Ml iKefcivJKl EM Making Your Job Pay Beatrice Fairfax Gives Women Who Work Vahiablo Aids in Helping Nation in Time of Critical Need. The patriotism of .\metirau women lias won for them tlio ad miration of the Nation. The part I lie j are playing to help their coun try win this great conflict to make iho world safe for democracy has inspired their husbands, brothers and bweetheaits to greater efforla, No work hns been too ditlli ult for wcmcii 10 tackle; tlioy hive lieen untiring, cheerful and etti < itnt. In this series of article", ing Yonr Jcb Pay," Beatrice ITiir lax will endeavor to encoiii:i{,o all who arc nuxit.us to make tlio most o( oppoitunities. By BEATRICE FAIRFAX "How can I make my job pay?" That is the question so many are asking. First, figure out for your self logically what you want to do and the best method of doing it; j second, take a cheery attitude. The grim necessities of business • lifo make us realize that with so j 11 -.any purposeful people journeying i definitely toward accomplishment , any idler or unpiloted dreamer or | unintelligent pretender at work is I going to 'get into the way of heavy j machinery and be crushed. Before going to work to-day, take an inventory of yourself. Find out | just what your abilities are, just what your desires are, just how i Kreat is your earnestness, and then, | having studied your equipment, 1 march down to otfer your services with a clear idea of what you have j 10 offer. The equipment anyone. ought to i-ring to work is clear knowledge, inteKlgent willingness to work hon. cstly at any job, sane desire to learn to do your work as well as it car possibly be done, and elear-eyee vision as to its possibilities. Now, when you set about enroll ing yourself for new work or seek ing advancement in your old work. Why not measure the job as well as youruelf? Why not find out all about the "fords," the "bridges," the "ferries" —all the means of getting across the river—the methods of acquainting yourself with your job? Study the work you want to do and jour fitness for it. Then enter upon it cheerfully. You will find Dandruffy Heads Become Hairless If you want plenty of thick, beau tiful, glossy, silky hair, do by all means get rid of dandruff, lor it will starve your hair and ruin it If you don't. It doesn't do much good to try to brush or wash It out The only sure way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve it, then you destroy It en tirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; ap ply it at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it In gently with the finger tips. By morning, most if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will "•ompletely dissolve and entirely de stroy every single sign and trace of it. You will find, too, that -all itch ing and digging of the scalp will •stop, and your hair will look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug f-tore. It is inexpensive and four ounces is all you will need, no mat ter how much dandruff you have. This simple remedy never fails. EDUCATIONAL r \ School of Commerce HARRISBURG BUSINESS COLLEGE Troup Uuilillnß, 13 S. Market Sa. Bell pboue 4SS| Dial 43U3 Bookkeeping, Shorthand. Steno type. Typewriting, Civil Service. OUR OFFlSH—night Training ■ by specialist* and High Grsde ' Positions. You take a Business ! Course but once. The Beat is ' what you want Day and Night ' School. Enter any Monday. A Fully Accredited Collece -LADIES— you will be more than pleased to 1 own a copy of the Winifred Worth Crochet Book It contains C 6 stunning designs. • les, Indeed, all new designs. Dan- J dj for a new beginner. Han full i and complete Instructions HOW TO CROCHET. 11 n Si BOOK MAILED TO ANY ADDRESS FOR 15 CENTS Send this coupon and 15 cent* in stamps or silver to the Harris burg Telegraph, and the book will be mailed to you from tho New York office of the publisher*. Al low a week for Its arrival. Name Address City or Town TUESDAY EVENING, HARRIBBUR.G TELEGRAPH JANUARY 22, 1918. Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1917, International News Service ' By McM vEvtorm) r-i i in 1 Sstis®bm ,t truth In the old proverb: "well be gun is half done." Prepare for your Job by studying it and yourself—it and your ability to do it. Equipment Is the most Important part of a worker's kit. Good tools veil sharpened—perfect ammuni tion, well primed And cleaned— these for workmen or soldier— what then is the equipment which each of the army of workers needs To succeed there are qualities and qualifications that are absolutely re quired. Brains, plus energy, plus health, plus cheerfulness will give you success. Now let us analyze our equipment down to a more pri mary basis. The healthy individual has a background of vitality that will give him strength. If you have adenoids or ii.digestion or eyes that bother you, why not have your difficulty attended to? You wouldn't expect a soldier to come through a cam paign very successfully with defec tive cartridges. Put your house In order before you go to work—that means, have your body clean and sweet and wholesome, well groomed and pre possessing. Bring good appearance (o act as portent of the healthy balance of body and mind that are your main equipment for the bat tle of life. To healthy- body add sane thoughts, a mind that can not con centrate, observe, remember, rea son and vision. Get in the habit of seeing what goes on about you and finding out what it means. Put your mind on the Job you are doing, remember what you learn from it and from each experience through which you have gone. Learn to figure out consequences, to imagine results, to vision future possibilities in your business. All of us remember pictures, stories, when we forget admonitions and commands. To bodily health and mental abil ity three things must be added in order to make good the chance for success: energy that translates it self into forms of action, character that combines with ambition and loyalty, cheerful enthusiasm, know ledge that is modest and yet con fident. With health and energy, knowledge and character, cheerful ness and brain to act as motive power there is hardly one chance in a hundred for failure. Why not make a study of the qualities that shall insure us suc cess?' Ml I "A Golden Sea! Customer , —A Pleasant Customer." DRUGS Delicious Food— Tempting .Service— Reasonable Prices— at the Golden Seal Luncheonette If you haven't tried one of our special lunch- I eons come in this noon. I We serve wholesome, I satisfying combination ■ luncheons at from 20c I to 35c. Ala Carte Ser- ■ vice also. Oysters in Season. I Open from 8 A. M. to 7 P. M. City Health Tests ■ prove our Ice Cream X ithe best in the city. I Try some at the foun- ■ tain—take some hpme. I UMummwErsaam I r~~7" THE YUKON By William MacLeod Raise Apparently the bed had been slept in. In the waste-paper bas ket the district attorney found something which lie held up in a significant silence. Macdonald stepped forward and took from him a small cloth sack. "One of those we keep our gold in at the bank," said the Scotsman after a close examination. "This definitely ties up Holt with the rob bery. Now for PJlllot. "He left the hotel with Holt about five this morning, the porter says." This was the contribution of the landlord. The room of Gordon Elliot was in great disorder. Garments had been tossed on the hand on every chair and had been left to lie wherever they had chanced to fall. Plainly their owner had been in great haste. Macdonald looked through the closet where clothes hung. "His new fur coat is not here —nor his trail boots. Looks to me as though Mr. Gordon had hit the trail with his friend Holt." All doubt of this was removed when a prospector reached town with the news that he had met Holt and Elliot traveling toward the divide as fast as they could drive the dogs. The big Scotsman ordered his team of Siberian wolf-hounds made ready for the trail. As he donned his heavy furs, Colby Macdonald smiled with deep satisfaction. He had El liot on the run at last. Just as he closed the door of his room, Macdonald heard the tele phone bell ring. He hesitated, then shrugged his shoulders and strode out into the storm. If he had answered the call he would have learned from Diane, who was at the other end of the line, that the stage upon which Sheba had started for Katma had not reached the roadhouse at Smith's Crossing. Five minutes later the winners of the great Alaska sweepstakes were flying down tho street in the tenth of the storm. Armed with a rifle and a revolver, their owner was rushing into Ihe hills to bring the men who had robbed his bank and killed the cashier. He traveled alone because he could go faster without a companion. It never occurred to him that he was not a match for any two men he might face. CHAPTER XX. In the Blizzard "Swlftwater" Pete, the driver of the stage between Kusiak and Katma, did not like the look of the sky as his ponies breasted the long uphill climb that ended at the pass. "Gittin' her back up for a blizzard, looks like. Doggone it. If that wouldn't jest be my luck," he mur mured fretfully. Sheba hoped there would be one, not, of course, a really, truly bliz zard such as Macdonald liad told her about, but the tail of a make believe one, enough to send her glowing with exhilaration into the: roadhouse with the happy sense of| an adventure achieved. The girl! was buoyed up by a sense of free- ] dom. For a time, at least, r,ne was escaping Macdonald's driving en-1 ergy, the appeal of Gordon Elliot's' warm friendliness, and the un voiced urging of Diane. Good old Peter and the kiddies were the only ones that let her alone. She looked back at the horses la boring up the hill. Swiftwater had got down and was urging them for ward, his long whip cracking about the ears of the leaders. He was worried. He would have liked to turn and run for It. But the last roadhouse was twenty-seven miles back. If the blizzard came howling down the slope they would tiave a sweet time of It reaching safety. Smith's Crossing was on the other side of the divide, only nine miles away. They would have to worry through somehow. Miss O'Neill knew that Swiftwa ter Pete was anxious, and though she was not yet afraid, the girl un derstood the reason for ;t. The road ran through the heart of a snowfleld, the surface of which was being swept by a screaming wind. The air was full of sifted white dust, and the road furrow was rap- Idly filling. Soon it would be oblit erated. Sheba tramped behind the stagedriver and in her tracks walked Airs. Olson, the other passenger. Reduce Your Fat Without Dieting Years ago the formula for fat re duction "diet"—"exercise." To-day It Is "Take Marmola Prescription Tab lets." Friends • tell friends—doctors tell their patients, until thousands know and use this convenient, harm less method. They eat what they like, live as they like, and still lose their two. three or four pounds of fat a week. Simple, effective, harmless Mar mola Prescription Tablets are sold b.y oil druggists—a large casn for 75c. Or If you prefer you may write direct to the Marmqla Company. 861 Woodward Ave., Detroit, Mich.—Advertisement. Through the muffled scream of the storm Swiftwater shouted back to Sheba. "You wanta keep close to me." She nodded her head. His order needed no explanation. The world was narrowing to a lane whose walls she could almost touch with her fingers. A pall of white wrapped them. Upon them beat a wind of stinging sleet. Nothing could be seen but the blurred out lines of the stage and the driver's figure. The bitter cold searched through Sheba's furs to her soft flesh and the blast of powdered ice beat upon her face. The snow was getting deeper as the road filled. Once or twice she stumbled and fell. Her strength ebbed, and the ninges of her knees gave unexpectedly be neath her. How long was it, she asked herself, that Macdonald had said men could live in a blizzard? Staggering blindly forward, Sheba bumped into the driver. He had drawn up to give the horses a mo ment's rest before sending them plunging pt the snow again. "No chance," he called into the young woman's ear. "Never make Smith's In the world. Goln' try for miner's cabin up gulch little way." The team struck in the drifts, fought through, and was blocked again ten yards beyond. A dozen times the horses gave up. answered the sting of the whip by diving head first at the white banks, and were stopped by fresh snow-combs. Pete gave up the fight. He be gan unhitching the horses, -while Sheba and Mrs. Olson, clinging to each other's hands, stumbled for ward to join him. The words he shouted across the back of a horse were almost lost in the roar of the shrieking wind. . . heluvatime ride ... gulch," Sheba made out. He flung Mrs. Olson astride one of the wheelers and helped Sheba to the back of the right leader. Swift water clambered upon its mate himself. The girl paid no attention to where they were going. The urge of life was so faint Within her that she did not greatly care whsther she lived or died. Her face was blue from the cold, her vitality was sapped. She seemed to herself to have turned to ice below the hips. Numb though* her fingers were, she must keep them fastened tightly in the frozen mane of the animal. She recited her lessons to herself like a child. She mult stick on— she must —she must. Whether she lost consciousness or not Sheba never knew. The next Fashions of To-Day - By May Manton It would be impossible to find a more attractive, youthful, dancing frock than this one for the debutante or for the girl who has not yet made her bow. jjjr „ p It is just as charming and grace -7 ful as can be while it is abso ■'V' lutely simple withal. The little Sy. bodice is made in the Japanese j\\ ' V\ style that is always so pretty /' m ' \ anc * t ' iat a ' so ' s so sim P' e - The skirt shows the new drapery at t ' ie back which you may call a A | bustle, but it is really more A graceful and attractive than the r J yards 36- inch silk for the waist. Five yards of 40-inch cotton voile will make the costume to the right, and 1% yards 3 6-inch novelty silk will be required for the trimming. The model is an excellent -one for the woman who is making over frocks added to the wardrobe at last sum mer's end. The skirt, of course, fea tures the straight, gathered tunic. First Model; Pictorial Review Dres No. 7583. Sizes, 14 to 20 years. Price, 20 cents. Second Model; Costume No. 7fio3. .Sizes, 34 to 50 inches busfc Price, 25 cents. ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL BY JAN 10 M'I.KAN Tliey both breezed into the big room together and the quiet little woman observed both of them close ly. One was small, with soft rosy cheeks and glasses and a curved mouth. She wore a plain brown suit and a soft hat pulled down over a quantity of soft reddish hair. The other woman was stately and re served. She Wore black velvet and gorgeous furs and a an all very smart hat with a tight close veil. Both of them wanted a little girl. "I was told that you had several children that are desirable," said one. It was she of the velvet and furs, and she did not smile as she spoke. "I am looking for a little girl," said the other, and her voice spoke of good things to eat and kisses. The little woman at the desk waited to write something in her book and then she rose courteously. She knew that both these women were going to want Goldie. "Yes," we have several children," she assented, "several very sweet little girls." She looked at one wom an, but her sympathy could not help going out to the other, the mother woman. She wished vaguely that the decision rested with her and that she might give the child where she wished. But there were others high er in authority, and it was not a simple matter to allow a child to be taken from the home. Its managers prided themselves on the way the place was run and the fact that no child was given up unless it was thought to be for its ultimate good. In fact, no child ever left the Home unless it wanted to, and in spite of the fact that the Abel Home was run as other institutions of the kind, no child ever wanted to leave or was unhappy in spite of the lack of the personal element. Good wom en did what they could for the chil dren, there was as much of the home influence in the place as could pos sibly be managed, and there were no uniforms. In the old-fashioned sunny room there were perhaps ten or twelve little girls. They looked up as their beloved Miss Mason entered with two strange ladies and a thrill of inter est made them forget to go on with their play. Strange ladies always meant that some one mysteriously disappeared from their midst. Last W*ek it had been Rosalie, the week before then Ted and Gladys. Who would go this time? And strange to say, all eyes turned toward the win dow there, on the broad window seat, the sun streaming down over a mass of coppery hair, sat Goldie. Miss Mason saw her with a throb of dismay. The woman In black velvet saw the wonderful hair, gasp ed a little, and exclaimed: "What a beautiful child!" The little woman in brown saw j her, saw the -childish brown and ! wide inquiring eyes wanted her sud | denly, fiercely, and said almost in | voluntarily: "The darling!" Miss Mason heard the words and nodded appreciatively. "Come here, Goldie, she chirped, and Goldie obediently came across the room and smiled with an adorable three cornered smile at Miss Mason. "She is really lovely," said the woman in black. "I.ow about her family? Is it all right?" Miss Mason drew herself up. The families of the children In the home were always carefully investigated before a child was put In what they called the "adoption class." Miss Mason almost took it as a personal matter in regard to Goldie. "Her family Is above reproach, and she is absolutely healthy madam," she said stiffly. The other woman had gone down on Ijer knees before the child and was laughing into her face. "Do you like dolls?" she asked breath lessly. The big eyes fixed themselves on How to Cure Chapped Skin in Winter In warm weather no one suffers from chapped hands or face as the heat has a tendency to draw a nat ural oily moisture to the surface of the skin which keeps it soft and smooth. In winter the natural oils of the body are prevented by the cold from reaching the skin and as a result chaps, roughness and even chilblains may result. As the chap ped. bleeding and rough skin is hu miliating and often very painful the following valuable information will undoubtedly be welcomed by many. After wnshing always take great care to immediately dry the bunds and face. From your druggist get a small jar of Am-.0-nized cocoa cream and rub tills well into the skin at night before retiring. Kvery trace of-Borcness will unusually vanish after a single application and the akin will become soft, velvety smooth and white. Am-o-nized Cocoa Cream costs little, is easy to apply and has enormous sale at this time of the year as tt seems to contain just the nourishment required to j keep the skin in perfect condition' during the winter months. If you know anyone who is troubled with chapped skin you will be doing fhem ? rea s. f *Y or filing this to their attention. There Is nothing bet ter. t the strange face that was all soft r and quivering with feeling. Then the child dimpled quickly. "Little ones?" she asked softly, "to cud - die?" j The woman nodded. But the furs j of the tall woman in black swept the floor too as that haughty person c bent forward. "Ilow would yott like i to come and live in my home?" she , asked in a voice that was studiously sweet. "There would be toys, anil perhaps a ride every day iii a big 1 car." t "And a doll?" f There was a rapt pause. Children are strange little ani j mals, they sense character so quick i ly. Goldie hesitated for barely a 1 moment, and then she leaned to , ward the brown kneeling figure. "Don't look so sorry," she said • sweetly. "1 love you," she adinit , ted, growing braver, and then sud j denl.v becoming shy, she turned to . her never failing friend, Miss Mason, p and buried her coppery head on the motherly shoulder, i ~A s, J liss Mason said afterward. "I • i ,' 10pe child would choose . wisely. One woman wanted a little t girl, the other wanted a toy." > Advice to the Lovelorn MAKE THE BEST OF IT J DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I have beer, going about with a chap twenty-one (six months my junior), for three years. We have grown to love each other. Before our acquaintance ho went about - with another girl I knew, but they had a dispute and didn't speak to each other until only last week. He is again going about with her and I seriously object. What shall I do? He told mo he didn't want any one building aircastles l about him, as he will have to lead a bachelor's life for several years, to help support his parents and sisters, one of whom I he is educating. I am lonely and! dread the moment my mother hears ol' his re-friendship with this gtrl 1n ; question, for I cannot reason with I her. Please advise mo what to do! and also if I am in the right—he should not see this girl again. ARDATH. My dear girl, what can ydu do about it? If your friend again en joys his visits to the girl for whom he used to care, don't you see that you are nagging at him and trying to forbid his seeing her will accom plish nothing? Now, he has dis tinctly told you that you must at earn of marriage, with him as "1 FEEL SAFE .NOW" SAYS BRAKEMAN Risk) Business For Man With Rheu matism to Keep on the Job J' AX LAC FIXED HIM UP "Exposure to all kinds of weather | is part of my job," says D. I). Strong, a brakeman who lives at Campbell, I Pa., "and I contracted a fine brand of rheumatism that soon got so bad 1 began to lose my nerve." "I had aches and paing in my arms and shoulders and they sort of stiffened up so that "i wasn't quite as quick as I should hav.e been and I got to feeling mighty awkward and an awkward brakeman doesn't live very long as a rule. "So I began looking around for something to help me out and every-1 wher.e I went I heard 'Tanlac, Tan lac, Tanlac' until 1 began taking it I myself. And it helped me so quick you'd hardly believe it. Now I'm all limbered up and all my aches and pains are gone. Tanlac is certain ly the top notch medicine." Tanlac is now being introduced here at Gorgas' Drug Store. Tanlac is also sold at the Gorgas Drug Store in the P. R. R. Station; in Carlisle at W. G. Stevens' Phar- I rnacy; Elizabethtown, Albert W. Cain; Greencastle, Charles B. Carl] I Middletown, Colin S. .Few's Phar macy; Waynesboro, Clarence Croft's I Pharmacy; Mechanlcsburg, H. F. j Brunhouse.—Adv. , My Liver and Kidneys Bothered Me Caught Cold Easily says Mr. L. Craig, 1630 Elm street, Harrisburg. For several years I have been feeling miserable, gas would form in my stomach and cause bloating and pain. My liver and kidneys bothered me. I would get feverish, tired and sleepy. My head was stopped up and I caught cold easily. I tyid no ambition and was discouraged be cause nothing seemed to help much. 1 had no faith in patent medicine, j but as Sanpan jvas so highly recom • mended, I decided to try It. 1 be gan to improve right away, and in a short while I was well. Sanpan is being introduced at Kel ler's Drug Store. 405 Market street, Harrisburg;.—Adv. your fairy price. If you are Just to be his friend, then ho has every right to havo other friends. Sinca ho cannot be more than your friend, why don't you cease building your I whole life with him as the keystone, ; and find other Interests to fill in I part of your time? When a girl | finds herself in a situation where she is practically helpless she is I very foolish indeed to protest and | argue and to make herself and ev erybody else miserable. Do you ever have the "blues"? That discouraged feeling often ] comes from a disordered stom ach, or an inactive liver. Get your digestion in shape and the bile acting properly—then the "blues" will disappear. You will soon be cheerful, if you take SEEEHAM'S PILLS the people's remedy for life's common ailments. They act j thoroughly on the stomach, liver and bowels, and soon reg ' ulate and strengthen these im portant organs. Purely vege table—contain no harmful drugs. Whenever you feel despondent a few doses will Make Things look Brighter ke*est Sale of Any Medicine in the WorUL Sold everywhere. In boxes. 10c. # 25c. ASTHMA ~ There is no "cure" but relief is often ft brought by- ft Little Body-Guard InYour Home'' Ambition Pills For Nervous People The great nerve tonic —the famous Wendell's Ambition Pills—that will put vigor, vim and vitality into ner vous tired out, all in, despondent people in a few days. Anyone can buy a box for only 60 cents, and H. C. Kennedy is author ized by the maker to refund the purchase price if anyone is dissatis fied with the first box purchased. Thousands praise them for gen eral debility, nervous prostration, mental depression and unstrung nerves caused by over-indulgence in alcohol, tobacco or overwork of any kind. For any affliction of the nervous system Wendell's Ambition Pills aro unsurpassed, while for hysteria; trembling and neuralgia they are simply splendid. Fifty cents at li. C. Kennedy's and dealers every where.—Advertisement. RHEUMATISMLEAVES YOU FOREVER Deep Seated Uric Acid Deposits Are' Dissolved and the Hlicmiiatic Pol son Starts to Leave the System Within Twciity-ftnir Hours George A. Gorgas whom you all know is authorized to say to every rehumatlc sufferer in this vicinity that if two bottles of Allenrhu, the sure con querer of rheumatism,-docs not stop all agony, reduce swollen Joints ana do away with even the slightest twinge of rheumatic pain, he will gladly return your money without comment. Allenrhu has been tried and tested for years, and really marvelous re sults huve been accomplished in most severe cases where the suffering and agony was intense and piteous and where the patient was helpless Allenrhu relieves at once. Imme diately after you start to take it tlia good work begins. It searches out the uric acid deposits, dissolves the secretions and drives rheumatic poison out of the body through the kidneys and bowels. It's marvelous how quickly It acts. Blessed relief often comes In two days, and even in cases where the suttering is most painful all tracts disappear in a few days. Mr. Jamfs If. Allen, the discoverer of Allenrhu, who for manv years suf fered the torments of acute rheuma-j tism, desires all sufferers to knoidfl that he does not want a cent of one's money unless Allenrhu ly conquers this worst of all JMI eases, and he has instructed Oe Oorgas to guarantee it in stance. 5