lU|Bj RcadiiyJ Here's a saving" Eagle Brand proves its economy when the bills come in. You can also find the proof in your cooking. Eagle Brand is so rich in food value that only a small measure is needed to make a dish highly nourishing. A can of Eagle Brand is equal in units of nutritive value to one and one-half pounds of pork. You neither require nor desire much pork when you can make other dishes more nutritious and more tasteful by using Eagle Brand in your cooking. We will send you "Borden's Recipes" free on request. It offers you a wide variety of wholesome, satisfying foods which can be easily prepared at little cost. Eagle Brand has been the standard infant food for over sixty years. BORDEN'S CONDENSED MILK COMPANY New York^ggseingg^ Borden's EAGLE BRAND N Be sure the Eagle is cm the label" > • < ,•• • T ; "w' v..7.-™\, f ,rr . /• 1 • ' - . THURSDAY EVENING, HJLRRISBURG TELEGRAPH MAY 16, 1918. Bringing Up Father /•,' 1 Copyright, 1918, International News Service *•/ # # / *•' By McM i VOU'LL HAVE. A IT WOULD YOU VERY I V/OULO ."YOU LIKE YOU BET I I 1 AN' THE SOONER VOQ rf) LITTLE J1 little C.REEN U, LIKE, TO HEAR L'TTLE. ,-J ~0 HAVE ME WOULD- I START FOR THE FARM CRET HOME CRAVE IN THE ME A ] MORE! DOWN ON THE —prv, —f | THE BETTER' ing helpless women and little chil-] dren, of torpedoing passenger ships,! of desecrating and destroying the! monuments of the ages, of beastly I and unthinkable cruelty to prison-j ers, of all the loathsome savagery ■ that is included under that favorite term, "Schrecklichkeit." It is a stupid idea that we can cow and frighten people into sub-! mission, that by cruelty and ruth-1 lessness and slaughter we can ter rorize and intimidate nations and so! make conquest easy. It has oeen j exploded again and again. Babylon, with all her might and all her persecutions, could not sub- J due a little handful of Jews as long; as they held to their spiritual ideals, j Spain, mistress of the world, •using every dark device of cruelty and op-1 pression, could never overcome Hoi- 1 land's stout-hearted "Beggars of the' Sea." But the Hun brain still fails toj assimilate these facts, it is obsess- j ed with the idea of might, of hate, I of frightfulness, and these clouds befog its judgment. it blunders continually. It failed utterly in its j estimate of us. Germany never be- J lieved in the '.irst place that we I wttuld go into the war, or, in the! second, that we would prosecute it! with vigor. She regarded us as a country whoso only essential unity of spirit and purpose was the chase of the dollar. But she has found that we are just as ready to give the dollar as to chase it, when the c-horcl of our national idealism is touched. And to give not only the dollar, but all that we have and all that we are. Germany's insolent contempt and arrogance has acted as a boome rang; for it has created that very spirit of unity and purpose which she believed we lacked. She lias] given the greatest boost to democ racy known to history; for "Sec tionalism" and "Class Conscious ness" are -with us forgotten and ig nored shibboleths. The boy from California is fight ing beside the boy from Maine; ihe girl from Florida and the girl from i Minnesota are nursing together ini the hospitals; the Wall Stret bank-1 er and the Nebraska farmer, the ( cotton grower from Texas and 'he ] quarryman from Vermont are all! buying Liberty Bonds. This is no time to pause and i weigh the question, to debate the! advisability of investment, and! whether you can afford it or not.i You cqn't afford to do anything! else. At the present moment there isi just one duty before every American I man, woman and child —to buy Lib-| erty Bonds. You can do withouti dozens of things you think you need, j you can do without many things you thihk you want, but you can't do! without America and America can't | do without victory. Advice to the Lovelorn By BEATRICE FAIRFAX DON'T DECEIVE HIM Dear Miss Fairfax: I am deepl> | in love 'with a man who I believel reciprocates my feelings. He is| wealthy, a-nd is under the impression that I am also. Our family consists of six, my father earning about sixty-five dollars per week, while I make sixteen. I would like to know whether it | would be advisable for me to reveal my true station to this man. I fear attempting anything of this nature, for I am quite sure I would lose him if he knew I was poor. If you can only win this man's love by deceiving him, and if you feel that his interest in you would cease j if ho were to know that you are a| poor girl, you are pretty uncertain as to the basis of his feelings and you know in your heart that he is not sincere and that the slightest dif ticulty would make him cease caring for you. Just be true to yourself— don't deceive • him. Let the man realize that you are simple, honest folk with tine Ideals and a beautiful hotne life, that is infinitely more important than mere money. If he is a man of good caliber and fine principles, all this will appeal to him —not repel him. And in any event, from a practical point of view, you j probably couldn't deceive him for long anyhow. __| Daily Dot Puzzle i" • 2fc vd' T / v -^ "J? ' Xiv i9 '.i 8 m-e# 47' iir^ lb • • *45 4*B : - -f " 1' | * A. " 4o 37 • • r 11 33 ! 10 • 35 33 ' 3 \ e * 34 if; Draw from one to two and so on to the end. Sure Way To Get Rid Of Dandruff Vhere 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, Jusc get about four ounces of plain, or dinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring; use enough to moist en < the scalp and rub it in gently with the linger tlp3. By morning, most if not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three 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 be fluffy, lustrous, glassy, Allky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times bet ter. / You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive, and four ounces Is all you will need. This simple remedy has never been known Ito fall.—Adv. "Outwitting By Lieutenant Pat O'Brien (Copyright, 1918, by Pat Alva O'Btien.) CHAPTER XV Observations in a Belgium City One night shortly 1 left this ' it v. our airmen jgWßifcf.v-y i raided the place. **| I 1 didn't venture - 'l°ut of the houso. at jthe time, but the ( j next night I thought i I would go out and v 4 ] HOe what damage had been done. vJr . When It became * ark 1 left the house accordingly and mixed with the crowd, which consisted largely of Germans.' I went from one place to another to see what our "strating" had accom plished. Naturally I avoided speak ing to anyone. If a man or woman appeared about to speak to me, I just turned my head and looked or walked away in some other direc tion. I must have been taken for an unsociable sort of individual a good many times, and if I had encounter ed the same person twice 1 suppose my conduct might have aroused suspicion. I had a first-class observation of the damage that was really done by our bombs. One bomb had landed very near the main railroad station and if it had been only thirty yards nearer would have completely de molished it. As the station was un doubtedly our airman's objective I was very much impressed with the accuracy of his aim. It is by no means an easy thing to hit a build ing from the air when you are go ing at anywhere from fifty to one hundred miles an hour and are be ing shot at from beneath from a dozen different angles—unless, of course, you are taking one of those desperate chances and flying so low that you cannot very well miss your mark and the Huns can't very well miss you either! I walked to the station and min gled with the crowds which stood in the entrances. They no more attention to me than they did to real Belgians, and the fact that the lights were all out in this city at night made it impossible, anyway, for any one to get so good a look at me as if it had been light. Tempted b.v German Flag During the time that I was in this city 1 supposed I wandered from one end of it to the other. In one place, where the German staff had its headquarters, a huge German flag hung from the window, and I think I would have given ten years of my life to have stolen it. Even if 1 could have pulled it down, however, it would have been impossible to me to have concealed it, and to have carried-it away with me as a souve nier, therefore, would have been out of the question. As I went along the street one night a lady standing on the corner stopped me and spoke to me. My first impulse, of course, was to an swer her, explaining that I could not understand, but I stopped myself in time, pointed to my ears and mouth and shook my head, indicating that I was deaf and dumb, and she nod ded. Incidents of that kind were not unusual, and I was always in fear some inquisitive and suspicious German would encounter me and not be so easily satisfied. There are many things that I saw in this city which, for various rea sons, it is impossible for me to re late until after the war is over. Some of them, I think, will create more surprise than the .incidents I am free to reveal now. Touched Elbows With Death It used t amuse me as I went along the streets of this town, look ing in the shop windows with Ger man soldiers at my side looking at the same things, to think how close I was to them and they had no way of knowing. I was quite convinced that if I were discovered my fate would have been death, because X not only had the forged passport on me, but I had been so many days behind the German lines after I had escaped that they couldn't safely let me live with the information I pos sessed. One night I walked boldly across a park. I heard footsteps behind me and turning around saw two German soldiers. I slowed up a trifle to let them get ahead of me. It was rather dark and I got a chance to see what a wonderful uniform the German military authorities have picked out. The soldiers had not gone more than a few feet ahead of me when they disappeared in the darkness like one of those melting pictures on the moving picture screen. As I wandered through the streets I frequently glanced in the cafe windows as I passed. German offi cers were usually dining there, but they didn't conduct themselves with anything like \the Hght-heartedness which characterized the Allied offi cers In London and Paris. I was rather surprised at this, because in this part of Belgium they were much freer than they would have been in Berlin where, I understand, food is comparatively scarce and the re strictions are very strict. Often Half Famished As I have said, my own condition in this city was in some respects worse than it had been when 1 w*s making my way through the open country. While 1 hud a place to sleep and my clothes were no longer constantly soaking, my opportunities for getting food were considerably less than they had been. Nearly all the time I was half famished, and I decided that I woukl get out of there at once, since I was entirely through with Huyliger. My physical condition was greatly improved. AVhile the lack of food showed itself on me, I had regained some of my strength, my wounds were healed, my ankle was strong er, and although my knees were still considerably enlarged, I felt that I was in better shape than I had been at any time since my leap from the train', and I was ready to go through whatever was in store for me. CHAPTER XVI I IJCUVC For the Frontier To get out of the city, it would be necessary to pass two guards. This I had learned in the course of my walks at night, having frequently traveled to the city limits with the idea of finding out just what con ditions I would have to meet when the time came for me to leave. A German soldier's uniform, how ever, no longed worried me as it had at lirst. 1 had mingled with the Huns so much in the city that I be gan to feel that I was really a Bel gian, and I assumed the indifference that they seemed to feel. s I decided, therefore, to walk out of the city in the daytime, when the sentries would be less apt to le on the watch. It worked fine. I was not held up a moment, the sentries evidently taking me for a Belgian peasant on his way to work. Traveling faster than I had ever done before since my escape, I was soon out in the open country, and the first Belgian I came to I ap proached for food. He gave me half his lunch and we sat down on the side of the road to eat it. Of course, he tried to talk to me, but I used the old ruse of pretend ing I was deaf and dumb and he was quite convinced that it was so. He made various efforts to talk to me in pantomime, but I could not make out what he was getting at, and X think he must have concluded that I was not only half starved, deaf and dumb, but "loone.v" in the bargain. When night came I looked around for a place to rest. 1 had decided to travel in the day time as well as night, because I understood that I was only a few miles from the fron tier, and I was naturally anxious to get there at the earliest possible moment, although I realized that there I would encounter the most hazardous part of my whole adven ture. To get through the heavily guarded barbed and electrically charged barrier was a problem that I hated to think of even, although the hours I spent endeavoring to devise some way of outwitting the Huns were many. It had occurred to me, for in stance, that it would not be such a difficult matter to vault over the electric fence, which was only nine feet high. In college I know a ten- | foot vault is considered a high ] school boy's accomplishment, but there were two great difficulties in ! the way of this solution. In the i first place it would be no easy mat- I ter to get a pole of the right length, | weight and strength to serve the i purpose. More particularly, however, the pole vault idea seemed to me to be out of the question because of the fact that on either side of the elec tric fence, six feet from it, was a six-foot barbed wire harrier. To vault safely over a nine-foot elec trically charged fence was one thing, CASCARETSBEST IF CONSTIPATED They liven your liver and bowels and you feel fine again. . Don't stay headachy, bil ious with breath bad and stomach sour. but to combine with it a twelve-foot broad vault was a feat which even a college athlete in the pink of con dition would he ant to flunk. Indeed, I don't believe it is possible. (To lie Continued.) America's Place At the Front i A young Italian diplomat said toj an American friend recently: "I saw' a moving picture showing the inva sion of America. I remember that I could not be stirred by it as were my American friends; to me it was only a show. Now Italy is invaded. It is not a show. It is a reality. You sympathize—but you cannot know." An English woman now in this' country told of spending tive suc ; ccssive nights in the cellar of her little home to escape the Zeppelin < raids and she added: "You forget that England is now one of the in vaded countries." France, Belgium, Italy and Eng land. all are now scenes of actual invasion. 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Bacon $215 By a stroke of good luck we have just received Shoninger $235 a large shipment of Victrolas and Edisons, and Bush & Lane . .$290 stvles at the new prices— Poole $360 $22.50, $32.50, $50.00, 90.00, Players $175, $225, $275 Hinri'c C #365 terms desired. But choose yours Whitney ... . . .$385 at once. The demand for certain styles is greater Terms to Suit You than the supply, and we may not have enough of - r _ - some types to last thoughout the weekend. Try Our Record and Music Roll Service J. H. Troup TROUP BUILDING 15 SO. MARKET SQUARE is true, but her boys are being shot down. It is her tight. The very fact that her territory I has not been invaded, the very fact that she has been spared this dese cration of her towns and villages, makes the responsibility for per sonal sacrifice doubly hers. She should give and keep on glv- I ing. Her own personal comfort has | not yet fjeen touched. She should | contribute money and then more, I more money. But all the money In ] jail the allied countries will not win: I the war without food. J America is being asked right now j I to give every grain of wheat she can j possibly spare. There ought to be; but one answer to this request: "Take it." Most of us ought to say: "Takcl it all." France has again cut down her | bread ration to about two-thirds of i that heretofore maintained. Since | bread constitutes over one-half of i the diet of the French nation, this) is a greater denial even than itj sounds. The eating of wheat in America! is solely a matter of taste, of com-1 fort and convenience. Every patriotic American should | sacrifice his own taste, comfort and 1 convenience in order to give to those j who have suffered so long and cruelly in this war his last g-rain of wheat. WANT TO TAKE GERMAN OUT OF SAUER KRAUT ..Hazlt'ton, Pa., May 16. —In con nection with the statewide agitation for elimination of the word "sauer kraut," the suggestion was made here yesterday that Pennsylvania adopt the shorter Polish name for it —"kapusta." . It is claimed by Polish historians hero that sour cabbage, later christ ened sauer kraut, was known in Pol and before the Germans ever got a smell of it. "So let sauer kraut be kapusta," it is urged in Hazleton. NO ADVANCE IN PRICE CORE THROAT g* , J or Tonsilitis—gargle with warm, salt water ft apply- Little Bocy-Guftrd in Your Horn*" I VICRBVAPORUffif 25c—50c—$1.00 7