■ . , Wi IX\ 1 17IU. BE NATURAL AND BE "REAL" Affectation Bores Friends and Yourself; Frankness and Honesty Make One Loved By ISi:\TKICE FAIRFAX "A real person" is one who has an honest knowledge of himself, the mental detachment to stand off and criticise that self, the fineness and strength to cultivate the best and ronquer the worst in that self, and enough healthy impulse to thorough ly compel vital, energetic living. "A real person" has healthy instincts, normal desires and an honest way of expressing them, and sanity enough to respect other people's in dividuality even while expressing Ills own. Affectation surely must bore the i one who practices it. It means a j constant strain, a constant mincing along on tip-toes when you want' to stride on the balls of your feet, i And even as a man must have dn | excellent memory to be a. good liar, i so he has to keep careful track of his pose and the things he has done >to establish It, in order to keep on affecting: it. The poser is always forced to live up to something he is not. He has to keep his eye on his audience to see if he is making: a successful im pression. He has to go through the strain of posturing and grimacing and play-acting. Xo matter how much he longs to wash off the "grease-paint" and "make-tip" from his attitude, he has to go on wear ing them. Now, for naturalness. What will ii do for you? Well, first ol' all, the "You" you honestly are will attract the friendships that are honestly congenial to it and will be able to <io the things it honestly longs to do. You don't wear yourself out when you express yourself; you just grow freely along the lines that are nat ural for you. How are you going to be natural ? In previous articles I have tried to indicate how you may find out what you really are and which of the qualities you really have you want to cultivate. After you have done that, what you want to do with your naturalness is to bring it into human relations. The first use you make of your naturalness in your human relation ship is frankly and honestly to ex press the affection you feel for peo ple. Suppose someone you like i breaks an appointment with you. I The Real You says, "X like Jerry. I | This new method I prevents I faded Jr WILDROOT i 9 a preparation that is guaranteed to remove dandruff —your money back if it fails! You can apply it yourself, or your hair-dresser will do it for you. A week's trial of WILDROOT will work wonders. Here Is another use for WILD- and wipe your hair, one strand at ROOT which brings out the real a time, from the roots clear to the beauty of your hair as nothing ends. Then see how soft and else can. Try this treatment today; fluffy and pretty your hair is I Moisten a cloth with WILDROOT, Your money back if it fails. Wildroot is for sale by all good drug stores, and all good barber shops. Applications may also be had at any first class hair • dressing parlor. Always sold under our unconditional guarantee that it will do as tut say or your money will be refunded. WILDROOT CHEMICAL COMPANY BUFFALO, N. Y. Wildroot Shampoo Soap, when used in connection with Wildroot, will hasten th treatment. 11l Health Of Neglect of Kidneys and Liver Many organs take part In assimf lation of food, and a number are ac tive in eliminating those portions of ilie food which are not tuken into the blood for the upbuilding of th body. Of the eliminative organs, the liver and the kidneys are of majot importance, and are most likely tc lie overworked and become diseased. When such is the case, various trou bles of a digestive and eliminative character occur, and such troubles are so frequent, and so common that it is absolutely necessary to find isomt relief. Warner's Safe Kldnej \>nd Liver Remedy was compounded over 40 years ago to help equalize the work of both kidneys and liver. How successful'it has been Is evi denced by its widespread sale and its value is attested by an immense number of appreciative users who through these many years have put it to the severest tests with the most satisfactory results. The experience of multitudes la WEDNESDAY EVENING, KARRISBURG &&&& TELEGRAPH T\NT T ARY ox 101 o Bringing Up 4 *~.* Copyright, 1917, International News Service """ 'I 1 f ' THAT'S Mt*>b THAT'b- COUNT SHE THREY, HIM TTTI I THACT MOW HAVF V/HO \<o FOR A I like him well enough to excuse him 1 for failing me yesterday. Probably he had a reason. Perhaps he isn't ' quite brave enough to come and ' make his- excuses to me for fear I ' won't believe him. Well, I like him well enough to give him the benefit ' of the doubt. I'll ask him what it : was all about." . j That, I insist, is the natural atti j tude. But we have cultivated cer tain poses of pride and dignity. We have taken a position of feeling that certain things are our due and of insisting upon them. So what you probably do is to assume a very top-loftical attitude when Jerry comes along and, by that pose of frozen dignity, Jill Jerry with an idea that you don't care much about him after all. or that you are almost too exacting to be a real friend. If you like people, express it hon estly. Don't you see how easy that will be after you haw learned to ex press your tastes and inclinations honestly? Don't you see how nat ural that will be after you have cul tivated your better tastes and inclin ations? Come, Jack Wntkins, let us have you for an example. You have found out that you are full of fun and that you like to be amused and enter tained—that you have a tendency to let cheap vulgarity amuse and "en j tertain you. You try to educate your j love of wit and humor and beauty, I t and you get yourself beyond horse j sometimes worth more than the wis dom even of the brightest physicians. Hence, if you have liver or kidnev troubles, you cannot do better thaii call upon your druggist for Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy. "About 7 years ago I was so weak and worn out that I could hardly work. After trying other things without relief, I tried War ner's Safe Kidney and Liver Reme dy. In a short time the pain left me, my urine cleared up and the rheumatism and dyspepsia vanished. We have used Warner's Safe Reme dies ever since with great success in our family." O. F. Rose, Burton ville, Kentucky, U. S. A. Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy contains no harmful ingredi ents and should be used when the kidneys need attention. Sold by druggists everywhere. Sample sent on receipt of ten cents. Warner's Safe Remedies Co., Dept. 266, Rochester. N. Y. 1 play humor and burlesque beauty to an enjoyment of finer things. J You're expressing: yourself natur- I ally enough; only now you go to 1 charming comedies, instead of to 1 cheap burlesque shows, and you t wear ties of a wonderful shade oi 1 blue instead of green ones checked off with purple and dotted with yel ■ low. You still like a good time and - attractive clothes, only now you are 5 reaching a more cultivated standard t of what is fun and what is beauty. 1 Well now, honest Jack, you are t walking up Main street one evening and along comes a girl—overdressed, ; swaggering, bold. painted and 1 cheaply alluring. Won't you be like -1 ly to pass her by in favor of the 1 liner type, just because you have ' begun to appreciate fineness all along the line? A little later a charming young - woman who is well-groomed and full of the magnetism of clean, sweet 1 youth passes by. Now that you have • begun to be natural, your impulse • is to go up and fairly demand ac quaintanceship with her. This is the particular point at which all ■ writers on naturalness stop and hes itate. Lucy Wilton is attracted by , you, too, Jack. The natural thing for you two youngsters to do is to i scrape acquaintance? Why can't you? First of all, the game just isn't ] played that way; and either one of | you, seeing the other one ready to break the rules of the game, won't I quite trust that other to play fairlyl | and squarely always and to give an I | absolutely honest deal, i Naturalness in the < individual is j charming; but it cannot go beyond I the individual and bend the laws ot'j | society to its will. Teach yourself; ito like the best—and to set about I S attaining it in the finest and "best" j way! (The next article in tliis helpful scries by Miss Fairfax will appear | soon in tills page. Don't miss it!) Advice to the Lovelorn Hy BEATRICE FAIRFAX CLOTHES—ASD THE WOMAN ''•'AH MISS FAIRFAX; I I have been going about with a ; young man for about five months, and have now found out that he does not | care for mo on account of my clothes. IHe claims that I do not dress like j every other girl, but have explained it to him that I do not care to because my father is in the hospital. Do you think I should continue go ing with him, or should I drop him, as I have friends that care for me for myself. CLARA L. Clothes really do not count. Of course, if your father is ill, you art thinking of him and not of the latest New York fashions. That doesn't mean that neatness, cleanliness and tidiness have ceased being, important. I am sure that you can keep yourself lokoing well groomed even in old clothes, and any man who judges you by what you wear rather than by what you are is not particularly worth while. I don't think the quarrel be tween you two need break off your friendship at all. Just try to convert the young man to a common sense view of the situation. Fashions of To-Day - By May Manton _ There is no prettier variation of the fashionable tunic than this one. It really consists of one piece but is so draped that it \ „ T forms graceful and becoming points and the shaping of the bodice at the lower edge is ex - ceedingly new and smart. As /\l \\ yoU 860 ' lt here * ' s mac^e U 1 broadcloth with trimming of sou- J J/ / wO ;r tache braid and fur and is worn i jU/ IgLfr over a ve ' vet skirt. You could 1 ||y hardly find a more fashionable Afl combination or a handsomer one, wT but you could, of course, copy the 1 idea in various ways. Char- |n . \ meuse would be handsome for the • !, \ blouse with tunic and you could j H I ii \a use charmeuse over velvet or ivolß |' !\\ \ I 1 ® over serge or over the same ma -1 \\ Y \\ v\ terial. You could make the j! Is V| l! bodice and tunic of a fine serge n U \ l!| W if you want a more useful dress / n 111 I/\ and you could leave the lower W J 11 I 1 yu edge of the tunic plain, or you * iIPII 1 I SSI could use soutache there as well Vfiljk I as down the sides. Serge would /Vjfiw | be pretty either over a skirt of ft i 1 serge or over a skirt of satin. / V'ji I 'or the medium size the bodice jAfcflanß with tunic will require 3% yards of material 44 inches wide, it% I \j) /W / yards 54, and the skirt, a% yards • 11 JrV< //If of either width. • \s I \ tunic No. 959 a is cut in sizes \oj from 34 to 40 inches bust measure V and of the skirt No. 9593 in sizes from 24 to 34 inches waist meas ure. They will be mailed to any 5592 Bodice with Tunic, 34 to 40 bust, address by the Fashion Depart- Price 15 cents. ment of this paper, on receipt of 9593 Two-Piece Skirt 24 to 34 waist, fifteen cents for the bodice with Price 10 cents. tunic, ten cents for the skirt. THE YUKON TRAIL By William MacLeod Raiiie 1 (Continued) "Got to stable the horses," he explained, and left them. After a time he came back and lit a lire in the sheet-iron stove. As the circulation that meant life flood ed back into her chilled veins Sheba endured a half-hour of excruciating pain. She had to clench her teeth to keep back the groans. The cabin was empty of furniture except for a home-made table, rough stools, and the frame of a bed. The last occupant had left a little firewood beside the stove, enough to last perhaps for twenty four hours. Sheba did not need "to be told that if the blizzard lasted ; long enough, they would starve to ■ death. In the handbag left in the ; Daily Dot Puzzle 2o *2O 27 Z .' • 24 • So *B* 25 • • 31 • ' ? 2 •7- Z4 S3 S4 3s lb* • m V* i' ' I" " IZ r * • • • • V ® 15 . 6 • • " O ft • 44 M 3e Draw from one to two and so on :o the end. stdge were a box of candy and an Irish plum pudding. She had brought the latter from the old country with her and was taking it and the chocolates to the Husted children. But just now the stage was as far from them as Drogheda. Like many rough frontiersmen, Swiftwater Pete was a diamond in the raw. So far as could be he made a hopeless and impossible situation comfortable. His judgment told him that they were caught in a trap from which there was no escape, but for the sake of the women he put a cheerful face on things. "Lucky we found this cabin," he growled amiably. "By this time we d 'a' been up Salt creek if we hadn't. Seeing as our luck has stood up so far. I reckon we'll be all right Mighty kind of Mr. Last Tenant to leave us this firewood. We ain't so worse off." "If we only had some food," Mrs. Olson suggested. "Food!" Pete looked at her In assumed surprise. "Huh: What about all that live stock I got in the stable? I've heard tell, ma'am, that broncho tenderloin is a favorite dish with them there French chiefs that do the cooking. They kinder trim it up so's it's 'most as good as frawgs' legs." Sheba had never before slept on bare b6ards with a sealskin coat for a sleeping bag. But she was verv tired and dropped off almost in stantly. Twice she woke during the night, disturbed by the stiffness and the pain of her body. When she awakened for the third time it was morning. It seemed to her that the hard, whip-sawed planks Were pushing Giving Notice of the Great February Furniture Sale At Wanamaks IN PHILADELPHIA The February and August Furniture Sales seasoned, splendidly made furniture for prices as held in the anamaker Stores, Philadelphia and low as many stores charge for cheap and unworthy New York, are celebrated all over the United grades. States. Vet we never sell anything but the best in The greatest sale of all is to be held this com- workmanship, ing February. Tt will contain more than 15,000 Wherever you live, "even if it is a thousand pieces of furniture, every piece reduced in price. miles from Philadelphia, if you have new furniture Every piece of this furniture is good furni- to provide for your home, whether it is a single ture, and is better than you can possibly find else- room or a whole household, it will pay you to where for the same money. come to Wanamaker's. It is known that we sell good, sound, properly In advance of this Sale there will be Three Days Fo January 29, on which out-of-town people may make their se- The furniture will all be shown with its sale lections and give their orders for furniture at the tags on it. I educed prices to pievail in February, and these Furthermore, each of the Wanamaker Stores orders will be dated as of February Ist. is now holding a Million-Dollar Daylight Using Make your plans now. Arrange so that you j n which there are fine lots of special mer may be in Philadelphia earlv, if possible, next chan d ,se offered every morning. . r " , T or J, -' 1 ' Some of these may be of interest to you as Tuesday, January 29th. we ]j as t ] le g rea <- Furniture Sale. JOHN WANAM PHILADELPHIA through tho soft flesh to the bones. She was cold, too, and crept closer to the stout Swedish woman lying beside her. Presently she fell a sleep again to the sound of the bliz zard howling outside. When she wakened for the third time it was morning. In tile afternoon the blizzard died away. As far as the eye could see, Sheba looked out upon a waste of snow. Her eyes turned from the desolation without to the bare and cheerless room in which they had found shelter. In spite of herself a little shiver ran down the spine of the girl. Had she come into this Arctic >solitudo to find her tomb? As soon as the storm had moder ated enough to let him go out with safety, Swiftwater Pete had taken one of the horses for an attempt at trail breaking. "Me, I'm after that plum pudding. I gotta get a feed of oats from the stage for mjf bronchs too. The scenery here is sure fine, but it ain't what you would call nourishing. Huh! Watch our smoke when mo and old Baldface git to bucking them drifts." He had been gone two hours and the dusk was already descending over the white waste when Sheba ventured out to see what had be come of the stage driver. But the cold was so bitter that she soon gave up the attempt .to fight her way through the drifts and turned back to the cabin. Some time later Swiftwater Pete came stumbling into their tempo rary home. He was fagged to ex haustion but triumphant. Upon the table he dropped from the crook of his number arm two packages. "The makings for a Christmas dinner," he said -with a grin. Mrs. Olson thawed out the pur ding and the chocolates In the oven and made a kind of mush out of some oats Pete had saved from the horse feed. They ate their one sided meal in high spirits. The freeze had saved their lives. If it held clear till to-morrow they could reach Smith's crossing on the crust of the snow. Swiftwater broke up the chairs for fuel and demolished the legs of the table, ufter which he lay down before the stove and fell at once into a sodden sleep. Presently Mrs. Olson lay down on the bed and began to snore regu larly. Sheba could not sleep. The boards tirod her bones and she was cold. Sometimes she slipped into cat naps that were full of bad dreams. When she wakened with a start it was to find that the tire had died down. She was shivering from lack of cover. Quietly the girl re plenished the fire and lay down again. When she wakened with a start it was morning. A faint light sift ed through the single window of the shack. Sheba whispered to the older woman that she was going out for a little walk. As she worked her way down the gulch Sheba wondered whether the news of their loss had reached Ku siak. Were search parties out al ready to rescue them? Colby Mac donald had gone into the blizzard years ago to save her father. Per haps he might have been out all night trying to save her father's daughter. Peter would go, of course—and Gordon Elliot. The work in the mines would stop and men would volunteer by scores. That was one line thing about the Xorth. It responded to the unwrit ten law that a man must risk his own life to save others. From a little knoll Sheba looked down upon the top of the stage three hundred yards below her, and while she stood there the promise of the new day was blazoned on the sky. It came with amazing beauty of green and primrose and ame thyst, while the stars flickered out and the heavens took on the blue of sunrise. She drew a deep, slow 7 breath of adoration and turned away. As she did so her eyes di lated and her body grew rigid. Across the snow waste a man was coming, lie was moving to ward the cabin and must cross tho trench close to her. The heart of the girl stopped, then beat wildly to make up the lost stroke. He had come through the blizzard to save her. At that very instant, as If the stage had been set for it, the won derful Alaska sun pushed up into the crotch of the peaks and poured its radiance over the Arctic waste. The pink glow swept in a tide of delicate color over the snow and transmuted it to millions of spark ling diamonds. Tho Great Magi cian's wand had recreated tho world instantaneously. (To bo Continued) POSLAM BEST WAY TO STOP SKIN'S ITCHING Cover the spot that Itches with Pos lam; relief is immediate. When the skin aggravates, burns, presents an unsightly, broken-out sur face, there is one remedy pre-emi nently fitted to soothe and heal, on which you can always depend.—Pos lam. Poslam is Quality • Poslam Is Con centrated Healing Energy, so little does so much. Poslam SHOW von how excellent it Is. Sold everywhere. For free sample write to Emergency laboratories, 213 West 47th St., New York City. Poslam Soap is the tonic soap for the skin and will freshen and beautify your complexion.—Advertisement.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers