12 GIRLS! BEAUTIFUL CHARMING HAIR. NO DANDRUFF—2S CENT DAHNE Try this! Doubles beauty of your hair and stops it falling out. Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluffy, abundant and appears as soft, lustrous and beautiful as a young girl's after a "Danderlne hair cleanse." Just tty this—moisten a eloth with a little Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt and excessive JUDGE DAY LEAVES BENCH Washington, D. C„ April 2.—Judge William L. Day. of the United State>. District Court for the Northern Dis trict of Ohio, has tendered his resig nation. The inadequacy of the annual salary of SO,OOO is responsible for his action. Judge Day is a son of Asso ciate Justice William li. Day, of the United States Supremo Court. Great Bargains J UPRIGHT I We have on hand 12 Splendid Upright Pianos ! that have been traded in on Player-pianos; and on ac- j count of our limited floor space we are compelled to offer these instruments at the following low prices: I j One Henekamp & Son Upright. 85.00 One Kohler & Campbell . 150.00 One Shaw, used only a short while 290.00 One Shaw, used only about 18 months 275.00 One Kimball, about 3 years old. . 135.00 One Biddle, rebuilt and in fine condition, like new 140.00 One Biddle, large size, like new. . 21)0.00 One Knight-Brinkerhoff, used 3 months 105.00 One Bach, looks good 135.00 ll One Stieff, large mahogany case, all new felts 280.00 One Kroeger. good for beginners, 123.00 One Hardman. large mahogany case 175.00 Every piano will be put in first-class condition and sold and delivered to your home on terms of from $4.00 per month and up. Don't miss this sale if you want a good second-hand piano. CHAS. M. 24 N. Second Street Harrisburg, Pa. ||| i The End Is at Hand I & For man or monster? Hugo's hero has just one @ • chance to slay the Devil-fish. And you have only £ 1 TWO MORE CHANCES 1 9 q fll to get "The Toilers of the Sea" and all the other $ © volumes of these great romances by Hugo in our • complete 6-volume Imported Edition. $ \ The | ITelegraph! • Great Coupon Offer | 2 ® • Positively C oses on Saturday I • Clip the Coupon THURSDAY EVENING, oil and in just a few moments you have doubled the beauty of your hair. Besides beautifying the hair at once, Danderine dissolves every particle of dandruff; cleanses, purilles and invig orates the scalp, forever stopping itch ins and falling hair. lint what will please you most will be after a few weeks use when you will actually see new hair —fine and downy at first—yes—but really new hair growing all over the scalp. If you care for pretty, soft hair and lots of it surely get a 25-cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderlne from any drug gist or toilet counter, and just try it. HAOTITM *X)rxr> IN MONTANA Butte, Mont., April 2. —Large tracts of radium-bearing ore lands are re ported in Beaverhead county. Three Butte miners are said to have made he lind and the fields are reported the largest ever found in the Northwest. discoveries are in a group of claims thirty-four miles from Armsted and ten miles from Bremner. INEW RESULATION I FOR MILITIA WORK Adjutant General's Department ! Will Make Rifle Practice Con form to Regulars New regulations for the small arms practice of the National Guard, to t make it conform to the requirements of the War Department, are an nounced in a circular issued to-day from National Guard headquarters and radical changes are made in sev eral features. The practice of the militia is to be on a preparatory basis, the regular army practice being the ultimate aim. The season for outdoor practice is to run from May 1 to October 31, as usual, but announcement is made that indoor or gallery practice will be In order from November 1 to October 21 of the year following. Provision is made for a course of preliminary In struction before taking up gallery practice. Men who qualify as first class men in the instruction practice will be advanced to the record practice course. » The figures of classification have been changed. Hereafter 210 will constitute experts; 190 sharpshooters and ICO marksmen. Men making 1 f>o will be in the first class and 130 In the; second class. Medals will not be given | for any class below marksmen. As far as possible the practice is to be under service conditions and sil houette targets will be used Instead of the old-fashioned bull's-eyes. Big Men to Address Housing Conference! Plans have been practically com-| pleted for the opening of the State | conference for the organization of the ; Pennsylvania Housing and Town' Planning Association to be held in this j city Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of next week. Harrisburg will be j officially represented by the whole j City Commission. The conference will begin at -1 o'clock and the first speaker on the program .is Glfford Plnchot. At the I evening session Mayor John K. Royal; will extend the city's welcome to the i delegates. During the three days practical problems for bettering housing con ditions will he the principal topic dis cussed, and some of the leading advo cates of this phase of municipal Im provement will speak. Governor John K. Tener is due for an address on Tuesday and the noon luncheon on that day will be presided over by George B. Tripp, president of the, Chamber of Commerce. J. Horace I McFarland is another Harrisburg speaker scheduled on the program. j Cardinal Gibbons Walks Half Mile to See Movies Baltimore, Md., April 2.—Cardinal Gibbons yesterday afternoon walked half a mile throuhg a disagreeable Spring rain to see the new photoplay, { "The Life of St. Patrick." Although a closed automobile was in waiting at the door of his home, lie insisted on walking. The prelate enjoyed immensely the pictures and said they, and those like them, redeemed the sensation pictures and made the photoplay really worth while. | Salvation Army to Close Its Doors | The Salvation Army industrial home located at 211 Cherry street, which i was opened November, 1908, for the | benefit of men out of work will close its doors Saturday. ' The home has been operated at a | considerable annual loss which was borne by the National Headquarters in New York City in the hope that it j would eventually become self-support ing. This, however, it has failed to do. LION ROARED .March came in like a lion, 'tis true, if you'll remember; and it may be well said that March went out much like a lamb, as it should. But from March 1 to March 31 it alternately behaved like anything but a peaceable lion, and occasionally was like the prover bial lamb, according to the month's meteorlogical report. Of the thirty one days there were only four clear days, one of which was a Sunday. The others were either cloudy or partly so. HUNTINGDON" COUNTY "DRY" Huntingdon, Pa., April 2. Hunting don county has gone absolutely "dry for the first time in nearly a quarter century. This is the outcome «of the election of two dry judges last Novem ber, Judges Beers and McCarthy. The lawyers of the county are pleased at the situation, because the liquor license question will be practically eliminated from .the contest for president Judgs next year. DEMOCRAT SUCCEEDS REPUBLICAN Sunbury. Pa.. April 2. Judge Wit nier, o£ the TTnited States Court, to-day announced that Urias Bloom, <of Sun bury, is to be the Democratic jury com missioner for the Middle District, cover ing thirty-two counties, to succeed Kii gene V. Zerling, Republican, of Sun bury. C. F. Clement, a son of Brigadier General Clement, of Sunbury, was nam ed by Judge Witmer as referee in bankruptcy for Northumberland, Union and Snyder counties. DOESN'T GET LICENSE Joseph Paganelli, a former Harris burger, who for thirteen years has been in the hotel business at Hunting don, returned to Harrisburg to-day. Mr. Paganelli expects to go into some other business in Harrisburg. He was among those who were refused a li cense recently by the Huntingdon < "• *• ty court. HOLDS BOX I'AHTL A successful prize box party was held last night by the Ladies' Auxiliary to the Citizen Fire Company, N»o. 3. The proceeds will go to the fund to be used in paying the expenses of entertaining the visiting llremen next October. SENIORS ELECT OFFICERS The Senior class, of Central High School, to-day elected Carson McAllis ter, president, and Marion Townsend, secretary. SIMPLE REMEDY IS FAVORIiz, HERE ; The simple mixture of buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., known as Adler i-ka, the remedy which became fa mous by curing appendicitis, Is a great favorite with Harrisburg people. Ad ier-1-ka acts on BOTH the lower and opper bowels and drains off such sur prising amounts of foul matter from the body that A SINGLE DOSE re lieves sour stomach, constipation and gas on the stomach almost IMME DIATELY. George A. Gorgaa, drug gist.—Advertisement. HARRISBURG !&s&} TELEGR APH SHIP AND MOST OF CREW OF 170 ME LOST IN St. Johns, N. F., April 2. The steamer New Foundland came Into port to-day with a story of disaster to the sealing steamer Southern Cross, and her crew of 170 men. The exact loss of life is not known but ft is believed that practically the whole crew perished after the South ern Cross had been crushed and sunk In the Ice off (.'ape Race. The New Foundland picked up fifty of the crew, the greater number al ready dead and others dying, from the tossing of ice floes to which they escaped when their craft went down. Those who survived were able In their weakened condition to tell but little of the wreck and probable fate of their fellows. Ships were at once dispatched in the hope of finding oth er survivors or recovering more bod ies. 18 Hours Adrift In Ice The sufferings of those found by the New Foundland beggars description. For forty-fight hours they were adrift on ice floes while a furious blizzard swspt over them. The Southern Cross hail completed HUERTA EIUDEAVORtNG | TO DEVELOP POLICY Refers to United States in His | Latest Message to Mexican Congress i By Associated Press Mexico City, April 2. —In his mes-1 sage to Congress last night., President j Huerta said he refrained from exten sive mention of international relations j although he commented with some | bitterness upon the discussions of the! various governments and the difflcul-' ties the Mexican government, had en-j [countered in obtaining money, owing | to "the influence exercised by the i strange, attitude of a certain power to- ; wards Mexico." The only direct reference to thej United States was In a review of the, work done by the foreign office, when j he said: "Referring to the Department of| Foreign Relations, I must tell you! i-that the government of the Republic has earnestly endeavored to develop | a Just nationalistic policy, which, far from injuring our international rela tions, has resulted in making them the most cordial possible with the chief I powers of the world, i "Some of the American States have I not yet recognized the constitutional government ad interim of the Repub ! lie, but the greater number of them keep in Mexico diplomatics represen tatives and no one of them has in terrupted relations with the Republic. The United States has been so good as to Invite me, through His Excel lency, President Wilson, to organize |in corrtmon accord the preparatory work for the approaching peace con ference at The Hague." Telegraphic Briefs Police Commissioner McKay, of New York, sends resignation to Mayor. Supporters of the President realize they have a bitter fight in the Senate, but believe tolls repeal bill will be passed. Offer of Shibe Park, Philadelphia, j for Army-Navy football game favored by Annapolis representatives. | Major General W. W. Wotherspoon to succeed Major General Leonard Wood as chief of staff on April 22. | Clarence Panza, of the Thirteenth I Coast Artillery District, the first of ! 100,000 soldiers inoculated against ty ! phoid to die. Indian Commissioner Sells suspends Seceni Nori, chief clerk of the Indian School at Carlisle, Pa. Congressman Temple, of Pennsyl vania, offers bill to smash "pork bar rel" by appointment of Rivers Com mission. Immigration Commissioner Cami netti declares he Is not candidate for Governor of California. The new Federal reserve banking system begins operations with about $110,000,000 capital. Emlle Vedrlnes and two other air men killed at Rhelms, France. French budget committee author- Ibes report in favor of official parti cipation in Panama Exposition. German "Princes' Trust" collapses, control of vast properties passing to Deutsche Bank. Outlook for peaceful settlement of home rulo dispute. Unionist leaders working for settlement of compromise. MINIATURE COLLIERY IV OPERATION IN WASHINGTON By Associated Press Washington. April 2.—To acquaint those who know little, if anything, of the workings of a coal mine, the Na tional Museum here has installed an immense working model of a colliery and to-day began operations. Down to the minutest detail the model—a miniature colliery it should be called for it is one twelfth actual size and occupies a space of thirty by forty feet—ls complete and all parts are faithfully represented even down to the railway spikes. NEW C. S. MARSHAL By Associated Press Pittsburgh, April 2. —Acting on in structions from Washington Judge I Orr, in the Federal District Court here to-day appointed Joseph Howley, United States marshal and administer ed the oath of office so that Howley might enter upon his duties at once. This was made necessary by the resig nation of Henry F. Wilson, the former marshal. METHODISTS ENDORSE SUNDAY j New York, April 2.—The Methodist church needs such revivalists as "Billy" Sunday, in the opinion of the New York conference of the Metho dist church now in session here. This is directly at variance with the judg ment of the New York East Confer ence, which recently met at Mt. Ver non, and abolished its evangelistic commission with the statement that the days of the old-l'ashloned revival ists are over. SHEPHERDSON ARRIVES J. W. Shepherdson yesterday arriv ed from Johnstown and at once as sumed duties as assistant superinten dent of the Central Iron and Steel Company. He came here from Johns town, Pa., where he was connected with the Cambria Steel Company for 1 the past seven years. FALLS DOWN HOTEL STEPS Falling dmwn a flight of steps at the Bolton Hotel, this morning, shortly be fore 10 o'clock, a man who gave his name as Patrick Jones, was treated at the Harrlsburg Hospital with a deep gash on the side of his head. , an unusually large catch In the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Her holds were fill ed with seal skins and her decks were piled high with trophies of the cruise. The steamer also carried a crew greater by one third than she had signed for her former trips, as the sealing was reported to be unusually good and a large bonus had been of fered by the owners. This unusual load added to her difficulty when she encountered the storm and ice. Icp Held and Blizzard The Southern Cross was reported off the Southern coast on Sunday and ought to have reached here last Tues day. As near as can be learned she was rounding Cape Race and she ran. Into an Immense field of drift ice from the Labrador coast and at the same time a blizzard enveloped the ship cutting off observation. Not long after, the sealer was caught between two ice floes, which crushed her. The crew had Just time to tumble over the side to the siip- Ipery Ice cakes, when t' e steamer dis -1 appeared. tKlr WIT BULL FROGS Song, Substance and Society Are Given as Reasons For Their Longing By Associated Press Kansas City, Mo., April 2.—Big, green bull frogs are in demand on the. farms of Kansas, according to IJ. L. Dyche, State fish and game war iden. who Is ffstributing fish from the j State hatcheries. He says many farm ers are asking for frogs for their j ponds. "Some say they want them to eat," j Air. Dyche said yesterday. "Others i declare they want to hear them sing i while others say that they just want them around.'" Mr. Dyche said 5,000 tadpoles had | been distributed from the hatcheries | this Spring. V. S, HAVE DEFECTIVE TEETH By Associated Press | New York, April 2.—Figures com j piled by the American Museum of ■Safety show that upwards of 12,000.- j 000 school children In the United j States have defective teeth. In many | schools this represents approximately fifty per cent, of the pupils, but in ! some schools the number runs as high |as ninety-eight per cent. In New I York City 126,928 cases of defective ; teeth among school children were ! found. TETANUS KILLS BOY j Elmer Wagner, Jr., the nine-year-old I son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Wagner, of I Twelfth and Hemlock streets, who had been suffering with tetanus for the past week from the result of a kick of a I pony's hoof, died yesterday afternoon iat the home of his parents. He is sur vied by his parents, one brtother and I one sister. Funeral services will be ! held Saturday afternoon, at 1:30 o'clock. . The Rev. Harry B. King, pastor of Cal vary Presbyterian Church, will offlcl- I ate. llurlal will be made in the Ling j lestown Cemetery. CUTS PRICE OF GASOLINE Special to The Telegraph | St. Louis, Mo., April 2.—The Stand lard Oil Company has reduced the price | of gasoline in this city to 13 cents a gallon. This cut is the fifth made by the Standard Oil Company since No vember 4, when it began a fight, It is said, against other dealers in the St. Louis field. EIGHT FOR STATE POLICE Eight men were enlisted by the : State Police Department to-day from a dozen applicants. All of the men | enlisted served in the United States ' army. Practically every man enlisted |in two years has been an ex-regular or marine. FATAL ACCIDENT AT BUTLER By Associated Press Butler, Pa., April 2.—Ora Keiser, A. J. Johnson and H. A. Giehler were killed and W. E. Cranmer was injured when a motor truck car was struck by a Pittsburgh, Bessemer and Lake Erie train at Oneida, near here to day. The men were employed as track repairers. MUSICAL COMPOSER DIES By Associated Press Salzburg, Austria Hungary, April 2. —Robert Hirschfeld, the musical com poser and director of the Mozarteum School of Music of this city, died to-day. Deaths and Funerals • CHILD DIES At the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Drawbaugh, Camp Hill, Carl Dean Drawbaugh died yesterday. He was one year old. The funeral will lake place Saturday afternoon at 1 o'clock from the home. Relatives and friends are Invited to attend with out further notice. Burial will be made in Churehtown. BURY W. H. CHRONINTER Funeral services for William Henry Chronlster, a former park p»ollceman, who died Tuesday morning, at his home, 1533 North Fourth street, will be held this evening, at 7:30 o'clock. The Kev. C. H. Grove, pastor of the Green Street Church of God, will officiate. Burial will be made at Zion View, York county. MRS. KINTER DEAD Funeral services for Mrs. Annie E. Kinter were held this afterno'on from her home, 1218 Mulberry street. The Rev. Clayton Albert Smucker, pastor of Stevens Methodist Episcopal Church, conducted the services. Burial was made In the Harrlsburg Cemetery. WE SHAPE OUR OWN CAREER The greatest moment in our career is when we awaken to the shining truth i that <our life, to make or mar, Is wholly In our hands; that neither dark destiny nor grim fate, nor the stars, nor the decrees of the gods, nor the machina tions of men or devils, can cheat us of that greatness of soul and serenity of mind which are the crown of real suc cess. The most terrible note in the despair of the despairing is the sound 'Of help lessness. To feel that the universe Is a huge machine to grind us at last to <"ust, that the odds of existence are against us, and that we are borne down by the tramp of Irresistible forces, thiß is the salt taste of failure. But when a man has discovered that he himself is master, and that no out- Blde force can touch his inner triumph, that discovery is as of a new world, the America of spirit, the opening vista of limitless opportunity. Dr. Frank Crane, In Woman's World for March. APRIL 2,1914. SEUUN EVER REUDY ID ASSIST MUTES Report to Navy Department Tells of Rescue of Men on Collier Jupiter By Associated Press Washington# April 2.—lteadineas of officers and enlisted men of the navy to risk their own lives at all times to save their shipmates is strikingly illustrated in a • report to the Navy Department from the commanding of ficer of the collier Jupiter which was made public to-day. "On March 16 last." the report says, "ordinary .seamen Curtis, Fritz and Anding went down in No. 13 hold of the Jupiter to coal the galley. About five hundred tons of coal were stored in this hold and subsequent develop ments showed that poisonous gases had collected. Fritz, finding himself getting faint, started to go back up the ladder, but fell unconscious. And ing at once placed the hoisting line around Fritz and Curtis went up for help. Seaman Stanley then went be low to bring up Fritz. As soon as the latter had been removed Anding J himself dropped back unconscious, i Roatswain Mate then went down to put the line around Anding, | but found that he had fallen so far from the ladder that the. line would j not reach. He then tried to drag j Anding but was himself overcome and | | fell back into the hatch. Boatswain! T. W. Shaw arrived at this time, went i below, and endeavored to drop the I unconscious men to the latter but found that he could not move them. Chief Carpenter Kempton and Ordi nary Seaman Ferguson then went into the hold to render assistance, and Or dinary Seaman Curtis went back into the hold a second time. When the ex ecutive officer arrived he had a line thrown into the hold from the coal boom and Boatswain Shaw placed this I around Anding and he was then hauled out. He then started to bend the line around Leitner, but was over come before he could finish his task. Kempton, Curtis and Ferguson fin ished It-and Leltner was hoisted out. j The three men then started for the | ladder but Kempton and Curtis were I overcome and fell back. Ordinary ■ Seamen Sales and Slmpon then went to the rescue and all were hauled to | safety. Wotherspoon to Succeed Wood as Chief of Staff j Special to The Telegraph Washington, D. C., April 2.—Presi dent Wilson has selected Major- Genera! W. W. Wotherspoon, now as sistant chief of staff, to succeed Major- General Wood its chief of staff ot' the United States Army. Gen- . eral wood will retire from that office ' on April 22 on the expiration of his term of four years at the head of the army. He will be assigned to the com mand of the Eastern Military Depart ment, with headquarters at Governor's Island, N. Y. Brigadier-General Hugh L. Scott, now commanding the Second Cavalry Brigade, with headquarters at Fort Bliss, El Paso, Texas, will be as sistant chief of staff, succeeding Gen eral Wotherspoon. There is also con nected with the announcement the implied intention of the President to nominate General Scott to be a major general on the retirement of Major- General Wotherspoon, November 16, this year. Building Pulled Down by Auto Provides Fire Wood Residents of Third and Reily streets regret that the removal of the old partly burned building at the north-; west intersection of these thorough- •• fares was not pulled down earlier in , the season. It would have saved them some fuel bills. As it is all of the cellars in that vicinity lire well i stocked with Are wood as a result of the school authorities which own the plot hiring an automobile man to pull down the'old structure to-day. The building was 125 feet long and 30 feet wide. The auto car pulled it ' to pieces in live hours and the popu lace for a block around cleared the ground of the debris. Miss Tyler Is Forced to Vacate Her Office | _ i Special to The Telegraph Norfolk, Va„ April 2. —Miss Mattie • R. Tyler, granddaughter of John Tyler, 1 yesterday surrendered the Courtland. 1 Va., ppst office to B. A. Williams, ap : pointed by Postmaster General Burle- 1 '■ son Miss Tyler refused to surrender the | : office when Mr. Williams presented the commission upon her return from I Washington yesterday. Mr. Williams j telegraphed to Washington for in- i structionß. Miss Tyler to-day received orders to vacate. TREE CAUGHT FIRE . A biasing tree, in Pine street, be tween Secind and Front, set fire by an electric wire, was saved by the Citizen Fire Company responding to a pb-one call. FOR SALE LARGE BRICK DWELLING, 221 FORSTER ST. Witli roomy front porch, on lot 40 feet wide, lias an un usual equipment. For instance, it has more closets than rooms, lavatory on first floor, open wood fire grate on second floor and bath room on third floor. On certain Front St. blocks would be a $28,000 house. Can be bought for $6,000 cash and mortgage for balance. Inquire Room 6, Cameron Bldg., Second and Walnut Sts., Harrisburg, Pa. i i I MONEY TO LOANj | LESS THAU LEGAL RATES| #4 We take pleasure in announcing that our new management ha* < ++ put into effect very liberal reductions in the rates on all loans. We < ++ positively offer the lowest rates In the city and Invite a comparison of < *+ our terms and methods of doing business with those of othor com- « ♦♦ We especially Invite honest working people without bank credit < A ♦♦ to do buxlnoHS here. Our new rates are lower than those prescribed ' ♦♦ by the law of 1913. < I PENNSYLVANIA INVESTMENT CO. 132 Walnut Street Ottier H»»W H4tO a. n. to Ma p. m. Saturdays, 8.30 a. m. to Mt p. m. <>2 txnuitiutuuttmtxttuxxtmiuttixttttttttn U. S. to Save $11,000,000 on Pensions This Year Special to The Telegraph Washington, D. C\, April 2.—The. pension roll has diminished to sucb an extent in recent months that it will require $169,160,000 for pension dis bursements in the fiscal year that will begin on July 1 next Instead of SIBO.- . 300,000, the amount appropriated the current year. This interesting fact is brought out in the report on the pension budge', which was reported to the House day by the committee on approprla-fc,. tions. More than 40,000 names have been dropped from the pension roll in ! the past year on account of death anil other causes. I Autos —Autosl Price Way Down Wo must sell our cars and to .. i move them quickly we have > marked the prices lower than ever before. Our cars are guar- n anteed. We have over 3UO for i you. Pick from 1914, 1913 and " 1912. models In all makes, also i < auto trucks of every description. < Cars from SIOO to S6OO. Trucks . from $l5O up. A few specials <» for tills week: I I.ate Model Chalmers It 150 < E. M. F„ like new $375 c 1013 Krlt Roadster s.'ls<) I Cane Cur, dandy ear $ - JSO " I Cadillac, like new S3OO 11 | Ford Itoudnter $175 " • ' Ford TourliiK Car S2OO " , Palmer Sinner, <[-«->-1 $475 I 1 And about 280 others. If you " I < contemplate buying a car it will > j ' pay you to Inspect our stock ami " j " see our prices. Send to-day for our Com plete List and Prices Krouse Motor Car Co. ! 441 to 4>l North Broad Street !! PIIIIAIM.I.PIHA. PA. OPRX SUNDAYS ♦ I Agent* wanted to represent us. t I Yon enn make lil» money. Write • ' us. ■ ' ' • *'Hmniii»iHiiti.o.iOiHiilii»iiinf..t.it„>,HiHiH„ <l^w >„»„| 1 \ Centra! Apartments FOR RENT ) 6 rooms, 2 bathrooms, city steam heat and water supplied. Newly renovated. Convenient In every way. . Can be rented as an entirety, or in two suites. Ready about April 15. 191 I. Located at No. 32 N. 2nd St. Apply to Commonwealth Trust Company Heal KMate Department Z'Z'2 MAIIKKT STRKICT v _J YOU MUST DIE someday, when that day Is we do not know. Better prepare now against the uncertainty. Tho Penn Mutual Issues a SIO,OOO policy which requires but ,4 $115.90 at age 35. Dtvl- dends reduce cost after first year. Write for upeci man policy. PENN MUTUAL LIFE 103 I*. Second St. Isaac Miller. i Local F. O. Donaldson, l Agents. j - FOR SALE 441 S. 16th St., 3-story frame, im provements. 262-264 Delaware Ave., 2-story brick, all improvements. 18or> Green St.. 3-story brick, all im provements. 2029 Green St.. 3-story brick, all Im provements. 1408 Herr St., 2-story brick, all Im provements. PENBROOK 2637 Curtln St., 2H-story frame. 3009 Main St., 2W-story frame. PLOT OF GROUND Southeast Corner Fifth and Emerald Sts., 38*4x127 ft. FARMS 40 acres, I'/* mile from Marysvllle, g Pa. ■ 55 acres, % mile north of Lingles- town. Pa. 46 acres, south of Mlddlotown, Pa. H. M. BIRD UNION THUST lII.DG. 1V.,. —J I THE Harrlsburg Polyclinic Dispen sary will be open dally except Sunday at '3 P M.. at Its new location. 1701 I North Second street, for the free treat ment of the worthy poor MONEY FOR SALARIED PEOPLE and others upon their own name*. Cheap rates, easy payments, confiden tial. Adams * Co.. II- 304. K IV. Market S«. Try Telegraph Want Ads.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers