Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, May 04, 1918, Page 5, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Little Talks by
Beatrice Fairfax
"How old are yoir?" might have
been the title of an amusing comedy,
enacted at the special Congressional
election in New Yor.<, when women
voted.
This inquiry was put to a tall,
slim, boyish-looking woman—one of
the keen, live-wire type. Without a
moment's hesitation she answered:
"Forty-nine."
She was informed this was no oc
casion for jocularity, and serious
consequence might ens le if she l er
sixted in merrymaking. The lady,
with an air of "1 expected this.'
orened her handbag: and produced a
marriage license, seating 101 th that
she had been niarrieo twenty-eight I
J'ars and that she was twenty-one
iii (he time of the ceremony.
The men looked foolish, and the
slender one, with an ai • of having
insured herself ag'.iinst masculine (
stupidity, went on with her business
of citizenship and iepirted.
Another woman with a triple chin,
ehrrtness of brea;h an i a 'general |
air of limpness who had got wind oi
t:ie -comedy nearly contracted alio- i
j ltxy in rlinning down the girlish!
f irty-niner. "How no you d > it?" !
*he gasped.
And the lady who had held tjle
clock back twenty years answered
t-rielly: "Interest and fresh air.'
And the greatest of these is inter
<•3l. Some vital interest as a whet-
Fton" for every facultv and the yeors
fly tj* without leaving- their fatal
f"ot| rints.
A Group of Yoillls-<Mil People
Clemenceau, the French Premier, 1
Is seventy-six: Thomas Edison is!
seventy-one, and he thinks nothing;
j
Daily Dot Puzzle
2® O , 16 ~ I
• 18 l 7 '
" * f=N ' * l4
2b • *ll
. | |. lO
f * '
f ' lB
I 2,9 • 9 )
r? '
31 7 * •
*. *
31
\^
-'ii. \
• \
C f S*
Draw from one to two and so on
tfi the ond.
BAKER'S
I BREAKFAST !
I COCOA
| The food drink j
without a fault
'M 5
| Made of high grade cocoa jj
H beans, skilfully blended and |
I manufactured by a perfect
p mechanical process, without
| the use of chemicals. It is jj
| absolutely pure and whole- I
i (some, and its flavor is deli- I
cious, the natural flavor of \
the cocoa bean. |
The genuine bears this |
m' \ trade-mark and is made I
IS 11 i i Walter Baker 8 Co. Ltd. \
IllljjJf \j3 DORCHESTER, MASS. f
BJ U opr. Established 1780
I Can't sleep! Can't eat! Can't even digest what little you do eat!
One or two doses
ARMY & NAVY
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,
Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service '•* *■* *•* By McManus
LL ' Y * JIC<^'OUST JUST
THINK- tT'6 TVJENTV HAVt I ISOT S\l ' BRINC, IN ONF OF W Hft WAS J I I i
of working forty-eight hours on a
stretch; Anna Shaw is ais.> seventy
one, and she often sits up in tne
train at night, and mukes three or
four speeches the following day. If
yoj've ever heard the tnagic of h'.r
elcquence, it is not necessary to say
how young she is. Amelia Barr, ;it
eiphty-seven, is still ,v. iting books
that sell up into the thousands
These peop'c haven't time to get
tin- they are too busy thinking and
working at important things—they
let the years take care of them
selves.
If you would be young and haven't
a vital and consuming interest, "it's
up to you'' to create one. The war.
with its countless opportunities for
work, has been a godscni tj the type
1 am going to call the mummified
wt man.
The woman is to be
found in all classes of society. The
influences that control 1-er life are
always material. Her world is
thrown out of gear if the silver
car.'t be cleaned on Wednesday, if
that happens to be silvsr-clcaning
duy. if the seamstress is late or un
able to come, it is a tragedy. If the
department store has no more ma
genta satin of the particular shade
has decided on foe a belt. It is
a world calamity.
In her soul that woman is as old
as Rider Haggard's "She." Never an
interest in life above some foolish
material thing, that she'd be better
oft without. Sofa pillows, lamp
shades, a bargain—something not
really needed—ice cream soda, cards,
bridge, movies and a petty rivalry In
getting ahead of some other woman.
f>he never thinks her brain is the or
■tan above which she pins her hat.
The mummified woman seldom
■ •ares about children—if she did they
would keep a,way that slow drying-
Lip process. Usually she lives in a
Hat which reduces her housework to
a minimum.
And lier family consists of a cou
ple of plants, a Victrola and a ca
nary, sometimes the canary is varied
by a dog. More often than not there
is a mummified husband in the back
ground. and he, too. has h's dry-as
dust little interests.
Now the great world war J-.as laid
its grip on that family and shaken
them out of that slaw process of
evaporation that was desiuating them
body and soul. It has given her
something to do, something to think
about besides the iniquities ot the
Janitor and the great question of
rloes the laundress make oft with the
handkerchiefs?
If she goes out to do Red Cross
work, it brings her in contact with
other women, who help to bring
something into her life. But when
a woman of this type decides to take
a "job" it makes her over.
A Xtnnllnic Change
I I know several such women and
the change in them is startling. One
| in particular who has taken a place
with the Food Administration, where
j she gets a salary of SSS a month
| and with it a new lease of life.
• She was the most mummified per
| son I have ever known. She kept
| house neatly and well, but there was
I not enough to keep her busy more
! than a few hours, the rest of the
I time she spent in drying up.
She and her husband had a simple
breakfast at eight, and ne departed
not to return until 5.30 o'clock. Then
they sat down to a silent dinner, not
l because they were "mad." but be
j cause there was nothing to talk
I about. She "did" the dishes and he
' smoked, and their day was done,
j Her husband was fond of her in
i his dull, dry way. He accepted her
<as part of the flat furniture. In j
j the scheme of things she occupied a
| place higher than the diningroom
i table that held the meals, or the
I steamlieat pipes that kept the place j
' warm, because she saw to and ad
i ministered these things.
They might have gone on like this
for years, but one day she heard a |
patriotic speech that stirred her as ]
i nothing had stirred her for years. I
| and she went out and got that Gov- ■
ernment job.
j This gave her husband a terrible
I "jolt," The little, dull wife had her '
j place in the world, the United States j
I Government had decided she was
worth >BS a month. '
Jifttlf'n Value to the Country 1
It was incredible, but Nettie was ;
worth something besides going to j
market, cooking the dinner and i
making the stew now that the price j
of steak had gone up so high. He I
polished his glasses and began to j
regard her with fresh eyes. She |
was only thirty-six, after all—and
not bad-looking. So he began walk
ing to her office with her in the
| morning and sometimes bringing
! home a bunch of violets at night.
I The maid they have in to cook
I the dinner is not as good a cook as
! Nettie—but what's the difference?
1 That particular husband has begun
j to show some of the attentions of)
| their courting days—he's not so sure •
j of Nettie as he was.
liDaily Fashion!
I Hint I
IP Prepare 4 Especially For TTiii |
p Ncjuspapet
A COAT IN HIQH FAVOR.
Despite the cry for wool conserva
tion entire coats of brown English
cheviot are to be seen among the
spring modes, and also In high favor
are the Canadian homespuns, Eng
lish woolens, Irish friezes and Scotch
tweeds. The model pictured is in
straight-line efTect trimmed with
large pockets, cuffs, collar and belt
of self-material. Medium size re
quires 4 yards 54-lnch material. Pic
torial Review Coat No. 7750. Sizes,
34 to 4ti Inches bunt, l'riuo, 2f cenu.
HAREISBURG TELEGRAPH
Wheatlessness
at Dinner
So croutons, macaroni or spug.
hetti in soup—use barley, tapioca,
sago, peas, beans or eat with it
wheatless and ryeless wafers.
NO BREAD—Double servings of
potatoes or two kinds of potatoes,
(sweet and white) or potatoes and
hominy or potatoes and rice.
Crackers (if any) wheatless and
ryeless. (Use rice flour, corn flour,
cornmeal, oatmeal.)
Pie crusts of corn flour, barley
| Hour, cornmeal, oatmeal.
Other wheatiess desserts such as
I tapioca puddings, rice puddings, gel
j atin dishes, frozen desserts, custards,
j hlanc manges, fruit compotes, fruit
! sponges, pota'to flour desserts,
| steamed puddings of cornmeal and
I barley, baked puddings of cornmeal
| and barley wheatiess cakes. ,
CORNFLOUR BISCUITS
I 2 2-3 cups corn flour
i ti teaspoons baking powder
I 1 teaspoon salt
.1 '.ablespoons fat
' 1 cup liquid
Sift dry materials together. Work
'in fat well. Combine liquid and
j dry materials, handling lightly. 801 l
| or pat inch thick and cut as bis
) cuits. Bake in a hot oven.
RICE FLOUR SPONGE CAKE
i 4 eggs
1 cup sugar
I 2 tablespoons lemon juice
j '4 teaspoon salt
j 3-4 cup rice flour
i Separate the whites and yolks of
. eggs. Beat the yolks until thick
land lemon colored. Beat sugar into
j yolks, add the lemon juice and salt.
I Fold in alternately the stiffly beaten
; whites and flour. Bake in ungreas-
I ed pan for 35 to 40 minutes.
Advice to the Lovelorn
By BEATRICE FAIRFAX
The.v Are Selfish
Dear Miss Fairfax:
1 am in love with a young man,
and there is no doubt as to the sin
cerity of his love for me. The bar
j rier to our marriage is the fact that
, his people are not anxious to see
i him marry, as they hate to see him
[ leave them. He is urging' me to
wed him without their consent.
What would you advise ? M. C. S. S.
This man's parents, as you de
scribe them, are selfish and self
centered. Most parents nafe to see
their children leave the home nest
—but most parents conquer their
own feelings ! They once upon a
time wanted a home of their own
and now they should realize the
tight of their children to have an
individual existence, too. If only a
selfish unwillingness to part, with
their boy stands between you and
the man you love, then I think you J
two young people have a light not]
only to take jour happiness <>nd to
force your elders to a more generous
attitude of acceptance—but to com
pel them to recognize your rights '
if generously, or not.
Why Kncouraee Him?
Bear Miss Fairfax: o
1 am just eighteen years. I am
in love with a man of twenty-one in
my class at college. This young I
man has been friends with a young ]
lady, about twenty, for several j
years, and though they are not for- I
mally engaged, are understood to ]
be so.
What shall I do? May I offer '
him any encouragement ? I do not
want to feel that I would be the
cause of making a girl miserable.
S. N. i
Why should you "offer him any i
encouragement"? He has not 1
shown any signs of wanting to be I
encoi.raged, has he ? You "think" j
yo'i nre In love. I think you are
romantic and not too honorable. '
Leave this boy alone. He is plight- !
ed to another girl. He might mere- !
;>• be disgusted with you if you tried ;
'o steal his love—but even were I
possible for you to gain 'iT, such a i
course would be contemptible.
Are You Mercenary?
Bear Miss Fairfax:
I am twenty-eight and have a
friend (widower) twenty-one years
•my, senior. He is well able to g<ve j
■me a more comfortable home than
I have. We love one another and j
know that we will do everything to !
make one another happy. Do you '
think the difference in ages is too i
great ?
L. R. j
One sentence In your letter seems !
to settle the whole question. If
you are convinced of your own sin- I
cerity and mean what you say, this j
disposes of the situation for you. j
The sentence to whi-h I refer is I
this: "We Jove one another and I
know that w'e will do everything to !
make each other, happy." . My dear
girt, as compared to that., what Is I
any evidence of the calendar and
the date of your birth in the town ,
hall or family bible ? You are a i
woman grown and this man is In j
what is called "the prime of life"!
Age is a matter of spirit rather than j
time. One of the youngest, most i
v'tal and energetic men I know is I
sixty-five. The only thing that wor
ries me is the suggestion of a nier- j
cnary attitude on your part, in the
emphasis you plate on your joy in
the sort of home this man can give j
jou.
"Outwitting the Hun"
By Lieutenant Pat O'Brien
(Copyright, 19IS. by Pat Alva O'Brien.)
SVXOI'SIS
i Enlisting in the K. F, C. in Canada
in May, 1917, Lieutenant O'Brien was
I transferred to France for active ser
| vice, where he was brought down be
; hind the German lines, in a fall of
8,000 feet. He escaped later, in Ger
many, by a hold leap from the window
of a prison train going thirty miles
an hour.
Then came his extraordinary jour
ney out of Germany, through Luxem
burg and into Belgium, hie traveled
at night and rested 'n hiding during
the day, surviving terrlole hardships. |
swimming rivers when delirious from j
hunger and exposure, living like a
i hunted animal. When well on his way
1 through Belgium, one night, in quest ,
of food, he raps at the door ot a j
dwelling and is admitted by a (
Flemish peasant, who befriends him ]
and directs him to a man in a Belgian '
citv who will help him secure a pass
port. Now go on with the story.
CHAPTER XI.
I Fneonntor <jennnn Soldiers
| (Copyright, 1918. by Pat Alva
O'Brien. > •
What the Bel
fil'1" j'"',''-
; j worry. Ii
j should run into a
fHpip j SlUTPCd'cd
until the
h 'g city which the
Belgian had men-1
tioned—and which 1 cannot name fori
rear of identifying some of the peo-i
pie there who befriended me I!
j would proceed with the utmost pre-:
i caution. Since I had discarded my
uniform and had obtained civilian
clothes, I had not been Quite as care-!
ful as I was at first.
While I had done my traveling at|
night, I had not gone into hiding so
early in the morning as before and I;
I had sometimes started again before j
lit was quite durk, relying upon the.
tact that I would prooably be mis
j taken for a Belgian on his way to ori
| from work, as the case might be. ]
From now on. I resolved, however.
I 1 would take no more chances.
I That evening I came to a river per- \
I haps seventy-live yards wide an.l l|
was getting ready to swim it when I
thought I would walk o i:ule way to'
find, if possible, a better place toi
get to the river from the bank, i!
had not walked mo:e tnan a few,
; hundred feet when I saw a boat. It!
I was the first time I had seen a boat!
j in all my experiences
It was firmly, chained, but as the,
stakes were sunk in the soft bank it j
i was not tpiuch of a job to pull them
| out. I got in, drank to my heart's j
| content, shoved over to the other j
I side got out, drove a stake into cl!<-
I ground and moored the boat. It;
j would have been a simple mutt ?r|
! to have drifted down the river, but i
! the river was not shown on my map!
and I had no idea where it might!
lead mc. Very reluctantly, therefore,]
I hnd to abandon the boat and pro
ceed 011 foot.
Making Hotter Headway
T made several miles that nignt
J and before daylight found a s.tfe
place in which to hide for the day.
Ftom my hiding place I could ste;
through the bushes a heavy thick'
wooil only a short distance away. J J
decided that I would start earlier|
than usua", hurry over to the wood
and perhaps, in that way. I could'
cover two or three miles in the day-1
time and gain just so much time, j
Traveling through the wood would!
be comparatively safe. There was, a
railroad going through the wood, but;
I did not figure that would make it
any the less safe.
About 3 o'clock that afternoon,
therefore, I emerged from my hiding
place and hurried into the wood.
Af'er proceeding for half a mile or so
I came to the railroad. I took a
sharp look in both directions -md
seeing no signs of trains or soldiers,!
I walked boldly over the tracks and;
continued on my way.
I soon came upon a clearing and|
knew that someone, must be living in
the vicinity. As I tunned group of
trees I saw a small house and in the
distance an old man working in aj
garden.
T decided to enter the house and 1
ask for food, figuring the woman!
would probablv be ol<l and would hei
no match for me even if she proved!
hostile. The old woman who camei
to the door in response -to my knock
was oldct than 1 had expected. If,
she wasn't close to a hundred years, I
X miss my guess very much.
She could not speak English and I!
could not speak Flemish, of course,
but nevertheless I made her under
stand that I wanted something to i
eat. She came out of the door und j
hollered for her husband in a shrill
voice that would have done credit to
a girl of eighteen.
The old man came in from his gar
den and between the two of thou
they managed to get the idea that I
was hungry and they gave me a
piece of bread—a very small piece—
which WHS quite a treat.
The house they lived in consisted
of just tw6 rooms —the kitchen r.nd
A bedroom. The kitchen WHS per
haps fourteen feet square, eight feet
of one side of it being taken up 1 y
an enormous fireplace. What ws
in the bedroom 1 had no way of roll-
ing, as 1 dill not dare lo be too in- j
quisitive.
Refused a Night's lodging
I made the old couple understand
! that I would like to stay in their!
: house all night, but the old muni
■shook his head. 1 bade them good- i
• by and disappeared into the woods,!
'leaving theiu to speculate as to ihe i
j strange foreigner they had enter-1
tained.
From the greater density of the;
population in the section through!
which X was now passing i realized I
that 1 must be in the outskirts of the I
big city which the Belgian hal nien-i
tioned and where X was to procui j a:
! passport.
Village after village intercepted!
! me, and although X tried to skirt j
j them wherever possible X realized j
! that I would never make much prog-1
I ress if I continued that course. To
! gain a mile I would sometimes havei
to make a detour of two or three.;
I decided that i would try my luck in 1
going straight through the next vil-;
lase X came to.
As X approached it I passed num-l'
[ hers of peasants who were ambling j
along the road. I was afraid to nun-j
i gle with them because it was impus-:
sible for me to talk to them and .tj
was dangerous to arouse suspicion,!
even among the Belgians. For ill I
! knew one of them might be treacher
ous enough to deliver me to the Ger
-1 mans in return for the reward he
might be sure of receiving.
About 9 o'clock that evening I
1 came to a point where ahead of mo
on the right was a Belgian police
station—X knew it from its red lignts
—and on the other side of the Street
were two German soldiers in uniform I
leaning against a bicycle.
1 Here was a problem which called
for instant decision: if I turned back
the suspicion of the soldiers would
be instantly aroused and if I crossed
the road so as not to pass so closely
to them they might be equally sus
picious. I decided to march bravely
by the Huns, bluff my way through
and trust to Providence.
If anybody imagines, however, that
I was at all comfortable as X ap
proa'ched these soldiers, he must
think that X am a much braver man
than X claim to bo. My heart beut so
loud I was afraid they would hear it.
Every step I took brought me so
much nearer to what might prove lo
be the end of all my hopes. Xt was
a nerve-racking ordeal.
1 was now within a few feet of
them. Another step and —
They didn't turn a hail! 1 passed
right by them heanl wnat they
were saying, although, of course, X
didn't understand it. and went right
on 1 can't say,l didn't walk a lit'le
faster as X left them behind", but I
triad to maintain an even gait so us
not to nivc them any idea of the in
ward exultation X was experiencing.
No word can explain, however,
how relieved X really felt —to know
that I had successfully pass-.' I
thiough the lirst of a series of simi
lar tet,ts which I realized were in
store for me —although X did not
know then how soon I was to be
fronted with the second.
As it was, however, the Incident
gave me a world of confidence. It
demonstrated to nie that there was
nothing in my appearance, at any
rate, to attract the attention of the
German soldiers. Apparently 1 looked
like a Belgian peasant, and If I
could only work thing so thut 1
would never have to answer (|u.cs
tions and thus give away my nation
ality, I figured 1 would be tolerituiy j
safe.
(To lie Continued.)
T woPotatoßeceipts |
Even if you have never liked po
tatoes before, you will like them
fixed In tne following ways:
POTATO PUFFS
2 cups mashed potato
2 esgs
1 cup grated cheese
!6 cup milk
1 teaspoon salt
Add the milk and salt to the po
ta'o aod beat until thoroughly
blended. Add the beaten es;g and
the grated cheese. Bake In greas
ed tins or ramekins In a slow oven.
BKEOIAN BAKED POTATOES
Wash, pare and slice potatoes as
for French fried. I.ay the strips in
an oiled g-anlte pan and hake In the
even. Salt and serve.
N MATED
ONM-*j*tMren tacraaaao atrongth of ok>
d.}aa. nrvu, run-down peo- vw
trh In two v.-oeka l time, In many H
ln*Uneee, II Hat ha on u tod and JH
oi'.r*ad by aueh men a* Hon.
Lnallo M. Sfurw, former Secretary .
oHb ot (he T'vy,:ry and Ev-Guvornor
w&k. KlchsnJ Potlattd Kannoy of fILJB
WA DJt* m, Major of tha
<J. S. L .. C.i. ral John L. Clom
>M| • "f (trummor boy of
M SMoh - • aorpaont In tho
/%y *. Prmy „ only 12 yooro of
r.*X Oft*-' -i Ltat'ad Statoa Judo* €l. M ■
EW#M invi.tfl tno Court of Ctalmo ■ ■
of Watli'i.igfon and othars. Aak
your doctor or d'utfglat about It*
DiRON
MAY 4, 1018
Secret Service
For Cooks
Car. you tell the difference be
tween a barley flour chocolate cake
and a wheat flour chocolate cake ?
Do you know whether your biscuits
jare rice flour or wheat flour ? Could
you, make an accurate guefi as to,
whether thiit pie crust was corn
flour or wheat flour If you can't
then isn't it silly to say "O, 1 can't
use these wheat substitutes. The
family won't eat them."
It is not a question of becoming
used to wheat substitutes, but we
must realize that the time for idle
prejudice and idle talk has gone. It
is a question of life and death for
our soldiers that we eat other cere
als and send the wheat to them.
Cooks of America, line uj> in the
ranks of the secret service. You do
not hear an employe of that branch
of the service TALKING about his
work. But he gets results. So can
you. Don't say to your family, "We
have no wheat on the table, we are
eating no wheat, we haven't had any
wheat for weeks." Say rather, "Yes,
I think that bread is pretty good
myself," (a wheatless baking pow
der loaf bread,) "but there's no need
of neglecting the potatoes, John.
Here, eat more of them and less of
the bread. What are we going to
have for dessert? Oh, something
you like. Fruit gelatin and cakes"
—barley flour) —"if you must know.
Well what's the news about Ypre&
tonight ?" And so on.
Do your talking about wheat sub
stitutes when you meet with the
other wives who are secretly serv
ing. There is the place to compare
notes, and, incidentally receipts.
There is the place where you may
talk shop to your heart's content.
But In your family let your conver
sation, as well as your meals, be
wheatless.
|NO ADVANCE IN PRICE j ® T "^
jMEURALGIA ! The Value of
| rub the Forehead 1
Correct
ft and Temple with /Mlft i | .1, . _
Litil* Body-Guard inlbwr Hmne* v//sKfir M T C-
I tyesignt
25c—50c—$1.00 ; Faulty vision —an annoyance
' an<l serious handicap elimi-
DR. CHASE'S nates many of the joys of life.
Blood SsSNerveTablets *££Zt
Weigh Yourself Before faking. 1 >OUr eyCS '
Pric 60 Cents. Special 90 Cents I We v. ill I'lll'lliwli the clashes
I lilted Medicine Co., X. 10th St.,!
Philadelphia, I*a.
[ Relief from Eczema | / W.P^LQ
_ , , | Eyesight Specialist
Don t worry about eczema or other sa MIIITH TIIIIJM STHICET
skin troubles. You can have a clear, s;iiteinner Haiidias
healthy skin by using a little zemo, IT'.'.'i' 'rrrsssss &&&'£%
obtained at any drug store for 35c, or —*" —' ll ■■■ ■■
extra large bottle at SI.OO.
Zemo generally removes pimples, T-_ „ _ I ¥ rvTTT
blackheads, blotches, eczema a.id ring- L"drJl HOW
worm and makes the skin clear and
healthy. Zemo is a clean, penetrating, to
antiseptic liquid, neither sticky nor
greasy and stains nothing. It is easily i rjr TRY "T
applied and costs a mere trifle for each JJC _MI
application. It is always dependable. J.
The E. W. Rose Co., Cleveland. O. Nearly everybody's knitting theye
dnys, so of course, you want to do
Jl*-*"™ l *".. "™" 1 - ■" * ■ your BIT for OUR soldier boys us
Ualn wnntorl well as make a sweater and other
r WalllCU comfort articles for yourself.
by many women THK WI\IRNRO CT>ARK SWEAT
TF a woman suffers from sich EH BOOK
i. ailments as Backache. Head- I , ncludeß lnstrU ctlon a for the .land
•che. Lassitude and Nervous- ; ard Red CroM Army and lVavy
fiess - - the symptoms indicate j sweaters and helmets.
Karrisburg tare College
Troup lJulldln, 13 fi. Uarkei s%. this paper to-day and the Wlnifre<l
Bell pbune *6i uiai 43UJ Clark Sweater Book will be mailed
BooKKeeplng. ishorthund, jriieno- to you.
type. Typewriting. ctvil Servle*,
position 11 aiid "HOUI " CU ;Vl&°* Enclosed find 15 cents for which
v ui(h Training in a stuadurd school mail me the new Winifred Clark
of Katabllabed Reputation. Day Sweater Bock,
and Night School. ttntr auy Moa- 1
day. '
Fully accredited by the National I ame
Association.
V. —— ,mm "\ Address
German Admiral Removed;
Result of Zeebrugge Raid
Admiral von Schroeder, com
mander of (he German naval base
at Zeebrugge, has been relieved of
his command. His demotion was the
result of the successful raid recently
made by British and French war
ships.
BABY SCRATCHEr
DAYAND NIGHT
Had Breaking Out All Over
Face and On Head. Blisters
Came, Cuticura Healed.
"My baby had a breaking out all over
her face, and there was some on her head.
Small blisters came, and then they burst
and became sore, red. and angry, and s
dry skin came over them. She scratched
at them day and night, and she was so
disfigured I was ashamed for her to be
seen.
"My mother suggested that we get a
free sample of Cuticura Soap and Oint
ment and we did. It gave relief at once.
Then we bought more, and in about four
weeks she was healed." (Signed) Mrs.
G. S. Carr, Landenberg, Pa., Nov. 12, 'l7.
Nothing so ensures a clear skin and
good hair as making Cuticura your
every-day toilet preparations.
Sample Each Free by Mail. Address post*
card: "Cuticura. Dept. H, Boston." Sold
everywhere. Soap2sc. Ointment 25and50c.
5