ajjjß|j ReadiivJ all ike farciij\| iJjPfl ! Life's Problems Are Discussed UV MII.S. WIIiSOX WOOWKOW I read an article the other day written by a woman who signed her t-elf "A Superfluous Old Lady." In it she asked of the public in general: "Will you not help us to come out of our corners and be a part of the great world again ? Is there really no important work for us to do ? We are all mortally tired of the corners, of being bossed around by our dear, grownuj) children, of being dead while we are still alive." Her words began to haunt me. 1 found my mind reverting to them i'.gain and again. I could not imag ine the woman who had written them being either "bossed around" or. as she says later, belonging to that army of old ladies so squelched and sat upon by their superior chil dren that their u'nhappiness Is enough to break one's heart.'' Even as a child I had a horror of old age, its decrepitude, its ugliness, its weight of woe. It is so difficult to understand. Nature offers no iounterparts for it and no symbols of it. Autumn wraps herself in the .splendors of scarlet and gold, and Winter offers a contrast of sombre mysterious beauty. But this horror of old age was obliterated for me by gradually ac quiring a mental picture gallery of women who were old in years but who possessed in full measure the only real youth there is, the youth of the heart. Xo one could have called them superfluous nor have granted them the patronizing and grudging right to live. They had too much to give, and they gave royally. They were too busy to be decrepit or l'eeble: too mellow, too finely tem pered. too tolerant for harsh criti cism or censure; too wise and too philosophical to be cowed by any cirumstance or crushed by any grief. They were women who had proved under fire that they were still the masters of their fate and still the captains of their souls. Some of the most potent and molding forces in my life have been elderly women who never dreamed of being molding forces of exerting an active influence, but. neverthe less. could not fail of doing so be cause of what they were and what they stood for. .It should be the gift and t)ie grace of elderly women to inspire the younger generation, not so much the extremely youthful perhaps, be > ause extreme youth rightly wants to explore to find its own way and enjoy it: but they should be a lamp to the feet of the women in the late twenties and the thirties and the for ies who are perplexed In the confus ing mazes of life and worn with its struggle. I firmly believe that this idea that youth is the seed-time and old age the harvest is a pernicious ;ind false .and foolish one. It is commonly accepted that youth is the only period of enjoyment and achievement, and that old age is the season when from an arm chair in a chimney corner one may alter-i rate between contemplation of past errors and mistakes and the ladel ling out of platitudes and sage ad vice. That is not age at all; it is senility. The chimney corner existence be longs to those who have allowed their minds to rust and their bodies to decay. If you sit and think rheumatism and Brisht's disease and arterio-sclerosis all day you will probably have one of those troubles. Why is a doormat? Because it laid itself down for other people BAKER'S 1 BREAKFAST I COCOA I The food drink 1 without a faulty | Made of high grade cocoa 1 beans, skilfully blended and I manufactured by a perfect | mechanical process, without | the use of chemicals. It is k absolutely pure and whole g (Mk some, and its flavor is deli cious, the natural flavor of the cocoa bean. The genuine bears this ml ' frade-mark and is made H | | only by HI 11 I II filter Baker S Go. Ltd. ■Ltfjllffl DORCHESTER, MASS. REG. U. orr. Established 1780 Can't sleep! Can't eat! Can't even digest what little you do eat! • | One or two doses ARMY & NAVY J|r DYSPEPSIA TABLETS will make you feel ten years younger. Best known remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach and Dyspepsia. 25 cents a package at all Druggists, or sent to any address postpaid/ by the u. S. ARMY & NAVY TABLET CO. 260 West Broadway, N.Y. SATURDAY EVENING, SL/LKRISBURG Uftjg&l TELEGRAPH • APRIL 27, 1918. Bringing Up Father *•* Copyright, 1918, International News Service '■* *•* *•* By McM LETb WALK HOME • M COOD OEAP-VT IbN'T FA- J IT'LL 00 Ub COOO- KEEP ON ,4 IF<jl HAT 1 HOW MUCH l?> IT 0 (I DOLLARS / ' TOO <OIN4 ■ nnJ NO. ** jfc WALKm::" f ANOPR, (E , T . " ' W WM. (•*■*!• 'V-4 TO 1 ,T TV^ PP * • §r SrrvTrTTT-r sr^_P —xv- —' i^ + ,r >53. to wipe their feet on. If it had | adopted the air of a prayer-rug, it j would have been hung on the wall ; in the drawing room and proudly i exhibited to guests. Madame you are cowed and brow-beaten because you have al lowed those about you to dictate i your method of life, your mode of thought, your manner of action, , ! instead ot" firmly, sweetly, smiling- ! ly making them understand that you meant to do exactly as you pleased, no matter how absurd your would be guardians, the younger genera- J tion, might think it. I never could understand why 1 woman's grown-up children so often consider themselves divinely em \ powered to guard and guide their i parent's life. Why, for instance. If mother wants to wear red roses in her bonnet instead of the eternal j pansies, should grown-up daughters j remonstrate and nag until they final- i ly compromise on petunias, which mother has always detested? Or 1 why, if mother wants to marry for ! the second or third time, or change , her religion or take swimming les- I sons, should the matter be discussed pro and con for days- in the family circle? It surely is entirely moth er's own affair. And today, when every human be ing, man, woman or child is gladly ! doing his bit to help win the w*r. why. to consider oneself superfluous I no matter what one's years is just ! a.s much of a delusion as to imagine oneself Mary, Queen of Scots or Charlemagne. Austrian Press Sees New Russ-Teuton War When Strength Conies lioiulon, April 27.—"One thing Is • j certain," says the Arbieter Zeitung. of j Vienna, as quoted in an Exchange | Telegraph dispatch from The Hague, j | "We are not going to allow Austrian j blood to be - d. either now or later! : on. to retain * rman conquests." i This statement is made in a crit • icism of Germany's acton in the dl-; ! rectiqji of virtual annexation of the ; former Russian border states of Li vonia and Esthonia. The newspaper asks whether the treaty concluded i with Russia at Brest-Litovsk still ls ( valid and adds: "Germany's action will have to be ! paid for with another war as soon as Russia is strong enough. This of j course, is entirely Germany's busi- I ness." "Outwitting the Hun 99 By Lieutenant Pat O'Brien (Copyright, 1918, by Pat Alva O'Brien.) The "Hack to Nature" Theory i We freque nll y | hear of men who tain number of days i 1 '•>' on their own re- ; Km * j" sources in the woods : just on a bet or to 1 ;• prove that the j ¥- > "back to nature" I theory still has its! merits and will still i work. My advice to ■ some of na ture seekers is that. ! i if in the future they wish to make ; a real good record, try the little I ! countries of Luxemburg and Bel- ; I gium with a slice of Germany thrown ! 1 in. * I suppose that during this exper- ! j ienee of mine 1 made many mistakes 1 j and traveled many unnecessary milfes j which one with a knowledge of ' woodmanship might have avoided, I and 1 failed to take advantage of many things which would have been | quite apparent to one who knew. It , must not be forgotten, however, that I did not undertake this adventure voluntarily. It was "wished on me." | I simply had to make the most of , the knowledge I had. I .At about this time blisters began to appear on my legs and my knees | 1 swelled. In addition I was pretty 1 well convinced that I had lost the , , sight of my left eye. I hadn't seen a i thing out of it since my leap from i ; the train. j When I imagine the villainous ap ; pearance I must have presented at ! this time—my unhealed wounds. ; 1 eighteen days' growth of beard and general haggard and unkempt visage : —I think the fear I felt about meet- i j j Daily Fashion | j Hint ] z . Prepared Especially For Thh Newspaper X, 0 . o° •]" \° • • P THE ASSERTIVE GIRDLE Girdles are allowed to take all aorta of liberties by the designers of smart costumes, and one never can tell how or where they may b found. The dominant note of this foulard silk frock Is the wide girdle of . black satfn ribbon caught up at rhe front and finished In great loopi at the slds. Plain white satin trims the sleeves and forms the col lar of the dress. Medium size re quires 5 yards 40-lnch foulard, wltt 1 yard white satin and 3 yards 10- inch ribbon. Pictorial Review Oostune No 7(39. Sizes. 34 to 48 inches bust Prl-.e, 2s centa. _ t ins strangers was perhaps unwar- | ranted. The chances are they would j have been infinitely more scared 1 I than 1! As it was I was nearly out of Lux ; em burg before I came face to face i with any one. It was about 6 o'clock j in the morning and I was traveling I along a regular path. Just as I ap i proached a cross path I heard foot | steps coming down it. I stopped i I short, stooped over and pretended to i j be adjusting my shoelace, figuring ( that if the stranger turned into my I ' path he would probably pass right |by me. As luck would have it, he ' i continued on his way and never no- j j ticed me at all. ! After that I frequently noticed ■ I groups of peasants in the distance, 1 ; but 1 usually saw them first and i managed to avoid them. On the eighteenth day after my j ; leap from the train I crossed into , j Belgium. It had taken me just nine j days to get through Luxemburg—a distance which a man could ordi- i ; narily cover in two. but*, considering I the handicap under which I labored. | I was very well satisfied with mv ! I progress. CHAPTER IX I Enter Belgium I have said it was about the eight eenth day after my escape that I entered Belgium, but that is more or less guesswork. I was possibly well into that country before I realized | that I had crossed the line. About the third day after I fig i ured I was in Belgium I started to ; swim a canal just before daylight. I ' was then heading due north in the direction of the German lines. I was ' just about to wade into the canal i when I heard a German yelling vio- | lently, and for the first time I knew j I was being followed. I ran up the bank of the canal quite a distance and then swam to , the opposite side, as I reasoned they j would not be looking for me there, j 1 found a sheltered clump of bushes j that were in a swamp near the canal, ; and in the driest part that I could : find I crawled in and made myself ! as comfortable as possible. The sun came up soon and kept j ime warm, and I planned to camp right there, food or no food, until i the Huns got tired of searching for me. I think I heard them once or twice that day, and my heart nearly i stopped on each occasion, but evi | dently they decided to look in some | other direction and I was not fur- | I ther molested. | At the same time I figured that it ! was absolutely necessary for me to ; change my course, even at the ex- I pense of going somewhat out of my \ way. Certainly, if I went north they i would get me. I decided to go due I west, and I kept in that direction for i four days. As I was in a very weak condition, j I did not cover more than five miles a night. I kept away from the roads and did all my journeying through fields, beet patches, woods, swamps —anywhere, provided I was not like ly to be seen and captured. Food was an Important consideration to me, but It was secondary to conceal ment. At last I brought up at the Meuse river at a place between Namur and Huy, and It was here that I came nearest of all to giving up the strug gle. The Meuse at this point is about half a mile wide—as wide as the Hudson river at West Point. Had I been in normal condition I wouldn't have hesitated a moment to swim across. San Diego Bajr\ California, ! is a mile and a half wide, and I had S often swam across and back, and the 1 San Joaquin, which is also a mile I ( and a half wide, had never proven i an obstacle to me. (To Be Continued) British Casualties 18,369; Killed, 3,069 lx>ndon, April 27.—Casualties in the British ranks reported this week totaled 18,369, as follows: Killed or died of wounds, officers, • 408; men, 2,661; wounded or missing, officers, 2,071; men, 13,229. Despite the heavy fighting for more i than a month past the British casu j alties reported are only now begin | ning to approach the high figures I for week after week last year when the British were on the offensive on ' the western front. The increase re -1 cently has been on the overage of fifty per cent, each week over the t week preceding. Last week the ag- I gregate was 12,368 and the week pre , vlous 8.129, ' FLIES 115 MII.K.S IX HOCK By Associated Press II Washington, April 27. Sergeant Gianfelice Gino. of the Italian flying - corps, yesterday established what is! , | claimed to be a new world's reeord j J for speed when he flew from Laug ley ileld, Hampton Roads. Va., to | Washington, in a Spa fighting plane iin one hour. The distance is 145 ■ j miles. He left Hampton roads at | 12.30 and arrived here at 1.30. THEIR MARRIED LIFE Copyright by International News Service V I "Here, Mary, come and help me,| will you: I'm going to clear out this j hall closet this morning." Mary came obediently at Helen's 1 request and held out her arms for j the old clothes as Helen gave them! to her. "Heavens!" as a cloud of dust j whirled out and two or three mollis iuxied around, "I do believe this i closet is full of moths. I've been going to clear it out for ever so i i long. Mary when have you swept! in here?" Mary answered evasively and Helen drew her own conclusions. Mary, no doubt, had left the closet go for | ; the dust had collected thick on the i ! floor in the corners and the shelves] were gray with the powdery set j tlement. Here's an old suit of Mt. Cur- j i tis'," Helen went on. thinking it; best not to reprove the girl this: time for her neglect. It was not often that Mary needed a reproof: j ' she was quite the best maid Helen ; had ever had. "Take this and shake! it out, will you. Mary: it looks likej ! quite a good suit. Here, waft a I ; minute; I'll see If there is any thing! ! in any of the pockets." Helen slipped her fingers into one j pocket after another, and brought! to light a handkerchief, some ciga- j ret papers, a crushed cigar and some 1 other things. She was just about to hand the suit ovpr to Mary when she felt something crackle in the In- j j side pocket of the vest.' The next j minute she. draw abetter. Her face flushed as she saw that 1 :it was a letter in a lavender en velope and in a handwriting that was no doubt a woman's, but she turned to Mary with the vest. "There, you can take them all out I now. Bring baek a broom and a .dustpan and get up some of this I dust, too." Mary left the room and Helen was j about to draw the letter from the envelope when something checked | her. Was she so jealous of Warren 1 that she did not trust him? What 1 was she thinking when that quick | suspicion had leaped to her mind? ! She had not believed herself capa ! ble of such a feeling. Ixmg ago she had decided never tc be jealous of : Warren again. It was somehow | such a deliberate confession of i weakness. She thought over the situations! |of this kind she had read of In I novels. Always there was a dis-1 j covery_ on the part of the right-i cous wife which led eventually to! either an acceptance of the fact j that her husband was no longer | | faithful to her or a separation, t j Now that Helen was actually faced I [ with such a problem, her brave j show of independence faded some-' | what. She wondered desperately I just what she would do, If she took j ! the letter out of Its envelope and. | discovered something terrible in Its j I contents. j Mary had returned and was clean ! ing out the closet, and Helen re treated to the bedroom with the letter in her hand. She stood It | uj* on Warren's chiffonier and; 1 Daily Dot Puzzle 32 II ' 4 35 5 31 * 3 • * 2. . * 10 2V • •* ,40 • 26 •" -* 1 9 .42 • oil 46 4S 17 13 47. 52 49. lb 15 *l4 • .50 * 25 .u 54 •7. 5 ." 55 10 1. . * * *57 22 • • 59 *4 fc*9 • (W --j-J • i • I Trace the dot* to sixty-four, ! And you'lee see sweet Eleanor. Draw from one to two and so on , to the end. . . . -CWt.j-.v I suddenly decided to do the very j ! wise thing of leaving it just there | I in its prominent position until War- j j ren came home. Then' he would! ■ see it, and could not possibly get! j out of showing just how he felt I about Helen's finding it. The task was harder than she: had imagined it would be, until! ! finally in desperation and avoiding j i looking at the letter at all, she got | and went out. As soon as I 1 she had left the house she began! I to think how foolish she had been; !in not opening the letter. After I all it was not the same as open- j : ing one that had not been already] read. If she had read the contents j lof the mysterious envelope she' would have been doing no morel ! than the average wife would have ' thought entirely within her rights.! j But directly after this came a re-j ; vulsion of feeling and she deter- j ! mined to stay out until Warren came' j home. i *"*■'! She timed his coming almost per-' fectly and was in her room arrang-l j ing her hair when his key clicked in 1 ' the lock. ! "Hello," he called from the hall.; "Hello, dear. I'm in here." and! j then, as he appeared in the door-i j way. "how is everything?" • : "Fine," he said, coming over to' ! drop a kiss on the top of her head,! and then, just as she had known lie | would do. he went over to the cliif- j j fonier and spied the envelope. 1 "Hello," he ejaculated, "what's! ! this?" j "I found it in the pocket of an ! old suit of yours," Helen remarked,; her heart beating fast. "And I suppose you know the. con-1 tents backward," Warren returned.' "I haven't looked at the contents,"! Helen said proudly. ' "What? Do you mean to tell me. that you have allowed this letter to] remain here all day long without 1 taking a peek inside?" Hoi was 1 looking at her as though he could j not believe his ears. Helen did not He. and Warren, knew it. so that when she shook heri head he looked still more amazed.; "Well," he said finally, "all I have 1 to say is that such strength of cho.r- j acter should not go unrewarded.' Here it is, old girl: you see. {t's not| I from a vampire or anything likej I that, if she does use lavender paper.! 1 Just an application for funds from; the church. I don't see why I ever: | kept it." But Helen, whose heart was beat-; ] ing happily, thought it an almost uueanny test of her faith in him, al- I though she did not say so." Italians Turn on Germans With Picks Killing and Capturing Washington. April 27.—How two' companies of Italian auxiliary troops 1 digging trenches for the allies in, ! Flanders fought, attacking German j j troops with their pickaxes, is told; in a dispatch yesterday from Rome. The message says: "The first Italian troops reached! France last November. These con tingents made munitions for artil lery and various war necessities, showing discipline and capacity. Lat er on others arrived, under General j Tarditi, and were employed in de fensive construction, providing them selves excellent workmen, not dis pleased that they were unable to carry arms against the foe. like the, French and Rnglish. Two auxiliary. Italian companies working in the 1 trenches in Flanders found" them-! selves In front of the advancing Ger-I mans. The German subaltern in j charge ordered the soldiers to do some work before surrendering, but; the Italians fell upon the Germans with their picks, killing many, cau turing others, and re'iring in an or-i derly manner." MAN KILLED IN EXPLOSION By Associated Press Baltimore, Md.. April 27. One man was killed and four were in jured yesterday afternoon when a hugie boiler in the plant of the Mount Vernon-Woodberry mills, at Woodberry. exploded ard tore away 1 a. large section of the southern wn'l of the building. The loss is $33,- 000. AMERICAN VLYER IS KILLED By Associated Press London, April 27.—The death on Thursday of Second Lieutenant John Jewltt Miller, en American member of the British air force, became known through the Inquest held Fri day. Lieutenant Miller was killed in a fall of 400 feet near Chester. NO ADVANCE IN PRICE CROUP 43 Spasmodic croup it usually relieved with A one application of— Frllifc V .Ui,koirZm*l 25c—50c—$1.00 ' ! Advice to the Lovelorn By BEATRICE FAIRFAX A COXTBMPTIBI.E ATTITUDE DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am engaged. My fiance is one of the cleanest cut fellows X have ever met. He is also successful. For this I greatly admire and respect him* But, Miss Fairfax, there is one thing that | greatly annoys me. My fiance is not tall, and I do admire tall men. I I have been engaged about a year, and as the time draws near to my mar riage I wonder if 1 will regret it, feel ing as I do. I am considered beauti , ful, am about 5 feet 4 inches, and my ] fiance fiance is 5 feet 7 inches. My brother Is very' tall, and when I am with him T feel that protection I do i not feet with my fiance. At times I • love him devotedly and other times, j ] just for this reason, 1 seem to feel I that 1 cannot marry him. PERPJJ3XED. , Tour fiance's stature may not be j gigantic, but your heart and mind are j hopelessly dwarfed! Do you serious ' ly think that you have a problem? 'Of course, you have one, but wo do j not recognize what it is. It has noth ! ing to do with your fiance's being 5 j feet 7 instead of the magnificent six footer a weak, foolish, sentimental land ignorant creature like you fancies she would enjoy leaning on. | When I read a letter like yours I j am swayed at once by three feelings. : How under the sun do such women ever fool men into marrying them at | all? What do the men who are "not tall enough" think of their wives' ! dwarf-minds anf what under the sun l is to become of the human race if such I mentally stunted women have any I part and parcel in it? It is beneath Imy dignity to try to explain to you ! that the best thing that could happen I to the man who fancies he loves you is to lose the selfish little simpleton ! who can worry over a problem like I this. Don't worry—you won't break : any man's heart. You have not eyes to see a mind to understand that the | biggest, finest and most worthwhile may have a soul housed in a body! | five feet tall, not five feet seven, nor j j yet six feet! "TWO SOU I- SIDES" i DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: \ i Do you believe, in a dual person-i alit.v? A Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde af- | | fair? Do you think it possible that I a girl could appear thoroughly good. unselfish, devoted to her people, have ! a real love of religion, a desire to re i frain from doing unto others that which she certainly would never want ! done to herself, an ability to make j friends among really worth-while | people, and still be a wanderer after I i questionable pleasure? If you do, by \ any chance, believe this could be, what do you think are the chances ' for thr good triumphing, or will the 1 struggle ever end this side of the | "Passing?" T. F. You have not beeu describing a case ; I of "dual personality!" There is really j : nothing of the Jekyll and Hyde in the j case you describe. But I not only be lieve in dual personality, there is evi dence of medical science to prove its existence. The splendid, loyal, de voted daughter you describe might easily have a pleasure-loving, reck less side to her nature which is just an expression of youth and its long ing for happiness and gayety. The very recklessness to which you object —and to which I object, too is part of this girl's adolescent unrest. If I were a man and liked her. I wouldn t lecture her, but I would give her wholesome, clean, simple pleasures I and just by contrast win her away from the feverish things that appeal Ito her now. Splendid men and women I often lose their poise and balance and j react strongly in the opposite direc , tion. They repress self and selfish j emotions at home and then when they Why Women Suffer BECAUSE you are a woman there is no need to sufife. pain and annoyance which in terfere with work, comfort and pieasure. When you aufferagain j try Piso'a Tablets—a valuable, healing local application with astringent and tonic effects. 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His MOTHER'S INVITATION DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I am engaged to a young man who lives out of town. He is now serving Uncle Sam, and his mother has invited me to visit their home on his next furlough. Would It be proper for me to accept? A BLINK J. It will be absolutely correct for you to visit your fiance on the invitation of his mother. Some day she will be your mother, too, you know. Even if you were not engaged, but were merely very good friends, the invita tion of the man's mother would be one that it would be quite wise and proper for you to accept. You Cannot Expect To Have a Clear Complexion By Constantly Massaging It With So-called Skin Foods or Creams, Often Rancid or Germy. Substitute Cuticura. Contrast the purity, fragrance, comfort, and convenience of these super-creamy emollients with "beauty fads" so com mon, tiresome and expensive. A bath with Cuticura Soap and hot water on rising and retiring thoroughly cleanses and stimulates sluggish pores, giving I the complexion a fresh healthy glow. | If signs of pimples, redness or rough* | ncss be present smear them with the I Ointment and let it remain five minutes j before bathing. Nothing purer, sweeter | or more effective for your skin and hair i than Cuticura. Sample Each Frea by Mail. Address post card: "Cuticura, Dapt. 22, Bolton. 1 ' Sold every where. Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. THAT UNEASY FEELING That dull depression, that dragged out spiritless condition — it's bilious ness. Why be out of sorts with yourself • and everybody else when one dose of Schenck's Mandrake Pills will do wonders for you. 80 years reputation for biliousness, constipation and bilious headache,etc. 25c par box—uacoatad or sugar coatad Dr. J. H. Schenck & Son, Philadelphia The Joys ip|| SIGHT aL Forget—if you can—that you are able to see. Blot out the won ders of nature and art. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers