20 jys CUT-RATE MEDICINES KENNED Y'S 321 MARKET STREET Patent Medicines Hand's Remedies 170 Eskay's Food 160, 330, 530, #1.95 Gudes Pepto Mangon 750 Musterine 170 Milk of Magnesia 19c and 370 Mustrole 170 and 340 Doan's Kidney Pills 350 Sargol 340, 670 Sal Hepatica 170, 340, 670 Tyree's Anti-Powder 170, 670 Pinex ' 340 Eckman's Altcrati\e $1.50 Scott's Emulsion 370, 670 Fellow's Hypophosphites 670, #1.04 Jad's Kidney Salts ... 580 Croxone 570 Mercolized Wax 530 Hajjee's Cordial Cod Liver Oil 660 Vapo Cresoline 170, 340 Pluto Water, quart 250 Sterro Cubes 270 Pape's Diapcpsin 340 Pape's Cold Tablets 170 Pinkham Vegetable Compound 690 Pierce s Favorite Prep 670 Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery 670 Pond's Extract 170 and 340 Kondon's Catarrh Jelly 160 and 320 Jayne's Expect 170, 340, 670 Hyornei, Complete 670 Hyomei Inhalant 340 Herpicidc 340 and 670 Hood's Sarsaparilla 6TO Hay's Hair Health 340 and 670 Danderine 170, 34c and 670 DeWitt's Kidney Pills 340 Father John's Medicine 340 and 670 Castoria (Fletcher's) 240 Carters Little Liver Pills 140 Chase's Blood and Nerve Tablets 340 and 590 Cuticura Soap ISe Belles Pa-pa-yans I <0 and 500 Laxative Bromo-Quinine (Grove's) 150 Badem Salz 1?C and 340' Ten Cents Pays !J Health Insurance Would you pay 10c to keep well? A ten-rent box of Lax. Link*, the delicious randy laxative, exquisitely flavored iftth spearmint. will keep your bowel* free of all poisonous waste. Absolutely harmless. Ideal for women and chil dren. Recommended by physicians, ns they nre positive, though very mild In their action. 10c and 25c Boxes. All Druggists l BOKO SALICIXE CO.. Philadelphia. Pa. | _ DROPSY TREATED FREE By Dr. -Mile*, tile tireat Specialist. Who Will Send ■ New «Cl"> Treatment Free Many Have Been Cured After Doctors , Failed At first no disease is apparently more , harmless than dropsy; a little swelling i tif the eyelids, hands, feet, ankles or ab- | fiomen. Finally there is great short- I ness of breath, cough, faint spells, sometimes nausea and vomiting, even bursting of the limbs and a lingering and wretched death if the dropsy is not removed. Dr. Miles has been known as a lead- I ing specialist in these diseases for 30 | years. His liberal oit'er of a $3.75 Treat ment free to all sufferers, is certainly I worthy of serious consideration. You may never have such an opportunity | again. The Grand Dropsy Treatment consists of four dropsy remedies in one, also ' Tonic Tablets and Pura-Daxa for re- ] moving the water. This treatment is specially prepared for each patient and | is ten times as successful as that of • most physicians. It usually relieves the first day, and removes swelling In six days in most cases. Delay is dan- V . ous. Send for nemarkable Cures In Your State All afflicted readers may have Book, Examination Chart, Opinion. Advice, I and a Two-Pound Treatment free. ■\Vrite at once. Describe your case. Ad- i dress Jr. Franklin Miles, Dent. DA., 625 ' to 535 Main Street, Elkhart, Ind. Ad vertisement. ■fe B ■ EBB ara ratable. All kind* ■■ B ■ B II mean suffering and W0 ■ ■ ■■ dantvr. Tha CAUSE ■ ■ H la always internal. | I B|hU Dr. Ltonhardt'i HEM-ROID ssawffl'aißr'iJsa s.sssr.'s Quick Relief for Coughs, Colds and Hoarseness. Clear the Voice—Pine for Speakers and Singers. 25c. GORGAS' DRUG STORES 1« N. Third SL Penna. Station Try Telegraph Want Ads. FRIDAY EVENING, EXKR3SBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 6, 1914 POISON FOUND IN BODY OF Bridgeport, Conn., Feb. 6.—A sweeping investigation is being made | into the death of Mrs. Hannah E. Cross, widow of a wealthy New York jeweler, and the disappearance of about $30,000 from her estate. A chem ical analysis of the organs of Mrs. Cross' body resulted in the discovery of twenty grains of codeine, which were taken by Mrs. Cross on the day she died, according to the theory of City Prosecutor L. Delaney. A few hours before she died Mrs. Cross had a codicil added to her will making Frank M. Garland, inventor-promoter, executor of her estate. Garland has disap peared and no trace can be found of $50,000 said to have been realized by him as the result of the sale of some of Mrs. Cross' property. Mrs. Mary Thomson Luquer, a niece of Mrs. Cross, who Introduced Garland to the dead widow. Is also out of the city. She inherited a comfortable fortune from Mrs. Cross. Mrs. Luquer's daughter, Edith, married John W. Camp bell, a drug clerk, shortly after the death of Mrs. Cros3, and she is now oc cupying the Cross mansion with her young husband. They are living in rntbr»r tfivtsli stvln. rr»mr»nrert with their former NOTICE! To the People of Harrisburg and Virility There are rumors in circulation that Kennedy's Cut-Rate Medicine Store cannot do business and sell at the low prices they do. In reply to these rumors we beg to say if the people of Harrisburg and vicinity will kindly give us their patronage and stick by us we will always sell Patent Medicines at cut prices. There is no doubt we must do a large business to sell at these low prices, but if you will always remember to give us your patronage and show us your appreciation of a cut-rate store, we will do our part and give you patent medicines at cut-prices. Our competitors are fighting us and causing us all kinds of trouble, such as advertising as cut-rate drug store, etc., and going as far as to meet some of our prices. Please bear this fact firmly in mind, if we were not in business and selling at cut prices you would be paying full prices for all patent medicines. Yours Respectfully, Kennedy's Cut-Rate Medicine Store 321 MARKET STREET KENNEDY'S HAVE ONLY THE ONE STORE Electric Delivery Vehicles in Parcel Post Service Rented to the Indianapolis post! office authorities to "help'them out of ! a hole" in the delivery of parcel post | packages, two electric vehicles have j been giving such satisfactory service i in comparison with a pair of gasoline I cars that the latter are now to be discontinued and their places token t by electric trucks. The first two "electrics" have now been in operation about ten months, and on September | 1 a third was added. It was after the gasoline vehicles j first used in delivery work at Indian- | apolis had proved unsatisfactory that j the local manufacturer was asked to supply electric trucks for the same purpose. One of the stipulations; made was that these trucks should i have sufficient mileage for the out-of- j town and suburban work required of them. The machines were not sold j to the government, but were rented on ! an hourly basis, the Post Office De- j pi.rtment itself furnishing the driver. ; The batteries were kept up by the! owners, who also made all repairs ex- 1 cept in case of collision. At the rate! at which the cars were rented a satis factory profit was earned. SURGEONS FOR THE FILIPINOS Hon. Dean C. Worcester, former | Secretary of State in the Philippines, once said to us: "I make a yearly visit among the hill tribes. I believe if a medical missionary would first do something to relieve their suffer ings they wouid gladly listen to the preaching." He also said that it was his custom | to carry a few remedies with him, but i he could do nothing with cases that | needed surgical treatment. Then he j told of a man who had come to him ! in his latest visit there with a piece of ; bamboo in his foot which was giving ' him terrible pain. "I did not know enough about anatomy to cut the bamboo out of his foot, so I tuld him that the next time I came I would bring a doctor with me. But the chances are the man will be dead be fore that time."—Christian Herald, THE SHITTING OF DOORS L.ike a young child who to his mother's door Runs eager for the welcoming em brace. And finds the door shut, and with troubled face Calls and through sobbing calls, and o'er and oer Calling, storms at the panel—so before A door that will not open, sick and numb. 1 listen for a word that will not come. And know, at last, I may not enter more. Silence! And through the silence and the dark By that closed door the distant sob of tears Bpats on my «nirlt, as on fairy shores The spectral sea, and through the sob bing hark Down the fair chambered corridor of years The <iuiet shutting, one by one, of doors. —Herman H&gedorn in the North American Review. AS MAN TO MAN I From the New York Evening Post.] Archibald Forbes was due for a lec ture in a small English town. When he entered the hall not a single soul was present. After a bit a man strolled in and sampled a seat or two. It seemed he was a stranded commercial traveler trying to kill time. When the lecture hour had come and nobody else had put In an appearance, Forbes said to the "audience:" "Will you have a lecture, or will you have a drink?" "A drink." wnlrt flic trnvi»lrr i I (DIFFERENT CHURCH ! EVERY DAY IN YEAR i Damascus Has Enough Mosques For That, But Only a Few Are Worth Much ! There are nearly enough mosques ! and shrines in Damascus to make it i possible for you to have a different one for every day in the year. But : there are but two or three that you : i will care to spend any time on. You ! pass through the street called Straight and find yourself at the outer gate of I the mosque Jai 'a el Amwy, which | ranks next in sanctity only to those ' at Mecca, Medina and Jerusalem, j This has a history: First, a heathen i temple dedicated to the god Rimmon, I then a Christian Church, and now a , Mohammedan mosque. Evidences of Its Christian history still are there; the original gateway remains, as the chalice and patten on the bronze doors testify, and then a portion of an arch ! with a Greek inscription which seems singularly out of place and almost prophetic. It reads "Thy kingdom, O Christ, is an everlasting kingdom, and they dominion endureth throughout all generations." Does It not speak of the day when "He shall reign from sea to sea?" Perhaps the Moslems have left it remain as an evidence of its untruthfulness in their minds." — The Christian Herald. PA'S VIEW [From the Washington Star.] "Have you told your father that I' asked you to marry me?" asked the young man. "Yes," replied the positive young wo- ; man. I "And how was he affected?" "He smiled and exclaimed, 'Brave boy!' " ENJOY roi m, Take Mi-o-na —A Simple, Harm-| less Remedy for Indigestion or Upset Stomach Let us tell you how to enjoy your | ■ meals so that even the heartiest din- j ( ner will set well on your stomach, j cause no unpleasant or disagreeable | 1 after effects. i There Is no hard work; no need of ■ a rigid diet list; no disagreeable medl- , . cine; instead, eat what you like and I us( Mi-o-na Tablets. They are not • only a digestive and antacid, giving prompt and effective relief, but a »pe- i i dfle for disordered stomachs. Do not endure Indigestion another day. Mi o-na surely and safely strengthens the digestive organs, soothes the irritated ! I membrane, and increases the flow of: gastric juices so that the stomach can I care for the food as nature intended, j It is needless to have a bad stomach or suffer after-eating misery. Get i from H. C. Kennedy, or any druggist, j a 80-cent box of Mi-on-a to-day—take i two or three tablets at the first sign j of distress. Keep it in the house — i , carry it when traveling—it's at all : times the dependable stomach remedy, j Toilet Preparations Mary Garden Ext. Yi oz 05# Mary Garden Ext., 1 oz $1.75 Mary Garden Toilet Water, 8 oz $2.70 Mary Garden Sachet Powder $1.45 Mary Garden Face Powder $1.67 Mary Garden Talcum Powder 45# Djer Kiss Extract, 1 oz 00# Djcr Kiss Toilet Water 00# Djer Kiss Sachet Powder 00# Djer Kiss Face Powder, small 40# Djer Kiss Face Powder, large 85# Djer Kiss Creme 45# Roger & Gallet Violettc DeParme Extract 70# Roger & Gallet Violettc DeParme Toilet Water ... 75# Roger & Gallet Voilette Face Powder 40# Roger & Gallet Rice Powder 17# Piver's Azurea Extract 70# Piver's Azurea Sachet Powder 53# Pi vers Azurea I 4 ace Powder 85# Piver's Talcum Powder 10# Piver's Azurea Soap 50# Woodbury's Face Powder 17# Java Rice Powder 25# Tetlow's Swan Down Face Powder 12# Packer's Tar Soap 15# Resinol Soap 1.7# Pebeco Tooth Paste 34# Hush 13#, 2 for 25# Squibb's Talcum Powder 15# Peroxide Cream 13#, 2 for 25# Mennen's Talcum Powder 12# Babcoclc's Talcum Powder 12# Canthrox 34# Frostilla j 5# Hind's llonev and Almond Cream 34# and 75# Swan Down Face Powder 12# Tetlow's Gossamer Face Powder 17# Elcaya Creme 33# "Jess" Talcum Powder 15# Daggetts & Ramsdell's Cold Cream ... 17#,. 28#, 38# 4711 Glycerine Soap 15# Dioxogen 17#, 34#, 50# Sempre Goivine 37# EgiffiMiMfliiifl ■ 3-ln-One has been for 18 years the Old Rettsble, largest-selling home and office oil. §K M It it light enough to oil a watch; heavy enough to oil a lawn mower. On • soft cloth it R H iconics «n ideal furuiturt ptllthtr. Mskes a yard of cheess cloth ths best and cheapest M ■ Duiiltst Dusting Cloth. B S , And3-in-One absolutely prevents rust or tarnish on all metal surfaces. Indoors and out, H il in any climate. H IM Fne 3-ln-One. Write toias for generous/rM sample and the Dictionary of uses—*o/A fnt to H I ■ 7?rC sold everywhere in 3-sira bottles: 10c (1 or.), 25c (3 oi.), 50c (8 oi., Pint for H ■ KDollsr). Also in patented Handy Oil Can, 25c (3X 0z.5. MM 3-IN-ONE OIL. COMPANY j wMm.AX OA BaOAOwav New York City I cedi/IPF urc * > hr^si 1 | Fourth & Delaware Sts. 8 ! TAD "3SISS i i Evangelist Minges* vn Invite(i j I t; «n| Illustrated solo/'Calvary." A"**- 1 * * | ProfMor Rockwell will condort llf 11 Z ;; ttoe son* aw-vice.. Rev. C. F. Stfn- I |||m 11 LI I f il son wffl conduct the sacred Bap- ■ ■ 111 l l|T|| I 9 'II tiamal service at 7:30 p. m. 1 VlllUllA X j ■ = Cut Out Thl* Advertisement and Present at | Sanderson's Studio and Art Store | 1213 North Third street, with SI.OO, and we will m«ke of your self or any member of your family Si* Carbonett Photographs, cabinet size, beautifully finished, inclosed in portfolios, size 7xll. Regular price $3.00, or if you prefer one dozen regular Imperial Cabinets, regular price $3.00. The photos we make for you and deliver under these terms, are equal to those you pay three times as much elaewhere. Proofs shown. Remember $3.00 vorth for j SI.OO. Date expires March 10, 1914. "Remember you must have this adv." See samples in our windows. Pictures and Picture Framing. Finishing for amateurs. Sanderson's Art Studio ! 1213 NORTH THIRD STREET
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers