j][jl|jlf ReadiivJ ali iKe fonviki Ij^PjPl ©MAKING THE MOST OF OUR CHILDREN U A Series of Plain Talks to By Ray C. Beery, A.8., MJL President of tbe Parents Association. (Copyrighted, 191S, by The Parents Assdeiatlon, Inc.) Xo. 25. Do You Really Believe in Scolding? SCOLDING is a habit into which many women and some mon have fallen. Why women more than men? Per haps because they have had through the ages so much more to do with the training of children. Scolding is so easy. It is so natural. It relieves one's pent-up feelings. It seems actually necessary sometimes. But does It get anywhere? Scolding is a habit, and considered from a detached ethical standpoint, a parent who has the habit of scold ing is quite as much in need of cor rection as a child who has the habit of crying. "My little boy is untidy," a mother Insists That Frail, Nervous Women Can Speedily Become Strong and Vigorous A Vigorous Healthy Body, Sparkling Eyes and Health- Colored Cheeks Come in Two Weeks, Says Discoverer of Bio-feren. World's Grandest Health Builder Costs Nothing Unless It Gives to Women the Buoyant Health They Long for. It Is safe to say that right here in this big city are tens of thousands of weak, nervous, run-down, depressed who in two weeks' time could make themselves so healthy, so attrac tive and so keen-minded that they would compel the admiration of all their friends. The vital health building elements that theße despondent women lack are •11 plentifully supplied in Bio-feren. If you are ambitious, crave success In life, want to have a healthy, vigor ous body, clear skin and eyes that show no dullness, make up your mind to get a package of Bio-feren right •way. It costs but little and you can get an original package at any druggist •nywhere. Take two tablets after each meal and one at bedtime—seven a day for seven days—then one after meals till all are gone. Then if you don't feel twice as good, look twice as attractive and feel twice as strong as before you started, your money is waiting for you. It belongs to you, for the discoverer of Bio-feren doesn't want one penny of it unless It fulfills all claims. Note to Physicians! There Is no secret about the formula of Bio-feren. It is printed on every package. Here it is: Lecithin; Calcium Glycerophos phate; Iron Peptonate; Manganese Peptonate; Ext. Nux Vomica; Powd. Gentian: Phena'.phthalein; Oleoresln Capsicum; Kolo. f f Tmlo^rMMk I Promisee to keep ' A Teeth clean; to help euro sen sitive, bleeding I AND DOES IT! 9 Ask your Dentist, | he knows. On sale " 1 stall druggists and DENTISTS g toilet counters. FoM Ula „ ||! The Coal Industry is the most vital thing on earth. It creates power —without which there could be no real prpg ress. Do your duty now and save coal. Do it now. United Ice & Coal Co. Can't sleep! Can't eat! Can't even digest what little you do eat! til One or two doses Vlf/w. ARMY & NAVY JM DYSPEPSIA TABLETS J*ill make you feel ten years younger. Best known remedy for ConsUpation. 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. &ajwusburg TKLEGRAPHI SEPTEMBER 28,1918. wrote to me recently. "He leaves his clothes and playthings everywhere and things are always getting lost. I have scolded and scolded, but it does no good." Tho trouble is probably that you have scolded too much. Children do not like to be scolded and so the ad vice given goes "in one ear and out the other." When anyone tells you his child will receive a scolding with a relish, vou may be sure it is not a scolding in the ordinary sense. You can talk frankly and truth fully to your child, suggesting to him constantly improvement in the right direction, and commending him whenever the improvement is appar ent. . • Instead of calling attention to your little boy's past carelessness, talk to hitn in this fashion: "Now when you grow big and be come a man, you witl want to nave your room in good order. Then when anyone comes to see you, everything will be in its proper place and noth ing will be lying around on the tloor. "Would you like to keep your room here at home just as you will want it when you are big? All right, I'll ar range these chairs a little differently and you pick up the clothes over there and heng them up." After the child puts the clothes away, tell hinv a few other things about arranging articles in his room —points which have no relation to his past behavior. Then as you leavo the child say, "Let's keep this room all the time just as you will when you are big." This method always works better than scolding the child for being ne glectful. Always talk to your child alone about his behavior. It is better to have no third person present—not even a brother or sister—while inter viewing a child about his conduct— ! especially if he is timid. Never talk j to children about their general bad misbehavior. Such generalities arc I either meahingless or crushing. I Faultfinding will surely creep into a j talk of this sort. In no case does it j seem wise to convince a child that he lis very "bad." Such a charge will tend to drive him further away from you. This will result in worse con- I duct than before. Be concrete. Be | sure that the child understands ex actly what you expect of him. The less you talk about moral delinquen cies, the better. Explanation is always in place with your child and should be grad ually but surely substituted .for the scolding habit. Calmly set forth the ] things which you expect of him. j Neither threaten what would happen : if he did not do them nor find fault 1 with what done; be frank ! and let him know for a certainty I what you expect in the immediate ' future. He will be much more like | ly to carry out your suggestions than ; if you merely scold. If you want to teach ohedience to I a child who is disobedient do not think of telling him that you are go ing to turn over a new leaf or find i any fault whatever with his conduct in the past. Simply change the habit of disobedience into the habit of obedience by changing the* 'on ditions. The mere fact that the child ' is disobedient indicates that wrong ; methods have been used. Therefore, i it is for you, as a parent, to change i those methods. RALLY DAY SERVICES Allen. Pa., Sept. 28.—Communion I and Rally Day services will be held ! to-morrow morning at the Lutheran I Church.—Mrs. William Smith and ' *nn. Wilbert, of Steelton, and Mrs. j John Ratidemaker and daughter, Martha,, pent Sunday with their nar j ents, Mr. and Mrs. Levi Erick—Mrs. I Rosa Stricklin' and two daughters, j Esther and Marie, and Miss Stella Weiler. of Harrisburg, spent Sunday I with Mr. and Mrs. George Zell.—Mr. 1 and Mrs. Ira Rider, of New Cumber-' j land, spent Sunday with Mrs. Rider's j parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Mor rette.—Mrs. Charles Enck and son. I Charles, who have been ill with ty- I phoid fever, are Improving.—Mrs. I George and Mrs. Ralph Zell spent ! Tfhprsday with Mrs. George Zell's j cousin. Mrs. William Russ, at Har ! risburg. TRIED MANY REMEDIES Sanpan the Only One That Did the Work asys Mrs. Julia Bellmore, 1157 Cum berland street, Harrisburg. I was miserable for quite a time with stomach and intestinal trouble, aft er eating would get awful pains in my stomach and under my ribs on right side, also under my shoulder blade. I would bloat, get very nervous and dizzy. I started to take Sanpan, and arr> sorry I did not take it sooner, as I feel alright, and Sanpan is the only thing that did the work. Sanpan is being Introduced at Keller's drug store, 405 Market street, Harrisburg.—Adv. Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service liy llcManus I <rr OUT or tnid too listen to ne. qont YED-father -SINCE when Oio v N KITCHEN -DOTOO EVER LET ME HEAR TOO '- aaagL q fb VOO TAKE IT ON YOUR- 1 THINK 1 HAVE SmIS/TIN r— OV,N ' ORDERS AROUND VIL SELF TOT AUK TO MV I NOTHIN TO oo fS#B HAVE TO LEAVE 1 J ycMom. CHILD IN THAT FASHION' I jffc OO TOO UNDER A. J CON PLAINT E TELL SHOT OR AND , Little Talks by Beatrice Fairfax 1 The other day I saw a young; friend j I of mine in a uniform that was new to I me. It had a long serviceable cape of j I blue, a soft, comfortable hat with a I maroon cockade at one side and there ; i was a blue tailored cpat and skirt. It j i was comfortable, durable, and not too j ; swuggeringly picturesque. My young friend, who has had a I very thorough training in art, then I went on to explain to me the mission j lof this particular unit to which she I was attached. It had been recruited 1 i entirely from women artists and those > | who had gained, proliciency in the j I study of arts and crafts. And in addition to the thorough i training in art that had been a neces- i : sary qualilication of joining, they hjut : i been submitted to an intensive hos pital training for a number of months. | And the glorious work they were j ! about to engage in, over in France, j ! was the salvaging of soldiers whose I infirmities necessitated their learning] 'a new manner of bread winning, j The blind are to be taught Weaving j and basketry. Men who had lost legs > ; anfl would have to depend on a seden- j ■ tary occupation were to be taught; | modeling, stenciling, inina decora- j I tion. jewelry making, wood carving, I and when they showed the necessary ; i ability they would be taught paint- | I ing. I Those who had lost arms would ; tend looms, manipulated by foot i power, and so it went. This wonder ful salvaging unit had taken account; ' of all the human wreckage of battle, j and it would take a disabled man and I teach him a new way to make his liv ing and enable him to keep his self j respect. j After long week' and sometimes | months, in hospital when a soldier I realizes he has got t< begin life all over again, and learn i new occupa ) tion besides, he is apt to feel discour aged. He must face tne future from an angle entirely different from the one he looked at life from before the war —then comes the time he needs help! No useless, enervating pity—but a lift from a strong, helpful hand, is . the tonic that soldier requires. And . here it is that the soldiers' mothers, [ 1 sweethearts and wives can do the biggest war work woman is capable | of doing when the boys coma home i to them. Do not depress them with your pity, ; ; but hearten them with your courage I —if they should return maimed. ! Never in the history of the world j I has there been so just a cause as the j i one for which they are now lighting, j j Their sacrifices have given the world ! | a mighty shove in the right direc- I tion. They are fighting for human I | liberties, against a medieval despotism, | and the men who have done that are ' I entitled to love, admiration of respect' I —not to pity. I After the war is over and we be- I gin to travel in Europe again, it is; I likely that we shall look on some of i ! the wrecked monuments of the world] I with a greater reverence than we gave I them when they were whole and beau- ' ] tifuh | Those battle-scarred Belgium towns! | will make us realise more thoroughly I than could any telling, how the brave I | little country, crouching in the path ; of the invader, and suffering all| things, gave the rest of the world a' chance to awaken and rush to defend! Itself. Something of the same feeling, only | infinitely deeper, we must keep in our i hearts for these young heroes when they return. They may come back wraiths of their former splendid man- ; hood, but we must never forget that they have given to the world some thing infinitely greater than the ' glory of youth and the strength of young bodies. ! And it is up to every woman to! j make some soldier —beginning life j over again on account of his inflrmi- I ties—feel the tremendous admiration ! | we have for this second great battle I i that must be fought out alone and ! j with none of the Inspiriing drama of war. Illltprriil Fro in n "Man's Job" I At first this new business of toil- ] I ing patiently at loom or lathe may j seem insignificant as compared to the "man's job" that claimed the i | soldier before the war. But we shall ! j not feel that way after our eyes j j have been opened to the significance ' I of this new calling. | Many of these reclaimed soldiers ; will doubtless be toiling at something] : that will make the world more beau | tifiil—some old handicraft that we had all but forgotten in our senseless , ' rush and hurry. And he will put Into i the long hours of patient carving or j modeling some of the thoughts that i came to him under the atars out on , I the battlefields—waiting. I The War Department, with com -1 mcndable foresight, is sending out i this band of picked workers to train ; i the first to suffer wreckage. It does i not wait till the war is over. Tt be- , • gins its work of reconstruction as |' I soon as the soldier is out of- hospital. I It is the ambition of this coutry that j ' all soldiers who survive mv be sal- ; vaged; that not one who has borne i arms in this glorious cause may be- I . come a public charge. I The other day a well-known banker I of Minnesota came back from France ' battered, "but unbowed," as Henley | puts it. He had part of one hand, and I believe a stump of a leg. He coolly, remarked that a man from his neck ; down was worth a dollar and a half I a day. but from his neck up he might j be worth a hundred thousand a year.] And this man's brain did happen to be worth that sum. It is impossible to beat that brand of courage. It is the thing that the poor Hun. whose soul has been crushed from birth by the weight of militarism, cannot under stand. He cannot grasp the leaping enthusiasm of the man whose soul has not been "trained" out of him. It is this magnificent initiative of the American soldier that will bring him through his second battle. And let the woman he comes back to not forget to cheer him on, to make him realize that she is prouder of him winning this recond and greatest vic tory In patience and silence than she was when they pinned the Cross of War on his breast. t " When a Girl Marries" By ANN LISLE A New, Romantic Serial Dealing With the Absorbing Problems of a Girl Wife CHAPTER XXVI ( I "Anne, will you give me a lift? I I've forgotten the trick of tying a \ j four-in-hand," called Jim from the I i bedroom. I deserted the peaches I was slic ing for breakfast and went to my ! | husband's rescue. I knew this was | I my boy's generous way of helping me | | over the first stabbing moment when , I must see my soldier transformed i j into a blue-serge "businessman." In ; | adjusting the tie—slowly, with j stumbling fingers—l adjusted my- | j self, too. Jim was tense, but abso- i | lutely controlled. "That's a pretty good knot—l like ! j black ties with blue serge," I ven | tured when 1 had finished. 1 lifted ! my fingers from the scarf to my j | boy's face: he caught them in a j | burning hand and crushed them 1 ! against his mouth. But in another i | moment he had banished emotion | j and was talking of the new work he was going to meet. And I, re- , specting the grave reserve that I sometimes overshadows all the boy- : j ishness in Jim's nature, chimed in with a discussion of his new "Job" with Sneddon and Company. But when the door closed on my boy, I staggered against it in sheer exhaustion. Then I turned to the task I dreaded—packing away his | uniform. It was nowhere to be seen! I could picture the pain at the back of his eyes as he had folded it and had laid it away. Wounded and alone stood my Jim—and I, who loved him so, couldn't help! The morning dragged by. At noon there was a 'phone call from Evvy. She was lunching with Sheldon Blake ! and he wanted the "Jimmies" to j join them. I tried to refuse op the ! score that Jim was out, but Evelyn I announced that she would drop in ! and call for me just the same. I j was glad to have her tyrannize over j ! me—it wasn't healthy to be done I ' with my constant vision of the un- | j fathomable look in my boy's eyes. | "How sweet you look!" cried j ; Evelyn, breezing in picturesquely in I | a white georgette topped by a sleeve- j less jacket of turquoise blue satin, j | and with a tiny wrapped turban of ' t blue riding gracefully above the ,soft j fluffiness of her spun gold hair. I She was beautiful, and the compli- J ments she paid my simple navy blue j calico and white sailor seemed to I emphasize her loveliness rather than ' I to glorify my simple costume. Her little cgr whisked us over to I ] the Santvoort, where Sheldon Blake j j was waiting. • | "Alone?" asked Evelyn. Afterward i ' I remembered her half-whispered i I question for just as we were finish- j ' ing the hors d'oeuvre for which the | | Santvoort is famous, in strolled Tom I j Mason. j "Room for one more?" he asked. ; I And Sheldon Blake replied: ! I "Tardy as usual. Tommy—'but wel- | j come." I Then it was that I wondered why | | I hadn't been told this was to be a ' | party of four. Did Evelyn and Mr. I i Daily Dot Puzzle 33 32 3 * \° 2 \ 23 27 34* / 25 ) J r Wi9* 20 •* 2i • 3S ..8 21 1 39. '7* .16 ' 4 ° \ I I V ! 4" " S ' 43* 72* .12 jj - .44 1 "o t 7°" • t f 45 0 . *46 4 ! • V • ' a \ 66. 6 7 47 *4O •<* A '■ 49 ' -57 " \°7 5b • ! s° 51 • S. * 54 ' • •B2 " j Draw front one to two and so on < to the end. ] Blake guess that I would never have come? "Where's Jam? I suppose he's go ing to land some soft snap office job in one of the army departments," said Mr. Blake suddenly. "He's not looking for any soft snap,' Mr. Blake," I replied, with a cold dignity 1 hoped was worthy of my boy. "Oh, I didn't mean to offend" began Mr. Blake. But Evelyn interrupted him an grily: "Sheldon, you old stupid, don't you know Jim is a hero?" Her tone sounded sincere, but Mr. Blake laughed as if unconscious of reproof. "Jim is out of the army," I man aged at last. I felt that however hard it was for me to discuss the matter, it was my duty to spare him the startling plunge into chill waters that re lating his own story might? mean for Jim. As briefly as I could manage it, I told of the medical examination he had failed to pass, of the deci sion he had made and of his depar ture that very morning for his first day's work with Sneden and Com pany. .. Eyelyn and Mr. Blake exchanged glances—but their "Snedden and Company!" was colorless and indif ferent. It was Tom who expressed what Dicky Royce had probably been thinking the night before. "Mrs. Harrison, Jim can't stay with the Sneddens! They're pretty cheap 'white trash'—the sort of gen tlemen who never get caught in any thing raw, but who never run honest ly out in the open middle of 'The Street.' They're planning to trade on the fact that Jim's a wounded hero and may tarnish his reputation so even his splendid war record won't save him. This must be stopped." "Hurrah for Tommy! Go on, boy: butt In to your heart's content. You know how well people like unasked advice," said Sheldon Blake laxily. Evelyn sat smiling inscrutably. I turned to Tom Mason. His eager expression was in vivid contrast to Evelyn's smile and Mr. Blake's cold placidity. "I'm going to 'phone Jim at once: you will excuse me, won't you?" I cried with apprehension 1 could not control. Mr. Blake suggested that I finish my chicken a la King first, since neither it nor the artichoke would taste well cold, but something irn pellel me to the telephone. I called the Snedden offices and was told that Lieutenant Harrison wasn't in. Subconsciously I realized that I had asked for "Mr." Harrison. Brushing that aside, I asked for Mr. Snedden. | A moment later a smooth, unctu ous voice came to me over the wire i and in reply to my question I found I that my husband had tried to reach me an hour before but had failed. He had been compelled to start on a sudden trip to Pennsylvania with two mining: men who wanted to look over some property there. "Sorry ■ we had to steal your husband like I this. Mrs. Harrison, but there was no time to waste. His train goes at 2.15." I hung up the receiver in the midst of his explanations about big men and an important deal. I rushed to the.door and ordered a taxi. X had less than thirty minutes for what I must do. 1 dared not delay even to explain to the Masons and Mr. Blake. I must reach the station in time— but in time for what? "I'll give you a dollar extra if you get me to the station by live min utes after two." I said to the taxi driver. 'Can't be did, lady." "two dollars! Drive as fast as you can." And as we went whirling through the traffic on the avenue I sat back, dizzy with our law-breaking spefed —<praying for a miracle that would ! bring me to the station in time. A jeweler's clock hurtled by, Its hands stood at five minutes past two. I hoped against.hope that it might be fast. To Be Continued) DEMOCRATS DODGE HUM Burlington, Vt„ Sept. 2 B.—A plat form Indorsing the war policy of the administration and favoring woman suffrage was adopted at the Demo cratic state convention yesterday. No mention was made of the national prohibition amendment. SERGT. CHESTER J. RHINE ARRIVES SAFE OVERSEAS The many friends of Sergeant Rhine will be glad to learn of his safe arrival "over there." Leaving Harrlsburrf on July 26 for Camp Lee in five weeks time sailed. He was made first sergeant in the Ex ceptional Medical Replacement Unit. No. ii. THE KAISER AS I KNEW HIM FOR FOURTEEN YEARS By ARTHUR X. DAVIS, D. D. S. (Copyright, lUIB, by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate) (Continued.) One of the sodiers who had been | lighting on the Carpathian front I came back on a furlough, and what I he told me illustrates very clearly I the iron discipline which prevails ! in the German ranks, j "One night we were told to go I "over the top' early in the morning," |he said. All we hud had to eat that j day was a small piece of black ihread. We told our officers that I we would refuse to budge out of the ! trenches unless we received decent i food. Our threats were ignored, I but that night we were given another j small piece of black bread. Still j we grumbled and insisted that we ; would refuse to tight unless we were ' properly fed. The hour arrived for j the advance, and when the signal was given, hungry and angry as we ' were, we clambered over the top | like a flock of sheep, and went for j ward at the command of our ot- I ticors as we had always done!" As long as the officers remain | stanch to the Kaiser, therefore, lit [ tie may be expected in the way of a successful revolution, no matter I how discontented and rebellious the i people at large may grow, but I I believe that the time will surely I come when the officers themselves j will turn against their government. There may be two revolutions. The civilians, consisting of women, I old men and youths and others who j have not been called into the army, | may rise up. but their effort will be |in vain. The defee* <-tih an up | rising, however, may be the signal I for a greater one in which a portion I of the army itself will take part, and i then a civil war will result which j will have no counterpart in the I world's history. | The basis for this belief 'lies in the fact that the officers of the Ger | man army realize the extent of the j distress prevailing throughout the j country. Their families, as well as | those of the rank and ti'e, are suf j fering from undernourishment and I privations, and they know, even | better than their inferiors, the ex- I tent of the reverses which the Ger | man army has suffered and will con j tinue to suffer and how the govern ment has misrepresented actual I conditions. , i If the German officers consisted ' entirely of men of the old school — ! men who were willing to fight for I fighting's sake and who would rather | continue the war until the last Ger j man had dropped than give in—we ' could not look for much in this di rection. ! But the ravages of war have dis • posed of a large percentage of these j bred-in-the-bone officers and their | places have been taken by civilians I who have been raised from the I ranks. Therein lies the hope of a | successful revolution. When these ■ civilian-officers, who at heart are still civilians, and de- j i spite their exalted positions are no j different essentially from the men j they lead, become convinced that | the German cause is not only wrong [ but hopeless, they are apt to listen i I to the grumblings of their men and j side with them. Then the break wil 1 , come. T will not venture a guess as to j [when that will be, but. I feel sure; that it will certainly come about. | Fortified by a large portion of the; army, the German people will at last turn on their rulers and destroy the i throne and the whole Hohenzollern j regime. In this connection. I recall a i prophecy made early in the whr by I an honored colleague of mine, an j American dentist who had lived'and I practiced in Germany for forty; years and understood the German j people and their rulers as well, per- ■ haps, as any man alive. He was a leader of his profession and a man ; whose judgment on all things was most accurate. He was in close! contact with many leading figures of! the German nobility. j George Washington University I Founded in 1821 Non-sectarian and coeducational. | STUDENTS' ARMY TRAINING i CORPS Available to all young men. ! graduates of accedited secondary schools, enrolled in any of the De partments of the University: Liberal Arts. Engineering, Peda gogy, Medicine, Law, Dentistry, Graduate Students. Students in SATC recetvo free tuition and pay of privates, and are fed, clothed and housed at government expense. Session opens September 25. Wire or write at once for information. Secretary. George Washington University, Washington, D. C. ' "Germany will lose the war be cause her cause is wrong," he de clared. "She will right it through to the bitter end until the founda tions of the empire are absolutely destroyed!" The foundations of Hohenzollern isni will be destroyed, no doubt, but when the Gorman people realize what dupes they have been and re veal a desire to embrace the bless ings of democracy, it is possible that the world at large may be willing to accept Germany again In the family of nations. Germany's deliverance lies In the hands of the people. "The truth shall make them free." THE END. Skilled Men Only Are Needed in the Navy When the local navy recruiting station opens again only men in the following ratings will be individual ly inducted, it was announced to day: Optical machinists, coppersmiths, machinists, blacksmiths, carpenters, expert gas engine men, boilormak ers, quartermasters, shiptltters, in tiument repair men, camera repair men. These men will be enrolled-as ap prentice seamen and sent to the training camps and will he given a higher rating when qualified, but no promises of advancement are made. Men who cannot qualify for the above rating will not be handled by Won't ' w Hurt Your Hands j if you will let 20 Mule Team Borax do the cleaning and scrubbing. 20 Mule Team Borax is good for the skin. It softens the water, neutralizes the irritating action of the soap and keeps the skin soft and white. MULE TEAM BORAX makes housekeeping easy. Cuts grease off table and kitchenware. Sprinkled in the cleaning water, it dis solves dirt from floors, walls and woodwork, without scrubbing. Endorsed by all health authorities. Used wherever hygienic cleanliness must be maintained. LAT ALL DEALERS 20 MULB TEAM BORAX hat 100 hcsehotd mam- ail da- Merited in the Magi* Crystal Booklet. It's fret. Samel far U. PACIFIC COAST BORAX CO. Hew York, Chicago J SEDUCATE FOR BUSINESS! BE Because business needs you and offers splendid opportunities to H I the young man or woman who Is thoroughly prepared. DAY OR NIGHT SCHOOL ■I Bookkeeping, Shorthand, (hand or machine). Typewriting, and I ■ their correlative subjects. I SCHOOL OF COMMERCE I Harrlsburg's Accredited Business College 15 South Market Square Write, Phone, or Call For Farther Information K BELI- 4M DIAL 4SOS H ' the navy stations but will be sent t< mobilization points by draft boardi 7 Will prove a revelation to those who use it for the first time because of its absolute purity, delicate med ication, refreshing fragrance and super-creamy emollient proper ties for preserving, purifying and beautifying the skin and complex ion, two soaps ; n one at one price. On rising: and retiring: smear the face with Cu ticura Ointment, wash off in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water,using: plenty ot Soap, best applied with the hands which it softens wonderfully, and continue bathing with Soap two minutes. For free sample oi Soap, Ointment and Talcum address: "Cufi cura, Dept. 3A, Boston." • Everywhere at 25c. ■ mm A Sufferers, write to- I llnil day for m y words IcVliH of value FREE about Weak Lungs and how to treat Lung Trou bles. Address M. Reaty, M. D., 102 Cincinnati, O. . 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers