Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, May 12, 1914, Page 6, Image 6

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    6
i CUT-RATE WEDICINESI
KENNEDYS 321 MARKET STREET |
H ' PATENT MEDICINES ] aA I TOILET PREPARATIONS \ §
tt Hand's Remedies H* JA 1 Mary Garden Ext., y 2 oz 90* XX
tt Eskay's Food 10*, 33*, 53* $1.95 I jT Mary Garden Ext., loz $1.70 tt
♦♦ Gude's Pepto Mangen 15* -M. WiAl A. V/ Mary Garden Toilet Water, Boz $2.70
g Milk of Magnesia 19* and 370 Mary Garden Sachet Powder $1.34 ||
H Musterole 17* and 34* v Mary Garden Pace Powder $1.67 tt
tt P oan s Kidney Pills •••■•• •«j> - . Mary Garden Talcum Powder 45* XX
tt Sal g Hepatica^^ !l! ....!!!!!.!.!!.' il*, 34*, 66* Every Druggist in the city of Harrisburg and surrounding towns were Djer Kiss Extract, loz 90* XX
2 Tyree's Anti-Powder 17* and 67* charging you 25c, 50c and SI.OO, full price for all Patent Medicines, toilet ar- D i er Kiss Toilet Water 00* |t
♦t Pinex «*4* tides etc D^cr iss acliet P° wiler 00* tt
tt Eckman's Alterative ••• $1.49 » .. Djer Kiss Face Powder, small 45* ♦*
H IXw S ? 99 $ Z> YEARS AGO Kennedy's started their cut-rate Patent Medicine Store. °! er Powder ' large *]♦
TT I A VA c n pjaA _ . Djer Kiss Cream 4<>* tt
H Croxone } 55* Cutting the prices to the bottom. Every druggist in town started fighting us Roger & Gallet Violette DeParme Extract 79* 8
XX Mercolized Wax 53* I then, with the idea of driving us out of business—thev have not succeeded in Ro § er & Ga,let Violette De Parme Toilet Water .... 75* XX
tt Hagee's Cordial Cod Liver Oil 06* , Roger & Gallet Violette Face Powder 40* XX
S Pluto Water, quart 25* the past 29 years, and we will promise they won't in the next 29 years, if the Roger & Gallet Rice Powder ♦♦
Steero Cubes 25* . ~. . , , . . , Piver's Azurea Extract 79* tt
55 Pape's Diapepsin ' 33* people ot Harrisburg and vicinity, will do their part and show us they appreciate Pher's Azurea Sachet Powder 50* Itt
Pane's Cold Tablets 17* , e , . , . . . * Piver's Azurea Face Powder 85* XX
tt Pinkham's Vegetable Compound 69* the btore that started this cut-rate business, and give us their patronage. Piver's Talcum Powder 19* H
tt Pierce's Favorite Prescription 67* . r , Piver's Azurea Soap 59* 2
tt Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery 67* Think of the money we have saved the people in these 29 years. Is it any j Woodbury's Face Powder 17* IYt
tt Hyomei \nhabnt . ..!...'.'.'.'.!34* wonder the druggists are fighting us? Think of the money they have lost sim- TeUow's Swansdown' Face Powder '.'.'.'.'.' \il ft
1 g^ c ? mptoe .::::::::::::::::::::::::::: incut prices. I
tt Hood's Sarsaparilla 66* n ~ , , . , ~ , ... .... , . Squibb's Talcum Powder 15* ♦*
H Hay's Hair Health 34*, 66* Don t y° u thmk our business should be successful? When we are working Peroxide Cream 13*; 2 for 25* g
tt DeWitt's Kidney Pills 34* so hard for the people's interest, trying to save them all the money possible. Mennen s talcum Powder 2*
tt Father John s Medicine «34*, 66* 3 & Babcock's Talcum Powder I*2* tt
♦♦ Castoria Fletcher's 23* Everybody should naturally feel it their duty to patronize a store of this kind. Canthrox
tt Carter's Little Liver Pills 14* J J J 3 * hrostilla 15^.
tt Chase's Blood and Nerve Tablets 34*, 59* Those who buy from us have the satisfaction of knowing they are buying at the Hind's Honey and Almond Cream 34* and 75?
ft Cuticura Soap 18* . , . , r, . , , r Tetlow's Gossamer Face Powder 17c XX
|t Belles Pa-Pa-yans 17*, 49* lowest possible prices, and are not in danger of being overcharged for patent Elcaya Creme ;{3<s 2
5 Mem ku on A° ! in . ine ~ GroVe ' S .:::::::::::: S medicines not advertised by us, as we make the prices and our competitors try Coid Cream 7.7.7.' I'it; is*. 111 g
tt Swamp Root 34*, 66* to follow. Glycerine Soap 15* tt
2 Danderine 17*, 34*, 66* Dioxogen 17*, 34*, 50*
S » Wyth's Sage and Sulphur 34*, 66* We only have the one store in Harrisburg which is 321 Market Street. Sempre Goivine 37* tt
tt S. S. S. Swift's Specific 66*, $1.17 Mum • I7p +£
H * ' Yours Respectfully, V " g
% KENNEDY'S CUT-RATE MEDICINE STORE. 321 MARKET STREET 1
♦| lILIIIILI/ I \*%J i fin 1 Lrn kWI L.&/I VIIVL. 1 V,lL > OPPOSITE BOWMAN'S DEPARTMENT STORE XX
Business .Locals
THE LEADIXG LADY
In a well-known play told her hus
band to stop talking economy but
earn more to keep pace with her ex
penditures. Most women realize that
every dollar saved is like that much
erned. This accounts for the hun
dreds of women who buy theirs and
the children's shoes at the 20th Cen
tury Shoe Store, 7 South Market
Square.
SHAKING THE DUST
from your portieres, draperies and
lace curtains at housecleaning time
does not renovate them. Send them
to Compton's and let us clean or dye
them in the most artistic manner.
Work unsurpassed. Prices moderate.
Try lis and be convinced. Compton's
Steam Dye Works, 1006 North Third
street. Branch office, 121 Market.
Both phones.
WHAT A COMFORT
to have a cooking range In your
kitchen that will allow you to use
both gas and coal. One for summer,
the other for winter. We have the
Year Round Range with all the mod
ern improvements at SIIO.OO. You
should see this range and know of
all its advantages before purchasing
elsewhere. Wm. W. Zeiders & Son,
14 36 Derry street.
SM ARTY ARTY GAVE A PARTY
and everyone came. There was a good
reason for all them being on deck.
One of the boys saw Hershey's ice
cream wagon stop in front of the door,
and by the wireless methods boys and
girls have of transmitting the news
for blocks around, it soon became
generally known what a treat was in
store. Phone for Hershey's, 409 South
Cameron street.
SHAKE YOUR HEAD,
dance a.jig or go horseback riding if
you want to after you have been fitted
with a pair of glasses by Ralph L.
Pratt, eyesight specialist, and they
will stay on without hurting. Bring
your eyeglass prescriptions to us for
accuracy ar.d promptness. 807 North
Third street.
ALWAYS INVITING
That Noon-hour Luncheon that Is
specially prepared for the busy men of
Harrjsburg at the Columbus Cafe is
surely a delicious luncheon Tor 40
cents. The food is nicely cooked and
faultlessly served. Try one of these
luncheons 'o-morrow noon. Hotel Co
lumbus, Third and Walnut streets.
SUCH LOVELY STYLES!
Just one of the many complimentary
expressions heard daily by those In
specting the varied assortment of
beautiful suits, coats and dresses at
the Klein Company store at 9 North
Market Square. A continuation of the
midseaaon special at this large storo
is assurance of extraordinary values.
Harrisburg
Carpet Co.
32 North Second Street
Try Telegraph Want Ads.
TUESDAY EVENING,
OLD-TIME RIDERS TOUR
One of the big features of the 1914
convention of the Federation of Amer
ican Motorcyclists will be a tour of
old-time motorcycle riders to the con
vention city. The tour will he made up
of men, many of whom are now heads
of motorcycle concerns, and who took
an active part in the tours in the early
days of the organization. No rider who
has participated in one of the tours
since 1910 will be permitted to enter
Veterans' endurance and reliability
contests will be held during the run.
Definite arrangements have not yet
been made for the tour, as the place
of the national meet has not been de
cided. However, it Is likely that either
Peoria, 111., or St. Louis, Mo., will land
this year's convention, all of the di
rectors apparently favoring one of
these two cities for the 1914 assembly.
In addition to the tour of old-time
riders, there will be a number of other
tours, all centering in the convention
city.
DEATH OF HENRY E. HERR
Special to The Telegraph
Marietta, Pa., May 12.—Henry E.
Herr, 53 years old, died Suddenly Sun
day from apoplexy. He was a
prominent farmer of Abbeyville and
was for twenty-three years school di
rector In Lancaster township. His wife
and two children and two brothers
survive. He was a member of the
Mennonlte Church many yAars.
Thin Folks Who
Would Be Fat
INCREASE IN WEIGHT TEN
POUNDS OR MORE
A PhynlHan'n Advice
"l'rt certainly give most anything to
be able to fatten up a few pounds and
stay that way," declares every exces
sively thin man or woman. Such a re
sult is not Impossible, despite past fail
ures. Thin people are victims of mal
nutrition. a condition which prevent?
the fatty elements of food from being
taken up by the blood as they are when
the powers of nutrition are normal,
Instead of getting into the hjood, all
the fat and flesh producing elements
stay. In the intestines until they paßs
from the body as waste.
To correct this condition and to pro
duce a healthy, normal amount of fat
the nutritive processes must bo artifi
cially supplied with the power which
nature has denied them. This can best
be accomplished by eating a Sargol
tablet with every meal. Sargol Is a
scientific combination of six of the best
strength-giving fat-producing ele
ments known to the medical profes
sion. Taken with meals, it mixes with
the food and turns the sugars and
starches Into rich, ripe nourishment
for the tissues and blood and its rapid
effect is remarkable. Reported guins
of from ten to twenty-five pounds In a
single month are by no means Infre
quent. Yet Its action is perfectly
natural and absolutely harmless. Sar
gol is sold by Qeogo A. Gorgas and
other good druggists everywhere, and
every package contains a guarantee of
weight Increase or money back."
Caution*—While Sargol has produced
remarkable results in the treatment
of nervous indigestion and general
stomach disorders, it should not. owing
to its remarkable flesh-producing ef
fect, be used by those who are not
willing to increase their weight ten
pounds or more.—Advertisement.
ONE-HUNDRED-AND-THIRTY TONS OF
ELEPHANTS WITH RINGLING SHOW
"innnHn
mMM |||» -
'
<SI HmSSFnii vH M iV MIJI
I ISB| MHH
One hundred and thirty tons of ele
phant 'vlll arrive In Harrisburg next
Friday morning. The cargo is to he
paraded through the principal streets
of the city and then housed under
canvas.
HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH
A whole tralnload of the ponderous
fellows makes up the "heavy squad"
of the Rlngllng Brothers' Circus, now
headed In this direction. It is claimed
that no such herd of the big-eared
giant* has ever before been gathered
together by one management. March
ing "tail to trunk," the squadron ex
tends over ablock in length. Were it
possible to stand them on each others'
heads, the elephantine column would
reach above a twenty-story building.
They occupy eleven of the eighty-nine
cars required to transport the Ringing
show. Computing elephant energy
Into horse power, the herd could, if
placed in harness, pull as much as
three ordinary locomotives.
'Collectively, these elephants drink
over 2,000 gallons of water every
twenty-four hours and not one of
them would think of entering upon the
day's work without his regular morn
ing cereal —a bale of hay. For dessert
the battalion consumes two wagon
loads of carrots. In addition to these
regular rations it is estimated that the
herd will, at the rate they have been
petted and made over by the young
sters thus far, have eaten approxi
mately 1,786,253 peanuts before the
end of the present Ringling season.
Dusty and wistful-looking as the
elephants appear to be, they have
many attentions accorded them in ad
dition to those ministering to their
inner wants. Whenever the circus
spreads its tents near a stream they
are taken into the water. Squatting in
the depths of a friendly brook, they
look like a cubist conception of "Sep
tember Morn." But no matter how
frequent the natural pools may be,
there is one elephant in the band who
refuses to be coaxed into the water.
His name is "Baldy" and he is the
heavy batter in the elephant baseball
nine which takes the field twice daily
in the Ringling "big top." Whether
"Baldy" was punished some hundred
years ago when as a youngster weigh
ing hardly more than a ton he was
caught in some forbidden swimming
hole In far-off India, his keepers do
not pretend to say. The fact is that
he will have nothing whatsoever to do
with stream, pool or lake. So to give
him his bath the Ringling animal men
are obliged to connect with a plug and
tre&t the gray giant to an improvised
shower. This takes as much water as
would be required to extinguish an
ordinary Are. „
Electric Light Rays
Cure Lung Disease by
Destroying the Germs
The therapeutic value of electric
light Is now very generally recognized
by most physicians, and the moat
memorable work In light treatment Is
that o( Dr. Neils Flnsen, of Denmark,
whose labors in this Held won for him
the 160,000 Nobel price. Dr. Flnsen
discovered that the chemical ruys of
light destroy certain disease germs and
by means or these rays, usually obtain
ed from a powerful electric arc lamp,
he has been able to effect a cure for
lupus an ulcerous disease which Is
rather rare in America, though com
mon In Europe. The head of the Fln
sen Light Institute of Copenhagen
has also successfully applied the elec
tric light In the treatment of patient*
■uttering from surgical tuberculosis.
An ordinary arc lamp is placed about a
yard away from the patient and the
affected part is exposed for fifteen
minutes a day at first to two and one
half hours farther along In the treat
ment In most cases artificial light
has given batter results than sunlight.
—Electrical world.
MAY 12, 1914.
NO USE FOR NOAH'S ARK
A Congressman of canny Scotch an
cestry contributed a story of disputes
in the glens about the antiquity and
importance of their respective clans.
A Campbell (pronounced Cammle)
anda McLean were one day disputing
and the Campbell said his clan had ex
isted before the days of Abraham,
Isaac and Jacob, for he said, "Does
the Bible not say that when Isaac
lifted up his eyes he saw that the
camels were coming?" (Gen. xxlx, 63.)
"Hoot, mon," said the other, "what's
that to the McLeans? The McLeans
are as old as the world Itself."
"Do you mean to tell me that the
McLeans lived before the flood?" ask
ed Campbell.
"To be sure," said McLean, "long
before the flood."
"But the whole of the people was
drowned," said Campbell, "excepting
the one family that went into Noah's
ark."
"Noah's ark," retored McLean
scornfully. "What would the McLeans
want wi' Noah's ark? Who ever heard
of a McLean that hadna a boat o' his
uln?"
Laughter ran .through the corridors
as the little group scattered and di
vided itself into pairs and trios as
some made their way to the House
Office Building, ano others marched
gaily out to the tune of "Home, Sweet
Home." —"Laughs Echoed From the
Cloak Room," Mitchell Mannering, in
National Magazine for January, 1314.
WHAT DYSPEPTICS
SHOULD EAT
A PHYSICIAN'S ADVICK
'Tndige'stlon and practically all forma
of stomach trouble are, nine times out
of ten, due to acidity; therefore stom
ach sufferers should, whenever possi
ble, avoid eating: food that Is acid in
lis nature, or which by chemical action
in the stomach develops acidity. Un
fortunately. such a rule eliminates
most foods which are pleasant to the
taste as well as those which are rich
irt blood .flesh and nerve building prop
erties. This is the reason why dys
peptics and stomach sufferers are usu
ally so thin, emaciated and lacking
In that vital energy which can only
come from a well red body. For the
benefit of those sufferers who have
been obliged to exclude from their
dl?t all starchy, sweet or fatty food,
and are trying to keep up .a miserable
existence on gluten products, I would
suggest that you should try a meal of
any food or foods which you may like,
in moderate amount, taking Immedi
ately afterwards a teaspoonful o< bl
surated magnesia in a little hot or cold
water. This will neutralize any acid
which may be present, or which may
be formed, and instead of the usual
feeling of uneasiness and fullness, you
will find that your food agrees with
you perfectly. Blsurated magnesia is
doubtless the best food corrective and
antacid known. It has no direct action
on the stomach; but by neutralizing
the acidity of the food contents, and
thus removing the source of the acid
Irritation which Inflames the delicate
stomach lining, it does more than
could possibly ue done by any drug or
medicine. As a physician, I believe In
the use of medicine whenever neces
sary, but I must admit that I cannot
see the sense of dosing an Inflamed and
Irritated stomach with drugs Instead of
getting rid of the acid—the cause of
all the trouble. • Get a little blsurated
magnesia from your druggist, eat .what
you want at your next meal, take some
of the blsurated magnesia a; directed
above, and see if I'm not rl*ht"—Ad
vertisement.
>
Great Reduction
Sale on
TIRES
No. 1 Diamond Tires With a
3500-Mile Guarantee
Regular Hcgular
Q. D. Q. D. or Dia-
Slae Straight Straight mond
Smooth Bead Tubes
Bead Anti-Skid
28x3 SB.BB »9.6 l $2.39
30x3 9.48 10.28 2.52
29x3% 12.38 13.33 3.06
30x3% 12.77 13.77 3.15
31x3% 13.17 1 4.22 3.24
32x3 % 13.58 14.67 3.33
33x3 % 13.98 15.12 3.47
34x3% 14.39 15.64 3.56
30x4 17.14 18.44 3.87
31x4 17.79 19.12 4.01
32x4 18.44 19.81 4.14
, 33x4 19.08 20.46 4.28
34X4 1 9.73 31.11 4.41
35x4 20.38 21.79 4.50
36x4 21.03 22.49 4.68
34x4% 26.73 28.35 5.54
35x4% 27.54 29.21 5.67
36x4% 28.35 311.06 5.81
37x4% 29.16 30.91 5.94
36x5 33.02 34.96 6.80
37x5 33.99 36.01 6.93 _
We can save you money on Auto
mobile Supplies of any kind. Call
at our store before making your pur
chase elsewhere and decide for your
self.
City Auto Supply Co.
108 Market Street
L 1
The Reliable House For
Pianos
YOHN BROS.
1 J
PATENT YOUR IDEAS
and makej .ToVTo^TShTm-
Money I Ratara W AH Fm> Abachitalr ImbW
ADVK3 ntci f r~ Wi*. if Mm IxwM.
wntoSTv**- JOSHUA R. H. POTTS
920 OHtSTNUT ST. PHILADELPHIA
105 G St. Wukisttse. D.C. SS. DMrbora St., CUcsgs
Dancing at Hershey Park
Every Wednesday and Saturday
evening*. AH tba popular and refined
dances.
HIGH CI,ASS ORCHESTRA
Grand May Hop.
Wednesday Evening', Hay 20th.
i ■