 fe-i Spanish leather slip seats—will match above table—Special, at $35.00 S $30.00 Decorated Lacquer Queen Anne -Arm Chair—Special, at $17.50 any—Special, at $15.00 1 §525.00 Colonial Drop-Leaf Sewing Table—solid == Mahogany—Special, at $15.00

' ard lIT 'l(h kk i I km II I Oil I the collar. I F '^' ie P attern No- 9627 is cut 1 1/ Br in sizes from 34 to 42 inches bust measure. It will.be mailed • to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper on . 9627 Coat Dress, 34 to 42 bust. receipt of fifteen cents, ten cents Price 15 cent*. for the braiding design. Life's Problems Are Discussed By Mrs. Wilson Wootlrow The man in uniform is going to and fro on the earth these days and up and down in it. You see him around "the hotels and in the railway stations, in the trolley cars and on the streets, and always moving, always alert, always with an air of purpose about him. There is no dawdling uncertainty in his actions; he knows just where he is going and what he has got to do. It is suggestive in a way of the pre cision and purpose to be observed in the different parts of'some intricate and perfectly co-ordinating piece of machinery. Indeed, it is a wonderful machine that T T ncle Sum has built up in the past few months—this Army and Navy of splendid, stalwart young men—and a very different fighting force from any that was ever before assembled. I had felt this in a way, had sens ed the "different" quality without knowing just where it lay; but it re mained for a young captain of the regulars with whom I was talking to put it into words for me. We had been discussing the ques tion of desertion, and I asked him if they encountered much of it. "In the strict sense of the word, hardly at all," he said. "Most of the cases we have to deal with are those of young fellows who run away in order to see their girls. They get the longing, and can't resist it." "And what do they get when you bring them back?" I asked. "Six months in prison for a first offense," he answered laconically. "Repeaters in proportion." Then a quizzical little twinkle showed in his eye, and he added: "The circum stances have a lot of bearing, though. We know the men, you see, and we know pretty well the motive behind the desertion. One of these birds that goes because he's simply bound to jump the traces unywliere finds scant mercy; but a poor, love-sick kid— well, that's something else. The army to-day, you must understand," he observed reflectively, "is a pretty human sort of an organization." I looked about me. There were, if I remember correctly, a couple of naval lieutenants, a major of cav alry, a lieutenant on staff duty, the chief petty officer of a battleship and several privates—a talkative, happy go-lucky, fine lot of boys. I had been interestedly watching and listening to them, and as a re sult the adjective which the cap tain had employed to describe the service as it stands to-day struck me with a sudden realization of apt ness. Human! That was exactly the word to express it. It was * formerly held that mili tay discipline demanded that a great gulf be fixed between officers and men. But here they all seemed to be comrades, quite regardless of their rank. One of the men told me about a football game in which tho teams were composed partly of officers and partly of men, and hilariously recit ed the insulting epithets showered on the shoulder-strapped players by coaches who an hour afterward would be standing at attention, with hands up in stiff salute, when one of these same officers passed. The story would have made an old-time martinet turn blue with horror. I turned to the major pres ent and asked whether such free dom might not tend to create a cer tain looseness and lack of efficiency. "Not a bit of it," he affirmed. "The soldier to-day responds more quick ly to military training and accepts its restrictions more readily than under the old system because he talks to his officers and understands the reason for what is being done. Wo have simply scrapped a lot of snobbish junk, and are getting down to essentials. "That is the direction which the whole modern method is taking in I actual warfare. On the other side I when a company goes 'over the top' j the olflcers wear no distinguishing j insignia nor uniform, neither do they lead, but charge in a line with their men, as like all the rest in ap pearance as peas in a pod." This conversation roused in me a deal of speculation. When you come to think of it, these young men and the ones who will shortly follow them into the cantonments and training camps are the men who will direct the future destiny of this country. And the manner in which they will direct it will be largely governed by the impressions they are now receiving. They are shuttling .back and forth across the continent, doing more traveling in many cases than they would otherwise have dreamed of accomplishing in all I their lives, and incidentally becoming ; familiar with tho people and cus toms of all sections. More than that, they arc going across the ocean and coining into intimate contact with the people and customs over there. Does not all this point to a tre mendous breaking down of section alism and provincialism and to the development not only of a new na tional consciousness but of a new world consciousness? Broadened and enriched by their experiences, these men should handle the problems of the future with a quickened intelli ! gence. Then add to this the effect of the j "human" quality in that organiza j tion in which they itre banded, and i what is to be the result? I For years the world has been | talking about "The Brotherhood of Man." The talk didn't mean very I much. "The Brotherhood of Man" was a nice mouth-filling phrase for orators and could generally be trusted to get a hand. But that was about all there was to it. The few idealists who from time to time tried to put the principle into actual prac tice found themselves extremely lonely. Yet in this hour when the whole world is at strife, and men by mil lions are tearing at one another's throats, the better understanding and the wider sympathy which are dawn- A SUCCESSFUL REMEDY All 'things succeed which really deserve to, —which fill a real need, which prove their worth. The fact that the famous old root and nerb remedy, Lydia E. Ptnkham's Vege table Compound, has for three gen erations been relieving women of this country from the worst forms of female ills and has won such a strong place in our American homes proves its merit beyond the question of a doubt. It will well pay any won;an who is in need of such a medicine J.o try it. What Women In Their "Forties" Need IIV V SIK< IAI.IST Many women approach the critical changing period of their lives that cornea between the ages of forty and fifty, unmindful of its tremendous importance to their future health and happiness. Not understanding the functional changes taking place in their bodies, they work beyond their strength, often break down, become nervous wrecks, their "bodies suffer ing with fatigue and their weakened nerves trembling at every step. Often in their weakened condition capillary hemorrhage becomes excessive, this added drain compelling them to take to their beds from nervous exhaus tion. What these women need is some thing that will instantly relieve the pressure on the overworked nerve centers and give them the vitality to utand up under the grueling strain. Wonderfully effective results are often given in such conditions by the simple use of Margo Nerve Tablets, a skillful combination of six of the besc nerve vitalizing elements known to modern chemistry. These little tab lets contain no dangerous habit-form ing drugs and are entirely harmless in their action. Thousands of women can testify that Margo Nerve' Tablets strengthen the Jaded nerves, revive the tired bruin and put the energy and courage Into the body that enablos one to stand up under the unusual strain of the changing period. Margo has to do these things or it costs nothing as Kennedy's Cut-ißate Medicine Store and other leading druggists sell It on a positive guarantee of relief or money back. —Advertisement. ing seem to presage the Brotherhood of Man not only as an iridescent dream but as an imminent possibility. Many Exhibitors to Show at Big Automobile Event Thirty-two firms of the automobile business have thus far promised to exhibit at the big show of the Har risburg Motor Dealers which begins January 26 and ends February 2. This includes the following accessory dealers: Atlantic Refining Company, Ej.celsior Auto Company, Front-Mar ket Motor Supply Company, E. Ma ther Company, Myers Accessories House, Sterling Auto Tire Company, H. G. Zimmerman. This list of exhibitors includes: C. L. Conover, E. L>. Cowden, Crispen Motor Car Company, Denby Sales Corp., Driscoll Motor Car Co., Ens minger Motor Co., Harrisburg Auto Co., Hupmobile Sales Corp., P. H. Keboeh, (Jackson Motor Car Co.), Keystone Motor Car Co., W. J. Marks, Elmer T. Mehring, Miller Auto Co., Monn Bros., Overland- Harrisburg Co., Packard Motor Car Co.. Pen Mar Auto Co., Andrew Red mond, E. W. Shank, Velle-Harrls burg Co., Geo. B. Zech., Martin IJ. |j 308 Market St. | Rummage Sale |' | Begins Tomorrow Morning at 9 O'clock || , It's a Rummage Sale of odd lots of good, desirable merchan- 11 m dise —but in some cases only one article of a kind. We have grouped many wonderful bargains into 4 big lots pj 'f ] and have marked each lot at one special price—a price that will W>. tip more than make it worth your while to attend this sale. ; v< v jjjn This lot contains Serge Skirts— k| Lot No. 1 Waists —Children's Furs, etc. —for- riO merly values worth up to $5.00 — llj Special Rummage Sale Price at ® Q An assemblage of Children's |j|| Lot No. 2 Coats; —Women's Bathrobes—Serge and Fancy Cloth Skirts—and Silk Petticoats—originally values up to rp OQ Ctl $ 10.00 Special Rummage Sale •j * jil j| Price at— .j| s|j A collection of Women's Coats— I Lot No. 3 Skirts Furs Serge Dresses that ™mm p! ■(Cj sold up to $1 5.00 formerly—Special m Rummage Sale Price at — f|j fj| This assortment consists of yD 4 Lot No. 4 Women's Coats—Misses' Coats— nri PP gj Dresses of Serge and Silk—Suits, M* "1 ■ 1*"" m H etc. —Special Rummage Sale Price g ij I r —— ~l |t Three Lots of Women's $7.50 and i 1 ffl i . •'//SB.OO Shoes, Special at ffi II 7/ $5.45 . | 0i; ;// LOT NO. 1— |j |f fig; / *I, Field Mouse Brown Kid Boots—plain toe—long vamp—high cut B<4- > , J My / "ill inch model—turned sole —high curved Ixmis liecls. S 1 i/\ LOT NO. 2 ~ . j; ]j .M bpj ; L >\ African Brown Kid Boots, with Sand Suede Tops; also Brown Patent ■ ljl ffij rn. xk I/eather Vamps, with Brown Kid Tops—B -inch models, with plain toe > W4 Hn VV XX —long vamps—turned soles—and high covered I-ouis XV heels. J fp W[\X '\ LOT NO. 3 Mm \ \ \X*-A Gray Kid and Field Mouse Brown Kid, with cravenetted tops to ! I 5 j \ maieh—B-inch models—long vamps imitation tips new 1 % -incii Ml jyUl W \ Cuban heel—(iootlycar welted soles. I if S SP The above are all new and up-to-date models and are t Kjj here in all sizes ami widths. 1■ .|| ' | lumma, C. A. Slough, H. J. Wll •liams (Williams Motor Co). Two automobile insurance agents will also have space in the show, William S. Essick and A. L. Hall. ' U. S. TO USE MAIL TRUCKS The introduction of motor cars for handling mail routes came a step nearer last evening when the time expired for proposing bids to equip the circuit that is to take in Har risburg, Beading and Hagerstown. A number of bids came in at the last moment and with the others were turned over the fourth assistant post master general. One of the first results of this new traffic, will be the repairing of the road between Har risburg and Beading, long in poor condition/ The government will con tribute SIO,OOO a mile for this re pair work. DECEMBER A BAD MONTH Siventeen inches of snow and three inches of rain felt during the month of December, 1917. This informa tion is given in the Monthly Meteo rological Survey for the month of December, and just issued by E. R. Demain, chief of the local weather bureau. The accumulated deficiency of temperature since January 1, 1917, was 576 degrees. The average daily 7 deficiency was 1.6 degrees. Decem ber 30 was the coldest day of thafi date in thirty years, a temperatura of three degrees belo** zero being recorded. A Sure Way To End Dandruff There is one sure way that has never failed to remove dandruff at. once, and that is to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, just get about four ounces of plain, common liquid arvon from any drug store (this is all you will need), ap ply it at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gentlv with the finger tips. By morning, most if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will com pletely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may \ have. I You will find all itching and dig ging of the scalp will stop instantly, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and so % ft, and look and feel a hundred times better—Adv.