6 Daily l ashion Hint Prepared Especially For Th Newspaper FROCK. All of the frocks of the coming sea- Son are to have straight lines, though distensions are permissible betweem the hips and the knees.. This design in ehallis with a erinkled crepe strips Is most effective. It is in two shades of brown. The neck is trimmed with • deep collar ef tub satin, held toge ther with a trifling, but very smart View of ribbon. Medium size requires 6 yards 36-ineh material, with % yard satin. Tectorial Review Costume No. 7545. <y*es, 34 to 44 inches bust. Price, 2* cents. i BASKETBALL PRACTICE The basketball teams of the Turks and Tartars of the Seller school will hold their weekly prac tice ill Cathedral Hall Friday after noon. The Turks will meet at 2.30 and the Tartars at 3 o'clock. Miss Frances Acuff of the school faculty is coach of the teams. Bliss Native Herb Tablets the Only Medicine that Does the Work In the Right Way "Enclosed find a one dollar money order, please send to me one box Bliss Native Herb Tablets. I have used one box. At lirst I took two tablets every night and now I take about one-fifth of a tablet every night as my bowels are more regu lar. I have suffered from constipa tion for eighteen years, and this is tKe only medicine that has done the work in the right way. "REV. BEN WEST. 'Houston, Tex." Every mail brings us testimonials from people in all walks of life as to the beneficial results from taking Bliss Native Herb Tablets. They nre the only recognized standard herb remedy for the relief of consti Elastine* Effect an Astonishing Reduction VE in Stout Figures l&M BACK FRONT LACE Hips, bust and abdomen reduced 1 to 5 inches, joo look 10 to 20 pounds lighter. ¥ou are no longer STOUT, you can wear more fashionable styles; and you get Satisfaction and Value at most moder- EH ate price. You never wore more com- Kg fortable or "easy feeling" corsets. SB LACE BACK REDUSO STYLES E| No. 723. Low Bast, Contll, pries .... *4.00 HI iKI No. 703. Medium Bust. Coutil, price . . . .$4.00 RufH No. 711. Short Stoat Flsmre*, AA Low Bast, Coat 11, prlc . . . .54.00 Without Elastic Gores j {& ?li; } *3 M a -m n r in ■> < Back and Front-Lace for A y JQJjTOU/j Slender And Average Figures Rlvetho"new-form" the vogue lessly fitting. Unequalled for Comfort, Wear and shape-nioulding.sl. to $3.50 AH Dealer* WEINCARTEN BROS.. Inc.. NEW YORK CUceco THURSDAY EVENING, Bringing Up Copyright, 1917, International News Service *"* By McM (-vO NOTAftITUKEIT-THE HE LL NOT <tT I I I f I I'lA I " ] 9 5 L COM,N V Patriotic Dishes KENTUCKY DODGERS (From the New York Sun) Place ina saucepan two cupfuls of boiling water, one teaspooonful of salt; add three-fourths cupful of cornmeal. Stir constantly until thick. Cook slowly for thirty min utes, then remove from the Are and add two onions, grated; one green pepper, minced fine; one-half cup ful of cold beef, minced fine. Turn on a platter to cool. When ready to use form into sausage shape rolls. Roll in flour and then brown in hot oil. Serve with tomato cream sauce. Two ounces of cheese or dried beef may be added in place of the cold meat. This dish is usually prepared the day before, so that it may be quickly prepared for breakfast. World's Cereal Crops Worth $30,000,000,000 Rome, Feb. 7.—Thirty billion dol lars' worth of the six chief cereals used for food—wheat, rye, barley, oats, corn and rice—is annually pro ouced by the farmers of the world, according to tho Year Book, just'is sued here by the Internatirnal In stitute of Agriculture, "We find, - ' declared the author of the book, "that the ascertainable yield of wheat throughout the world exceeds 1,000,000,000 quintals (one quintal being 3.67 bushels), and rep resents at present value more than £2,000,000,000. The yield of maize is worth £1,000,000,000. The yield of po tatoes is more than 1,50.000,000 quin tals and of beet sugar more than 50,000,000 quintals. Every year the world has at its disposal a total of 150,000,000 quintals of wine, 10,000,- 000 quintals of coffee, more than 8,- 000,000 of leaf tobacco and nearly 1,000,0000 quintals of hops." The vast consumption of coffee, wine and tobacco may be understood when it is estimated that thair tott.l value exceeds $20,000,100,000. pation, kidney and liver complaint, and the many ills arising from a disordered stomach. When you buy a box of Bliss Native Herb Tablets you receive a guarantee that if they don't do all we claim for them your money will be refunded. Start in to-day and begin taking them. One tablet at night will make the next day bright. The genuine Bliss Na. tive Herb Tablets are put up in yel low boxes of two hundred tablet* each, and bear the photograph , x of Alonzo O. Bliss. Look for the trade mark on every f"y tablet. Price $1 per box. Sold by Ken nedy's Drug Store and local agents everywhere. THEFOUR OFHEARTS A SERIAL OF YOUTH AND ROMANCE By VIRGINIA VAN DE WATER CHAPTER VIII (Copyright, 1918, Star Company) The question, that Cynthia, had asked mentally recurred to her mind many times during her first week In the Livingstone home. She and Dora were constantly to gether and talked frankly and free ly to each other of their affairs. Yet j Uora betrayed no sign of the sell- I consciousness common to an engag- ! ed girl when her betrothed is men- j tioned. She referred to Milton as she would have referred to a girl friend. A day or two before Van Saun's return to the city, Cynthia asked Dora if she had a picture of him. "I'm curious to know what your fiance looks like," she confessed, "I haven't seen a photograph of him in your room, have I?" Dora shook he£ head. "No, I j haven't a thing that really Jooks like lihn. I have a few snapshots ; tak?n with some o£ the rest of us—- j groups, you know. But they do not do him justice. Come along, and I'll I show them to you." The pictures which she drew from j her desk were like many other am- I ateur efforts—poorly taken and bad- t ly printed. The man whom Dora designated as "Milton" was evident ly tall and broad-shouldered. But one could scarcely tell whether the features were good or bad. "If you knew him well already, you'd recognize him," Dora remark ed. "Otherwise you'd never guess who he is. I suppose I really ought to have asked him to have his pic ture taken for me. That's the cor rect thing for an engaged girl to do, isn't it?" i "I should think you would want to have his photograph where you could look at it often," Cynthia ob served. Dora shrugged her shoulders. "Oh. I don't need that to remember how he looks. I've known him for so long that I can recall every feature. So I never thought of asking him for his photograph." "But he has yours, hasn't he?" Cynthia inquired .interested in what was to her a novel state of affairs. The Incident Recalled "Yes—at least he has one taken several years ago—when I was at school. I gave It to him one Christ mas. But I don't believe he has it with him. He never thought It a good likeness anyway." "He is handsome, isn't he?" Cyn thia queried. Dora laughed and pinched her cousin's cheek. "I declare I believe you are actually so much interested in my engagement that you want to know just how the victim looks! Well, he's six feet tall, broad-shoul | dered, with light, curly hair—that is, with hair that waves a little, and with very blue eyes. I don't think men often have very blue eyes—do you ?" Cynthia reflected for a moment. "No, I don't think most grown men have very blue eyes," she admitted. "I was just trying td think if I know any who have. I saw a man somewhere recently whose eyes were as blue as a child's. Now I remem ber! It was in the hotel just before I came away. I dropped a letter— your letter, by the way—when I was coming from the office, and a good looking chap suddenly picked it up for me. He had very blue eyes. I Fashions of To-Day - By May Manton There are very new features in this frock and very attractive features, and, withal, it is the simplest possible garment to make. The round neck. and /pfH AC. the short sleeves will appeal to J 1 k most mothers, but in mid-Winter - there is sometimes demand foi \ I i greater warmth and the small yjiji view gives a suggestion that is important. Really, the frock / 11/rV\ u. ' s us *" a P' a ' n little garment Jj ■ J I \vk with a straight piece arranged I I W over t ' ie * ower e dge. but that (%_ y M 1 ix straight piece is so stitched that f<\\ [I V\A it forms big, capacious pocket? are a oy ' t}ie ur e. it \t 'll -i\ /H ' 3 mac^e one the prett\ 1 \' l 7/ ' 1/Vf J plain challis with filet lace band- I l\)/ M irl / as trimming. Vx>u could V Vjtt/ lit, IM J co Py jt in any simple childlike \ /jy / For the 6-year size will be \ Al I 4 needed, yards of material 27 inches wide, 2 yards 36 or 44 3 f° r the plain dress, with 1$ yard any width for the over-portion. The pattern No. 9613 is cut in sizes from 4to 8 years. It will be mailed to any address by 9612 Girl'* Dress, 4 to 8 yean. the Fashion Department of this Pric 10 cents, paper, on receipt of ten centa. HARRIBBURO TELEGftXPH remember noticing them at the j time." "How romantic!" Dora exclaimed. "And then what happened?" "Nothing," Cynthia said carelessly, "except that he walked off in one | direction, and I in another." "Pshaw!" Dora frowned in dis- | appointment. "I hoped you were go- 1 ing to tell me that he had said— | "Pray, fair maid, what may your ; name be?" "Goose!" Cynthia ejaculated. "You j have a vivid imagination. Tell me 1 some more about the way your best beloved looks." "There's nothing more to tell," Dora said. "You'll see him soon, anyway, and can judge for your self You'll like him. Most people do." Cynthia recalled these words the next evening when, as she jvas sitting in her room writing, a maid ] announced to her that "Miss Dora j wanted her please to come down to I the library." "Mr. Van Saun's calling," the girl ; explained, "and Miss Dora's asking for you." Cynthia hesitated. Milton Van Saun had telephoned to Dora late this afternoon, saying that he was back in town and would call this evening. Therefore, right after din ner, Cynthia had slipped away to her room that the lovers might meet unobserved by an outsider. Mr. and Mrs. Livingstone were dining out to-night. Dora Calls < "Tell Miss Dora that I have a let ter to write, but will be down in a little while," she said now. She took as long as she could to finish her letter to Mr. Blake. She hated the idea of intruding upon the | reunion of long-separated lovers. ] She had not finished writing when she heard Dora's voice. "Cyn!" she called. "Come down stairs; I want you to know Milton, and ho wants to know you." There was no help fQr it. With a sigh of chagrin, Cynthia closed the desk and went slowly downstairs. Outside the library she paused. The curtains were drawn shut, and she feared to break in upon a love scene. But Dora had heard her step and summoned her. "Come on in, Cyn Milton's dying xo meet you." Pushing aside the portieres, Cyn ] thia Dong entered, then stopped as a tall form stepped forward. "Cynthia," she heard Dora say, "this is Milton Van Saun. Milton, this is Cynthia." Cynthia laid her hand in the one stretched out to her. then, looking up, found herself gazing straight into the eyes of the man into whose eyes she hifd gazed for a moment in the lobby of the hotel on her last evening in Chicago. To Be Continued ARMY MAN TOO TALKATIVE ! Officer Arrested For Disclosing Facts Aloiit Trip Overseas Washington, Feb. 7. A young Army officer, who confided to a rela tive the name of the ship on which he was going overseas and the date of sailing, is under arrest pending ivestigation of whether his super iors properly instructed him con cerning the requirement of secrecy. LIFE'S PROBL ARE DI By MRS. WILSON WOODROW Dysippos of Likyon one time carved a statue, the figure of worn- .j an standing on tiptoe to indicate j that she was always running and: with wings on her feet to show that j she passed like the wind. She car- j ried a razor in her hand to signify; that she struck more sharply than any steel. Her hair was worn Ions; In front so that she might be read-1 ily seized by anyone she approached,; but short behind to Indicate thatj once she had flitted by on her winged fee, no one was able to hold | her. And on the pedestal Lysippos; cut this Inscription: "My name, O stranger, is Opportunity, controller of aii things, and I stand here as a; lesson to thee!" 1 never run through a morning's; batch of letters from my corre-* spondents, but that I am reminded of that statue and the Inscription which the wise old Greek placed be-| neath it. For all the manifold and] varying problems which are submit-1 ted to me may be summed up In! the single phrase, missed opportu-l nities. Controller of all things! Was there ever a more apt designation? I For Opportunity as she hurries by I carries in her arms love, happiness,! success, the realization of one's dreams, al! the blessings of life. And contrariwise, if one fails to clutch that bobbing forelock at the j crucial moment and hang on to it, the results are failure, disappoint ment, regret, nnhappiness, all thei evils of Pandora's box. All of which sounds I admit a bit ] !!ke the empty platitudes of the i copybook; but even the copybookl maxims have a practical application, | if we will only forget the cramped | fingers and vengeful spirit with i which they were instilled into our I consciousness, and will put them to [ actual use. So to say, "Seize the opportu- j nity," means very little; for we are j all of us eager enough to do that. It is the thing which all the world's n seeking. The one great demand of the ages has been for an equal ity of opportunity—for nations, for racs, for religions, for individuals, i regardless of birth or worldly cir ! cumstances. It has been the.hub of every re : form movement from Magna Charta ! down. It is the supreme issue over i which the world is to-day at war. i : It lias come to be the issue on al-1 most every great decisive battlefield of modern times; at Yorktown, at Waterloo, at Appomattox, at Santi ago and Manila. And the world counting its gains presses on still more rapidly toward its goal. Religious tolerance is practically won. The even more stubborn prejudices of race are slow ly giving way. The political and economic equality of the sexes maS be regarded as assured. The security and independence of I the nations, little and big alike, Daily Dot Puzzle WW 1 •7* 6 5 •' *2 I ' f • • • ~ 2 J l- k *4 * ft. V- it) *i * ls I \ .30 . * 2B * s< .3, *9 lo A $;; • 4fc / •* ' • 42 37 <5 '4l . ' 44 4 ° 1 • .43 * * I Nine-aad-forty lines and then You will see my old Hen. Draw from one to two and so on to the end. will be settled and safeguarded at j the eventual peace conference; and '• from the present upheaval too we can foresee many social and civic j changes which will tend toward of- | fering a fairer field to ambition and I initiative, no matter where it may be found. Yet\With all these advantages the, personal, the Individual question shows no very clear sign of being ] solved, and I sometimes doubt if it \ ever will be. It is one thing to j make opportunities equal to all in dividuals; it is quite another to I make the individual equal to hls| opportunities. You may find examples to indi cate what I mean in almost every family, school or business house. Why under the same environment md with practically the same ad vantages and equipment should one son or daughter succeed and anoth er fail, one pupil progress and an other fall back, one clerk or ap prentice advance and another stick where he started? Ths answer of I course is opportunity. But in the ; cases cited the opportunities to all intents and purposes are equal you can even handicap the winner in that respect, and it will make no diqerence in results. It is in short the personal equa tion that decides the matter. One man sees and grasps the opportunity when it conies to him; the other Is too blind, or too much occupied with other things to realize that op portunity has brushed him with her wings, or, piaybe too lazy to stretch out his hand an<J clutch her. "I'm in conference now," he sends back word by the office boy. "Tell the lady to call again." And lighting another cigarette, he goes! beck to wishing that he had a mil- I lion dollars. There are those who claim thatj opportunity has utterly passed them by. "I never had a chance," they wail. For them there is only the short and ugly word, or else they belong to the class which having eyes see not, and having ears do not hear. Once at least to every man and nation comes the moment to decide; and ftfr the most part opportunity is sis persistent as a dunning bill collector. The question that really bothers most of us, though, is how to recog nize Opportunity as her actual self when she goes swishing by In met eor flight, and not by mistake to grab some masquerading counterfeit i who will only succeed in leading us Into the ditch. We can't hesitate or debate or stop long to consider; we all know that. It's the cave, man's style of wooing, the quick eye and the ready hand that captures Opportunity. But suppose, since she comes in .so many baffling disguises, that instead ol' the desired princess one should find he had been tricked Into carrying oft only a homely serv ing maid, as used to happen so often m the old romances. The preventive for that is to make yourself so familiar with the appearance of the,lady, to come to know her so well—voice, looks, man ner and gestures—that no imposter could successfully deceive you, any represent himself as your wife, your sister or your mother. Habit; that's the solution to the difficulty as it is to most everything else in life. Get into the habit of meeting Opportunity, study her ways and lier characteristics, and you will run email risk of not choosing the the test. The trouble is that so few of us comprehend what opportunity real ly is. We regard it as a fleeting and fortuitlous conjunction of cir cumstances which .presents itself to !: man or woman only once or twice in a lifetime, and upon which hinges pome great deed decisive of the des- BROWN & CO. Home Furnishers 1217-1219 N. Third St. February Furniture Sale If you wish to do so, look over the stocks of all other stores. After doing so be sure to come here. If we can not prove to your satisfaction, our ability to save you money, purchase whete you please- THIS IS A SURE TIP 0 FEBRUARY *7, T9IB | tiny of that person; whereas the truth is that Opportunity is a daily, | almost hourly visitor to everyone of us, appearing often in such humble, commonplace guise that we never suspect who she is. Another quality she possesses ia, that although we may question the nature of the opportunity which promises to do something for our ! selves, we are never in doubt as to | our opportunities to* do something I | for the advantage of others. And i that by the way is an excellent | method of coming to know Opportu- I nity as I have suggested; never to j overlook a single chance that offers | to be of help or benefit to others. By this means, and also by fac- I ing squarely every occasion, no mat i ter how difficult or how trivial and I unimportant it may seem—in other 1 words by meeting Opportunity in all 'her moods you will become her j pal, her intimate and her compan i ion, and you .cannot fail to know I hor when the moment comes for | your big decision, j The chance may never offer it- I self to you to perform some great or spectacular, deed; but should it FEE 1W BEnER BY IHING-W IT! Get a 10 Cent Box of "Cascarets" for Your l iver and Bowels. To-night sure' Remove the liver and bowel poison which is keeping your head dizzy, your tongue coated, breath offensive and stomach sour. flli? come you will be ready for It. Ant alter all, it is the quality of llf( that counts, not the high spots. "I am primarily engaged to my self to be a public servant of all the gcds," says Emerson, "to dem onstrate to all men that there is good will and intelligence * lt ,llc heart of things, and ever higher power in good intention, in fidelity and in toll, the north wind shall be purer, the stars in heaven shall glow with a kindlier beam that I have lived." The one, too, who makes him self the companion of Opportunity wili never again yield belief to the fallacy of luck. In a current theatrical revue, one ot the characters representing a voll.npnwn tension I c iy um. (lucebcays of the dean of the Amer ican stage: "Just a lucky guy! He pulls oft four or five successes every sea son." And the audience laughs, as was intended, at the idea of connecting luck with the man who against lr.any odds, has always made op portunity serve his ends. Don't slay bilious, sick, headachy, constipated and full of cold. Why don't you get a box of Cascarets from the drug store now? Eat ohe or two to-night and enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced. You will wako up feeling fit and fine. Cascarets never gripe or bother you all the next day like alomel, salts and pills. They act gently but thoroughly. Mothers should give cross, sick, bil ious or children a whole Cascaret a..y time. They are harm less and children love them.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers