Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, March 06, 1918, Page 7, Image 7

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    Life's Problems
Are Discussed
Bjr MRS. WIL.SOX WOOBROW
"We will now study Satin In all
is offices and characteristics," an
ounced the' Rev. Mr. XacTavish
fter having already preajhed two
did hours to the long-suffering con
regation of the Free Kirk at Drum
uchty. And even Klspeth MacFay
en, that model of church-sping pro
riety, scraped her foot n disap
roval at the prospect.
Yet the Rev. Mr. MacTa)ish need
ot have detained them mo'e than a
loment longer fully to ■lover his
t'.bject. He could have p-onounced
he singe word. "Fear." ind then
ave proceeded to his bmediction
,-ith the assurance that he had ut
ered all there was to say
Fear is Satan's middle rame. He
? born of it, and so is e*ery varl
tion of him that man haj ever In
ented wherewith to vex hmself. It
s the greatest negative fo-ce in the
r.iverse, the primary caus of every
\il under the sun, destructive alike
c our moral, mental anc physical
ber.
liewhere in these Uni'ed States,
ticago, to be exact, here is a
blessed by the gods who has
ed its corrosive touei. Nor is
her case a fearlessn-ss engen
by ignorance. She s familiar
the city's ways, a reader of
s and newspapers, open-eyed to
is called a knowledge of the
I. Yet she faces life with a se
and steadfast confidence that it
>ring her no harm,
ather these details from a let
ent me by the girl's mother —a
•, one would naturaly suppose,
with joy and thanksgiving. On
;ontrary. it breathes a tone of
complaining,
far Mrs. Woodrow." my corre
lent writes, "please advise me
to say or do. I am he mother
firl of seventeen, a sweet. cheer-
Single Application
Banishes Ever/ Hair
(The Modern Beauty)
re is how any woman can easily
quickly objectionable,
growths without possible in
to the skin: Make a saste with
powdered delatone jnd water,
to hairy surface aid after 2
rfiinutes rub off, wasi the skin
the hairs are gone. This is a
ess, inexpensive method, and
iting where the grqwth is un
ly thick, a single afplication is
;h. You should, lowever, be
ul to get genuine delatone.
ught Cold Easily
i Nervous, Stomach
Was Bad
T. D. Baltimore, 56 4 Sehaefer
:, Harrisburg. For several years
e been bothered with stomach
ile and nervousness My food
,'s lay like a weight |n my stom-
I would bloat and had severe
.
night I just rolled and tossed
ight long, and felt vorn out in
norning.
aught cold very easy, my head
throat always seemed full and
;sted.
thing helped me until I started
ke Sanpan when I was soon re
d to health. My itomach no
r troubles me, I sWep well. I
catch cold as before. My
;s are steady and my head
npan is being introduced, at Kel-
Drug Store. 405 Market street,
isburg.—Adv.
RAY OF HOPE
OR THOSE WITH
RHEUMATISM
I Here Is a Message That May
Mean An End To All of
Your Suffering
If you are just feeling the first
little twinging pains of Rheum
itism, we would uarn you to
take the right course at the out
set, and avoid permitting your
self to fall a helplcis victim to
ane of the most disabling and
jainful diseases to which the
tiuman family is subject.
And if you have had Rheuma
tism for any length of time, the
chances are that you have kept
the liniment bottle pretty busy
but you have realized by now
that gallons of liniments and
athcr locally applied remedies
will never rid yon of this body
wrecking, pain-racking disease,
rhe best that you can expect
From such treatment is some lit
tle temporary relief from the
sharp, shooting pains.
But you want more than mere
■elief. You want to break the
shackles of a disease that has
►ou so firmly within its power.
¥ou want a treatment that not
inly relieves the pains, but that
stops them forever, by reaching
heir sourc,e and removing their
:ause.
Experience has proven that a
WEDNESDAY EVENING, RXIKUBBURG CfiKA* TEL&GKXFB MARCH 6, 1918. 1
Bringing Up Father *"* *•* Copyright, 1917, International News Service By McManus
I'LLPWNTTHIt, WINDOW 111 111 4EEI lT<b ] T ° It ' T * ° MLV [ 1 KfS ° W ~
BLACK-1 CAN'T 'bTAND = NEARLY TEN 1 TREAT HICKEY -HE LI OCLOCK,- 7 WHERE WERE Y
THE CLARE FROM THAT 1U OCLOCK - I'VE AN L P L ° SE JOB NOW JU? v 1 VOU MONOAY '
STREET LAMP-ILL BE APPOINTMENT TO .] BHH ffl " ?'7X j A TUESDAY P n > .t./ '
<LAO WHEN macoe E v ',
ful child, bright and clever in every
way.
"The odd thing about her, though,
is that she refuses to believe that
-he can come to any harm. She has
proven this under many circum
stances. She reads the awful things
reported from time to time in the
newspapers, and knows as much
about life as the ordinary woman of
twenty-five but so far as she herself
is concerned, she seems to imagine
that she is immune and that nothing
or nobody will do her harm.
"Fortunately, she has never had
any experiences to disabuse her
rnind of this notion, and I rather ad
mire her faith; yet, at the same time,
her utter lack of that caution which
a girl of her age ought to show
tills me with the gravest apprehen
sions. Please tel! me what I must
do in such a case."
In her fluttering anxiety that [
mother reminds me of a hen which |
has hatched out a duckling. Still
she has my sympathy, too. She is I
of another era: and that does not;
necessarily mean that she is bowed |
with age or even that her hair is j
touched with gray.
The world progresses very fast
these days; and within a few years
the fashion in girls has entirely
changed. The jeune fille of her
ideas—timorous, blushing, ready to
shriek at the sight of a caterpillar—
is as out of date as the hand-paint
ed rolling-pins with which our maid
en aunts used to decorate their bou
doirs.
The keynote of to-day for our
Alkali in Soap
Bad For the Hair
Soap should he used very carefully,
if you want to keep your hair look
ing its best. Most soaps and pre
pared shampoos contain too much
alkali. This dries the scalp, maken
the hair brittle, and ruins it.
The best thing for steady use is
just ordinary mulsified cocoanut oil
(which is pure and greaseless). and
is better than the most expensive
soap or anything else you can use.
One or two teaspoonfuls will
cleanse the hair and scalp thor
oughly. Simply moisten the hair with
water and rub it in. It makes an
abundance of rich, creamy lather,
which rinses out easily, removing
everv particle of dust, dirt, dandruff
and excessive oil. The hair dries
quickly and evenly: and it leaves the
scalp soft, and the hair fine and
silky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and easy
to manage.
You can get mulsified cocoanut oil
at any pharmacy, it's very cheap, and
a few ounces will supply every mem
ber of the family for months.
great majority of cases of Rheu
matism are caused by a disor
dered condition of the blood.
Millions upon millions of tiny
little disease germs multiply rap
idly, and spread throughout the
circulation, setting up their at
tacks of pain at some susceptible
part of the body. Of course the
blood cannot be reached by local
applications, which explains why
Rheumatism is never cured by
liniments and lotions
But those whose blood is in
fested with the germs of Rheu
matism should be delighted to
know that in the midst of all
their suffering, there is a bright
ray of hope. S. S. S., the reli
able purely vegetable blood rem
edy, promptly purities the blood,
and cleanses it of all impurities
and disease germs, and in this
way makes it impossible for the
germs of Rheumatism to remain.
A full course of this remedy will
prove to you its great efficacy,
as it has in numerous cases
which have been reported to us
by grateful patients.
Do not continue to suffer be
cause of wrong treatment, but
go to your drug store and com
mence taking S. S. S. to-day.
Also write fully to our head phy
sician, who will give you full in
structions about your own case.
Address Medical Director, 401
Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga.,
daughters as well as for our sons is
self-reliance, intrepidity and pluck
with efficiency. They can't be little
fluffy chickens—how current slang
dies play havoc with one's meta
phors! standing shivering and
shrinking on the bank; they must
plunge boldly into the swim and pad
cile for dear life or be left hopelessly
behind.
Of course, if any mother really
wants to make a coward out of her
t.aughter. it can no doubt be man
aged. Hippocrates or some other
father of medicine prescribes. I be
lieve, blood-letting behind the ears
for maidens afflicted with a too ven
turesome temperament. The intro
duction of a mouse into the patient's
bed is also to be recommended, or a
band of thugs might bo hired to jump
out at her from dark corners and
shout "Boo!"
But perhaps the most efficacious
method is simply to follow the plan
of my correspondent, and shadow the
daughter's days with worrying ap
prehensions and repeated' warnings.
For there is nothing in all this
world so contagious as tear and pan
ic The alarm of on* timid beast
over the- crackling of a twig its able
to stampede a whole drove of cattle.
And human beings are 'quite as sus
ceptible.
The mother would never write me
to ask what she should do because
her daughter had shown herself im
mune from scarlet fever or small
pox, but she is distressed because
the girl obstinately declines to indi
cate any symptoms of a far more
deadly and tormenting malady.
Farental anxiety is natural
enough. From the time that the
child takes its first toddling step up
through all the vicissitudes of
adolescence one's heart must be con
stantly in one's mouth, one's nerves
on edge nevertheless, the wise father
and mother, and the ones whose chil
dren rise up to' call them blessed
are they who repress the impulse to
shield and shelter top much and who.
following the example of the birds,
push the fledgling out of the nest,
the bantling on the rocks to shift
for itself.
I would not be understood for a
moment as countenancing an abso
lutely free hand for a girl of seven
teen. That is the time when she
most needs a mother's Judicious
guidance and direction. Nor would
I minimize the dangers that beset
her. I would explain them and their
inevitable consequences as clearly
and candidly as I would tell a child
that if it stuck hand into the
flame of a candle it would be burned.
But I would certainly never try to
infect that girl with the virus of
fear.
I would try to realize and to im
press upon her that the very best
armor in which she could panoply
herself against these perils is an
utter fearlessness of them. The
n.ost vicious dog will never attack
a person who entertains no fear of
him, and there is the old story of
Sir Charles Napier sending a tiger
ccwering back into the jungle simply
by facing him unafraid and looking
him in the eye.
In the very case at hand my cor- |
respondent writes that her daugh
ter "fortunately has never had any
experience to disabuse her mind of
its fearlessness." May not that re
sult be due solely to the girl's own
mental attitude? The world gen
erally meets us In the spirit with
■which it is met. The defiant cour
age of old Barbara Fritchie was
quickly honored by the dust-brown
ranks she opposed.
Yet, here again X qualify. Reck
lessness and bravado is one thing
and so is that ignorance which
rushes blindly into danger; quite
another thing is that quality which,
while recognizing the existence of
the terror by night and the arrow
that flieth by day, also knows that it
shall not come nigh thee.
Of this character seems to be the
17-year-old girl of my letter, calm,
well-possessed of herself, unafraid.
Imagine wanting a splendid, free
creature like that to quake and shiv
er and be continually looking over
her shoulder for the bogie man.
All over this country to-day moth
ers by the thousands are sending
Uieir sons into certain and definite
danger. Their hearts are torn with
anxiety, yet not by word or expres
sion would they seek to imbue those
lads with their own fears and appre
hensions. They even feel a justifiable
pride in the dauntless courage of
their boys. They wolud despise a
different spirit.
Why should they wish their daugh
ters to be less brave and fearless as
women than their sons are as men?
SERVICE FLAG FOR CAMP
CURTIN FIREMEN UNFURLED
Special patriots services were held
last night to dedicate a service flag
with seven stars at the Camp Cur
tin firehouse last night. Speakers
of the evening paid tribute to the
men who have gone to the front,
complimenting the men of Harris
burg who have taken their places in
France. Among the speakers were
Mayor Keister, Colonel Henry C.
Demming, Robert B. Reeves, gen
eral secretary of the Central Y. M.
C. A.; the Rev. A. S. Williams, Mrs.
Lyman D. Gilbert, president of the
Harrisburg chapter, American Red
Cross, and Charles E. Pass, pho
thonotary.
Use McNeil's Pain Exterminator —Ad.
THE FOUR O
A SERIAL. OF YOUTH AND ROMANCE
By VIRGINIA VAN DE WATER
Copyright, 1918, Star Company.
CHAPTER XXV
Mrs. Livingstone appeared at the
door of Cynthia's room by the time
that Dora had helped her cousin to
divest herself of her hat and coat
and had brought a wrapper from
the closet.
"Lie down, dear," she was saying
as .Mrs. Livingstone entered.
''Yes, lie down," Mrs. Livingstone
advised. "You will have a full half
hour in which to rest before you
have to get ready for dinner. If you
girls wish 1 will invite the two young
gentlemen to dine with us."
Dora went on into her own room
without replying, and Mrs. Living
stone was not sure that her daughter
had heard her proposal.
"What about it, Cynthia?" the
matron addressed her niece. "Would
you not like Mr. Stewart to remain
to dinner?"
"It makes no difference to me,
Aunt Amanda," Cynthia replied.
"For, if you will excuse me, 1 will
not come downstairs this evening.
1 am rather shaken up and am sure
that it would be well for me to keep
quiet for the rest of the evening."
"That's too bad!" Mrs. Living
stone sympathized. "'Suppose I send
Marie up to rub your shoulder for
you?"
"I do not need her, thank you,"
Cynthia rejoined. Her one wish
was to have her aunt leave here
alone. "A little rest will be better
for me than anything else. Don't
you think so. Dora?" she appealed
to her cousin as she returned after
leaving her wraps in her own room.
Mrs. Livingstone hastened to ex
plain. "I was telling Cynthia that
I would ask Milton and Mr. Stewart
to remain to dinner if she felt able
to come downstairs. But she pre
fers remaining up here. I am
sorry." "I believe she should do
what she feels like doing," Dora re
marked.
"Well, I will go down and tell
Mr. Stewart just how you are, my
dear," Mrs. Livingstone addressed
Cynthia, smiling significantly. "He
looked much disturbed, and I know
he is anxious about you."
Cynthia flushed. *'l do not fancy
he is anxious," she demurred. "I
see no reason why he should be."
An Inucndo
"Oh, dear little girl," her aunt
teased, "it is well that the rest of
us are not as blind as yoU are.
Dora." turning to her daughter,
"shall I keep Milton to dinner?" I
have no idea that his friend will
care to remain since Cynthia will
not appear belowstairs."
Dora's eyes snapped in a way that
might have been a warning that
her temper was rising.
"Why do you suggest that Gerald
would not stay unless Cynthia came
down?" she demanded brusquely.
"What are you driving at. Mother?"
Her mother gazed at her reprov
ingly. "Dora," she protested, "you
must be nervous and over-wrought,
or you could hardly speak to mc
like that. I simply suggested that
you might like Milton to remain,
and that "
Dora interrupted her. "And that
3erold would not care to stay unless
he could see Cynthia. I understand
Daily Dot Puzzle
12 • *l3
1/• *l4
-• *<s
6 • 14 *23
• lb
5 •
• 27
4 * 28
3. 3°
i 1 •
I
• 22. .16
' 21
• •
\° >a . 17
Draw from one to two and so on
to the end.
what you mean, but I hardly see on
what you found your ideas. If Ger
ald does not want to dine with us,
he needn't. I, for one. don't want
him. As for Milton —I don't care
to have him stay either. Kindly do
not propose that he does it."
Her mother stood motionless for
a full half-minute, her face stern.
Then, without a word, she started
towards the door.
"Mother!" Dora spoke tremu
lously. "If I was cross, lam sorry.
I guess I see things a bit crooked
because of my scare about Cynthia."
"Perhaps you do," her mother
admitted, unbending slightly from
her dignity. "I suppose I should
not have made any suggestion about
Milton. Parents nowadays have lit
tle to say in such matters."
With which martyr-like observa
tion she went from the room, clos
ing the door behind her.
"There, I have hurt her feelings!" ,
Dora burst forth. "But she does try i
me sometimes. Oh, dear Cyn, don't
you ever get tired of it all?"
Dropping into a chair Dora buried ,
her face in her hands.
Cynthia, surprised and distressed, i
stroked the bowed head.
"There, dear," she soothed. "I I
don't know what the matter is, buti
it's too bad that you should be so I
upset."
Dora Is Inattentive
"Nothing's the matter!" Dora de
clared, suddenly springing to her
feet and laughing away her tears.
"I guess I'm just cross—that's all,
and here you are suffering like an
angel of patience and I am not
doing a thing for you. Take oft
your sleeve and let me look at that
hurt place, please." Then, as she
saw the bruised shoulder: "Oh, it's
all red and purple, honey! You poor
dear! I will bathe it with witch"
hazel. That will help it"
When she had suited the action to
the word and had laid a cooling
compress on the bruise, she kissed
her cousin tenderly.
"You were the one that had the
accident, and I was the one that got
the nerves," she said penitently. "I
don't know what ailed me for a
while."
"You were startled by the acci
dent, and over-tired by an afternoon
of shopping, dear," Cynthia said.
"Now go and dress for dinner, and
I will try to get a little nap. I will
promise to lie still and rest."
But, left alone in the darkened
room. Cynthia could not sleep. In
stead. she lay thinking of the look
on Dora's face when Gerald Stewart
had brought her, Cynthia, up the
steps and into the house. She re
called also the look In Stewart's
eyes as he gazed at Dora as she sat
in the car.
What did it all mean? Was Dora
glowing fond of Gerald, or—the idea
was not a pleasant one—was she dis
tressed because of Milton's attentions
to her cousin?
Cynthia moved impatiently, but a
sharp twinge in her shoulder re
minded her that she had promised to
lie still and rest.
(To be continued)
Couple Married 64 \
Years Celebrate
Collingswood, N. J.—Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin Merrick celebrated their six
ty-fourth wedding anniversary to
day at their residence, surrounded
by their five children, seven grand
children and three great-grandchil
dren. One grandson, Allen Merrick,
is in the Navy, but was at the cele
bration.
Messick celebrated his eighty
ninth birthday a few days ago, when
he was given a birthday party. He
is hale and hearty, goes to Philadel
phia several times a week and once
a week to the meeting of the direc
tors of the Soutnwark National Bank
of which he has been a director for
fifty years or more. Mrs. Merrick
is eighty-three years of age, enjoys
social occasions and is able to attend
her daily household duties.
'Perfect 75,' Weight 503,
Rejected by Draft Board
St. Paul. —Thomas Wood is so big
that when he was called in for phy
sical examination for the draft he
had to be weighed in a grain scale
at an elevator. The draft board's
scale could not register his weight
—503. Wood is 23 years old, six feet
and a half inches tall, and is a "per
fect seventy-five." He was rejected.
MAY SELL THRIFT STAMPS
Letter carriers have opened a
campaign to sell Thrift Stamps. De
livery of stamps and cards can be
made through these carriers.
Other organizations assisting in
the sale, include Boy Scouts, insur
ance agents and other agents. The
Bell Telephone Company encloses
literature describing the stamps and
urging their purchase with each bill
sent out to subscribers. Pamphlets
afe being placed in pay envelopes
and letters throughout the city, and
every effort is being made to have
Harrlsburg go "over the top."
Advice to the Lovelorn
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX
A CASE FOR YOUR OWN AID!
Dear Miss Fairfax:
What would you do if you were
I? I am well educated, pretty, and
have had unusual opportunities for
meeting men. Yet I have never made
a hit. I think I am just naturally
stupid. I was not a success socially,
and now that we have lost our
money and I am a stenographer at
sls per, I do not feel that I am a
success in business either —it is only
that I am working for an old friend
of the family's or I would not be
able to ' hold down the job." I am
one of those foolish women that have
dabbled in many things, but have
never stuck to any one thing long
enough to make a success of it.
Though I look much younger, I am
thirty-one.
"OLD MAID."
Your estimate of yourself is not
a very enthusiastic one, is It?
Can't you find something in your
self to admire and cultivate? With
a good education and good looks
and enough critical faculty to write
about yourself as you have, surely
you ought to be able to treat your
own case as well as to diagnose it.
Because you have spent most of
your life "dabbling" need not pre
vent you from now settling down
and mastering one thing. Why not
stop thinking about yourself and
your shortcomings and give your
entire attention to your present po
sition and its opportunities? Per
haps it hasn't any! Well, then, in a
world as teeming with chances for
women as is our present little old
globe, I suggest that you look
around for the place into which you
will fit! Take stock of yourself.
Perhaps you are a good executive,
perhaps you are a sympathetic
stenographer who brings out the
ability of the person who is dealing
with you. Perhaps you would be a
good saleswoman. Maybe you have
some artistic ability—or know a lot
about cooking. Find out what your
marketable ability is—then take it
to the market and insist on getting
the best possible price for it. Your
letter suggests humor and is dis
tinctly indicative of character and
ability. I fancy you are really a
clever, worth-while woman, and
that you can make a great deal of
yourself if you simply choose. Go
ahead, my friend—choose!
DOMINEERING
DEAR MISS FAIRFAX:
I am engaged to a girl a year my
junior, whom I love dearly, but she
has a habit of scolding over the
merest trifle, and always wishes her
advice to be taken in all things.
When I can, I do, but of course her
advice isn't suitable for all purposes,
as I try to point out to her, but of
no avail. She may get angry and not
talk to me nil week, (I call three
times a week) or until I give in to
her point.
If we have no particular engage
ment on hand for Sunday, I call
about 4 p. m., no later, but she gets
angry and won't go anywhere, say
ing the day is gone for any amuse
ment.
Now, Miss Fairfax, can't you tell
me what to do to get her out of that
domineering habit? A. B. C.
The domineering woman is likely
to be a vexenisli. srewish wife and
unless the man who loves her teach
es her to conquer her habits, it is
likely to net her and him as well a
great deal of misery. I think what is
required of you is firmness and com
mon sense plus determination. Per
haps the uncertainty as to what
time you are comig gets on the
girl's nerves. Have enough respect
for her to make your appointments
and to keep them. Have enough re
spect for yourself to demand that
she listen to your viewpoint, meet it
half way, and stop nagging at you
when your ideas differ from hers.
Take a firm stand. If she becomes
petty and ugly about nothing, tell
her that you will leave her unless
she acts differently. Tell her that and
stick to it!
Lift Out Your Corns
ICE-MINT
THE SEW DISCOVERY ENDS
ALL
Foot Troubles
This new discovery, made from a
Japanese product, is certainly a won
der the way it draws out inflamma
tion from a pair of swollen, burning,
aching feet. It takes the soreness
right out, then the corn or callous
shrivils and Jifts off.
Hard corns, soft corns or corns be
tween the toes, just shrivel up and
lift off so easy. It is wonderful. Just
think! Not one bit of pain while ap
plying Ice-mint or afterwards. it
doesn't even, irritate the surrounding
skin.
You will never have to cut a corn
again and run the risk of blood poi
son. Say good-by to your old corn
salve, plasters and bundling tape for
that pet corn of yours is sure to be
a "goner" if it ever feels the magic
touch of Ice-mint.
It imparts such a delightful, sooth
ing. cooling feeling to the feet that
you will sigh with relief.
Ice-mint is the real Japanese secret
for fine, healthy little feet. It pre
vents foot odors and keeps them
sweet and comfortable. It is greatly
appreciated by women who wear high
heel shoes. /
Just ask In any drugstore for a lit
tle Ice-mtnt and give your poor, suf
fering. tired, swollen feet the treat
of their lives. It costs little and'
there is nothing better.—Advertise
ment.
War Time Lexicon
(Copyright, by British Ca
nadian Recruiting; Mission, which
maintains depots In all large cities
where men, except Americans, may
volunteer.)
Mechanical Transports:
The trains of motor trucks used
to carry forward supplies from the
railroads.
Refilling Point:
The station or supply depot where
the mechanical transport trains
turn over their supplies to the quar
termasters of the different units in
the front trenches.
Hangars:
Sheds or huts where aeroplanes
are housed when not flying. They
are built of wood, tin, or canvas as
most convenient.
Camouflage: *
The fusion or blending of colors
to destroy the outline or distinguish
ing features of an object so hidden
and make it practically invisible.
Thus batteries are shielded from ob
servation under sheds made of green
branches, so that aeroplanes flying
wailing
| Smart and Inexpensive
I Draperies
| Your
With the coming of Spring new draperies
yf are required to make the home bright and
cheery.
|| A few minutes spent here looking over our
= wonderful stock of smartly designed and in-
M expensive draperies and drapery fabrics will
H surprise you,—they represent the best values
money can buy.
H Special No. 1—
M Fine double-thread MARQUISETTE CURTAINS—
-2]/> yards long, hemstitched and trimmed with
||l dainty lace edge—a real $2.00 value— 1 Cl"|
§| special at, per pair m) 1
1 Special No. 2
1 Elegant hemstitched MARQUISETTE CURTAINS
Hi —a splendid $1.50 value. Special at, 1 1 Q
ST per pair tJ/laA*/
Yard Goods Moderately Priced
H Cretonnes .. 25$ to $ 1.00 per yd.
§ Marquisettes 25$ to 75$ per yd.
Sunfast Materials 00$ to $ 3.00 per yd.
@ Quaker Craft Lace 30$ to Sf? 5.00 per yd.
== Velours, (all colors) $3.50 to SIO.OO per yd.
H Reps and Poplins 75$ to $ 2.50 per yd.
|| Curtains at Prices to Please All
= Marquisette Curtains ..$ 1.50 to $ 5.00 per pr.
M Lace Curtains $ 2.50 to Sf? 6.50 per pr.
H Net Curtains $ 2.50 to $25.00 >er pr.
H; Duchess Curtains $ 5.00 to $27.50 per pr.
=0 Sunfast Curtains $ 5.00 to $20.00 per pr.
H Silk Curtains $16.50 to $25.00 per pr.
H NATURAL DAYLIGHT DRAPERY DEPT., 2D FLOOR
Our workrooms are prepared and equipped to supply slip
= covers, awnings, etc., promptly and at moderate prices.
I GOLDSMITH'S
North Market Square
7
over them cannot distinguish thd
location of the guns from the sur
rounding green meadows. The term
which is French, as now adopted
into the language and generally
used, means any effort to cover up
or obscure the true nature of a
thing.
Try This If You
Have Dandruff
There is one sure way that never
fails to remove dandruff completely,
and that is to dissolve it. This de
stroys it entirely. To do this, just get
about four ounces of plain, ordinary
liquid arvon; apply It at night when
retiring; use enough to moisten the
scalp and rub it in gently with tha
finger tips.
By morning, most If not all, of
your dandruff will be gone, and threa
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.
You will find, too, that all Itching
and digging of the scalp will stop
instantly, and your hair will ba
Huffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft,
and look and feel a hundred timea
better.
You can get liquid arvon at any,
drug store. It is inexpensive, and four
ounces is all you will need. This sim
pie remedy has never been known
to fail.—Adv.