10 VALUE OF HYOMEI It's the Safe Catarrh Remedy. Nothing Better for Head Colds or Bronchitis Do not endanger your health by tak ing strong drugs into the stomach in the hope of curing catarrh, coughs, asthma and head colds. At the best they usually do little more than upset the digestive organs. Uso Hyomel, which is nature's own remedy for all such diseases. It is a combination of healing oils, gums and balsams, which, when breathed through the Hyomel Inhaler, saturates the air you breathe with its curative and health-giving medication —lt clears stuffed up head like magic. Hy omel quickly goes to all sore and in flamed tissues lining the nose, throat and bronchial tubes. Its antiseptic healing begins at once —dull head aches, distressing choking, constant snuffling, and unclean discharges of the nose surely cease. Hyomel is not only the most pleas ant, but the most natural treatment, and very inexpensive. All druggists have it. Be sure to get the complete outfit that contains inhaler and bottle of liquid. H. C. Kennedy will sell you Hyomel and agree to refund the money if you are not benefited—vou to be the Judge. Surely try it to-day—you have nothing to lose on this generous offer. —Advertisement. EASY TO DARKEN YOUR GRAY HAIR You can Bring Back Color and Lustre with Sage Tea and Sulphur When you darken your hair with Base Tea and Sulphur, no one can tell, because it's done so naturally, so evenly. Preparing this mixture, though, at home is mussy and trouble some. For 50 cents you can buy at any drug store the ready-to-use tonic called "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Tom pound." You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one email strand at a time. By morning all gray hair disappears, and, after another application or two, your hajr becomes beautifully darkened, glossy and luxuriant. You will also dis cover dandruff is gone and hair has stopped falling. Gray, faded hair, though no dis grace, is a sign of old age, and as we all desire a youthful and attractive ap pearance, get busy at once with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur and look years younger.—Advertisement. —•—i—————— Make Porch Repairs Now Winter weather is hard on porches. If yours begins to show signs of decay have it repaired at once. A few loads laid now may save you much work in the Spring. United Ice & Coal Co. MAIN OFFICE« KoMtor and Cowdcn St*. L Merchants A Minora Trans. Co. DELIGHTFUL TRIPS "BY SEA" BALTIMORE TO JACKSONVILLE and return $33.80 SAVANNAH lind return *-5.00 BOSTON and return B^o.oo Including meals and stateroom ac commodations. Through tickets to all points. Fine steamers. Best service. Ftaterooms de luxe. Baths. Wireless telegraph. Automobiles carried. Send for booklet. W. P. TURNER. G. P. A., Baltimore, Md. Hum Non-grcasy Toilet Cream keeps the skin soft and velvety. An ex quisite toilet preparation, 25c. GOHGAS DRUG STORES IS N. Third St., and I'. It. I{. Station V, ■ J SS R CITC T K OH REPAIRING or adjnatlng, Jewelry cleaning or rcpoltaiilnic, take It to SPRINCER T T t «8 U! 206 MARKET ST.—Bell Phone chas.h. mauk (II UNDERTAKER Sixth and Kelker Streets Largest establishment. Best facilities. Near to Kou as your phone. Will to anywhere at your call, lotor service. No (uneral too amall. None 100 expensive. Chapels, rooms, vault, etc.. used wiifc eat charts Business Locals YOU WOULDN'T BELIEVE IT! But look at the calendar and see. Christmas is here in less than eight weeks. While you are feeling in prime condition after your summer and Fall outdoor recreation, that's the time to ■it for a Christmas photograph. It's none too early, as it gives us ample time to do the most efficient work. Kellberg's Studio, 302 Market street. —Advertisement. Try Telegraph Want Ads. WEDNESDAY EVENING, Miners' Leader Flays Democratic Bosses That the Wilson administration is no respecter of persons in the burdens it has imposed is shown by President Van Blttner, District No. B, United Mine Workers of America. Mr. Bitt ner adds another link to the chain of opinion which clinches the fact that neither capital nor labor retains even a vestige of confidence in the stability of the Democratic administration. Speaking for the bituminous coal min ers, Mr. Bittner yesterday in Pitts burgh gave this view of the situation: "The year 19X4 will go down into history as the worst year we have had in the mining industry in Pennsyl vania. his fact is especially empha sized when we contrast present condi tions with those of 1912, which was the most prosperous year in coal min ing the country ever enjoyed. The change which twelve months have brought is inconceivable. "In the Pittsburgh district proper there are 52,000 union miners, and of that number not more than 30,000 are now employed and they but two or three days a week. At the present high cost of living, which places many of the staple necessities of life beyonu the reach of the workingman, it i;- not difficult to realize the serious em barrassment of the miner whpse mea ger income is being rapidly reduced, with but little hope for improvement. The condition of the coal miners to day Is doubly worse than it has been for many years. "The lake season, which is the im portant coal period of the year in the Pittsburgh district, generally openi about Apfll 15. This year -it did noi open until the middle of August, and as it must close October 15, approxi mately, it will be readily appreciated that this season was the most disas trous since we began shipping coal tu the lakes. Throughout Pennsylvania, in both union and nonunion fields, th» story of idle men is the same. "We can hardly hope for an im provement until the present era of national uncertainty has passed. With the industrial plants of the countr> reducing their output by about 50 pei cent., the demand for coal must fee. a like reduction, and until the rail roads, the iron and steel mills, and the other component parts of our in dustrial system find it safe to expand their business, mining will be at a standstill. It is to be hoped that thi result of the November election will be such as to put an end to the pres ent financial and industrial unrest, that conditions again will gradually become normal. Collapse of New Barn Injures Seven Workmen Special to The Telegraph Lewistown, Pa., Oct. 28. Seven men fell about twenty-eight feet to the ground at the Jacob Krick farm near Shindle yesterday, when part of the frame of a barn being erected collapsed. Franklin Sipe, received a gash in the back of his head and seri ous internal injuries, and Melvln Krepps, a leg crushed and was badly bruised about the bady. Others less seriously injured are Hiram and John Shawver, Charles Mattern, Martin Sipe and Samuel Gill. ARRESTS IN ARSON CASE Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., Oct. 28. —There were two more arrests made Monday evening in the Graft arson and rob bery case. These parties were "Blaise" Blair and Benjamin Calimer. They were arrested by Chief of J'olice Staley, charged with being accomplices of Graft in the looting and attempted burning of his house in Philadelphia avenue Wednesday of last week. It Is ulleged that these two men as sisted in stealing the clothes, dishes, and other household goods from the residence of John Graft some time before the attempt to fire the house. MACHINIST KILLED Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., Oct. 28.—Caught be tween a locomotive and a brick wall at the Shamokin roundhouse of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad Company, John A. Startzel, 45 years old, a machinist, was instantly killed. WOMAN'S BODY IX RIVER Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., Oct. 28. Yesterday the body of Mrs. Lydia Everett, 45 years old, of Lewisburg, was found in the Susquehanna, near Milton. It is generally believed that she com mitted suicide. 300 HUNTERS' LICENSES Waynesboro, Pa., Oct. 2 8. —Magis- trate John A. Potter has sold 304 1 licenses for hunters thus far. Laugh at Dyspepsia By Simply Using a Stuart's Dys pepsia Tablet After Any Meal You Want to Eat It sounds almost ridiculous to think of eating a big meal without pain and discomfort afterwards, doesn't it? Well, try this simple remedy and demonstrate its truth. You know that 12 men (a jury) decide the laws of our land. Not. only have 12 men O. K.'d Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, but hun dreds of thousands as well. "Wliat do I ca'p uliout thl* mi'iil f A little Stunrt'a l)yNp<'i>xla Tablet will dlgext It eaxlly for me." Just think! One ingredient con tained in Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets will digest 3,000 times its weight in food. Doesn't this tell you that such aid to your body means relieving your distress from food? What the thousands are daily doing you can surely do. Every condition of stomach and digestive troubles has been relieved by Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. They have been tested and tried for years. They are this nation's greatest dyspepsia remedy. They are sold wherever drugs are sold. Surely this manner of proof is all you need to know what course to pursue. If any man can prepare a better remedy than Stuart's Dyspepsia Tab lets he can make millions of dollars. Is there a better one? Why not use this hint to awaken your common sense and make you go to your druggist to-day and buy a box. To anyone wishing a free trial of these tablets please address F. A. Stuart Co., 150 Stuart Bldg., Marshall, Mich., and a small sample package will be mailed free.—Advertisement. THE LAST SHOT By FREDERICK PALMER Copyright. 1814. by Cbarlea Scrlbaex'a Sou, [Continued] She was «. -3 of surprise not to And him changed, perhape be cause he was unaccompanied by a re tinue or any other symbol of his power. He might have been coming to call on a Sunday afternoon. In that first glimpse It was difficult to think of him as the commander of an army. But that he was, she must not forget. She was shaken and trembling; and a mist rose before her, so that she did not see him clearly when, with a ges ture of relief, he saw her. "Lanstron!" exclaimed an officer In the first explosive breath of amaze ment on recognizing him; then added: "His Excellency, the chief of staff!" But the one word, Lanstron, had been enough to thrill all the officers Into silence and ramrod salutes. Marta noted the deference of their glances as they covertly looked him over. "I wanted a glimpse of the front as well as the rear," Lanstron remarked In explanation of hie presence to the general of brigade as he passed on toward Marta, who was thinking that she, at least, was not In awe of him; she, at least, saw clearly and truly his part. "Marta! Marta!" Lanstron's voice was tremulous, as if he were in awe of her, while he drank In the fact that she was there before him at arms' length, eafe, alive. She did not offer her hand In greeting. She was Incapable of any movement, such was her emotion; and he, too, was held in a spell, as the reality of her, after all that had passed, filled his eyes. He waited for her to speak, but she was silent. "Mar.a —that bandage! You have been hurt!" he exclaimed. "It's the fashion to be wounded," she eald, eyebrows lifted and lashes low ered, with a nervous smile. "I played Florence Nightingale, the natural wom an's part, I believe. We should never protest; only nurse the victims of war. After helping to send men to death I went under Are myself, and—and that helped." "Yes. that would help," he agreed, wincing as from a knife thrust. Her old taunt: sending men to death and taking no risk himself! She eaw that he winced; she realized that she had stayed words that were about to come in a flood. She was marshaling her thoughts to begin when the brittle silence was broken by a rumbling of voices, a stirring of feet, and a cheer. "Lanstron! Lanstron! Hurrah for Lanstron!" The soldiers in the garden did not bother with any "Your Excellency, the chief of staff" formula when word had been passed of hla presence. Marta looked around to see their tempestu ous enthusiasm as they tossed their caps in the air and sent up their spon taneous tribtit"" iVrn the depths of their lungs. Conqueror and hero to the living, but the dead could not speak, whispered some flend In her heart. Lanstron uncovered to the demon stration impulsively, when the conven tional military acknowledgment would have been a salute. He always looked more like the real Lanny to her with his forehead bare. It completed the ensemble of his sensitive features. She saw that ha was blinking almost boy ishly at the compliment and noted the little deprecatory shake of his head, as much as to say that they were making a mistake. "Thank you!" he called, and the cheerinees of his voice, she thought, expressed his real self; the delight of victory and the glowing anticipation of further victories. "Thank you!" called the private with a big voice. "Yes, thank you!" repeated some of the officers In quick appreciation of a compliment as real as human courage. He stood smiling for a moment in reply to their smiles; then, still smil ing, but in a different way, he said to Marta: "As you say, that helps!" with a nod toward the bandage on her forearm, and hurriedly turned away. She saw him involuntarily clutch the wrist above the pocket of his blouse to still the twitching; but beyond that there was no further sign of emotion as he went to the telephone. Instantly he was through he started toward the pass road, not by the path to the £teps, but by leaping from terrace to terrace and waving his hand gayly to the sol diers as he went. The officers stared at the sight of a chief of staff break ing away from his communications in thiß unceremonious fashion. They saw him secure a horse from a group of cavalry officers on the road and gal lop away. Marta having been the object of Lanstron's attention now became the object of theirs. It was good to see a woman, a woman of the Browns, after their period of separation from femi nine society. She found herself hold ing an impromptu reception. She heard some other self answering their polite questions; while a fear, a new kind of fear, was taking hold of her real self; a fear Inexplicable, IB sidlously growing. Lanstron was still In the officers' minds after his strange appearance and stranger departure. They began to talk of him, and Marta listened. "He said something about being a free man now!" "Yes, he looked as eager as a ter rier after rats." "He knows what he Is doing. He sees so far ahead of what we are thinking that It's useless to guees his object. We'll understand when it's done." "How little side he has! So per fectly simple. He hardly seems to realize the immensity of his success. In fact, none of us realizes it; It's too enormoue, overwhelming, sudden!" "And no nerves!" HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Of course, they gu«ssed nothing of Marta's part in) his success. The very things they were saying about him built up a figure of the type whoso character she had keenly resented a few minutes before. "But, Miss Galland, you seem to know him far better than we. This Is not news to you," remarked the bri gade commander. "Yes, I saw the accident of his first flight when his hand was injured," she said, and winced with horror. Never had the picture of him as he rose from the wreck appeared so distinct. She could see every detail of his looks; feel his twinges of pain while he emiled. Was the revelation the more vivid because It had once occurred to her since the war began? It shut out the presence of the officers; she no longer heard what they were say ing. Black fear was enveloping her. Vaguely she understood that they were looking away at something. She heard the roar of artillery not far dis tant and following their gaze toward the knoll where Dellarme's men bad received their baptism of Are, now un der a canopy of shrapnel smoke. "That's about their last stand in the tangent, their laet snarl on our soil," remarked the brigade commander. "And we're raining shells on It!" said his aide. "With our glasses we'll be able to watch the infantry go In." "Yes, very well." "We're all used to how it feels, now we'll see how it looks at a distance," piped one of the soldiers. Not until he had shouted to them did they notice a division staff-officer who had come up from the road. He had a piece of astounfjing news to im part before he mentioned official busi ness. "What do yon think of this?" he cried. "Nothing could stop him! Lan stron—yes, Lanstron has gone Into that charge with the African Braves!" "Why?" Marta heard the officers around her asking after their excla mations of amazement at the news that Lanstron was going In the charge. "Why should the chief of staff risk his life In this fashion?" Marta knew. All her taunts about sending others to death from his office chair, uttered as the fugitive sarcasm of a mood, recurred In the merciless hammerbeat of recollection. For a moment she was aghast, speechless. Then the officers, occupied with the startling news, heard a voice, wrenched from a dry throat In an guish, saying: "The telephone! Try to reach him! Tell him he must not!" * "Wo can hardly say 'must not' to a chief of staff," said the general auto matically. "Tell him I ask him not to! Try to reach him —try—you can try!" "Yes, yes! Certainly!" exclaimed the general, turning to the telephone operator. He had seen now what the younger men had seen at a glance. They were recalling La.nstron's relief at seeing her; how he had passed them by to speak to her; the Intensity of the two in their almost wordless meeting Her bloodless lips, the imploring pas sion in her eyes, her quivering impa tience told the rest. "Division headquarters!" called the operator. "They're getting brigade headquarters," he added while he waited In silence. "Brigade headquar ters says the Braves have no wire. It's too late. The charge is starting." "So it is!" cried one of the subal terns. "Look! Look!" Marta looked toward the rising ground this side of the knoll In time to :;ee bayonets flash In the waning afternoon sunlight and disappear as they descended the slope. "There! They're up on the other slope without stopping!" exclaimed the general. "Quick! Don't you want to see?" Ho offered his glasses to Marta. "No, I can see well enough," she murmured, though the landscape was moving before her eyes in giddy waves. "The madness of it! The whole '-lope Is peppered with the fallen!" "What a cost! Magnificent, but not war. Carrying their flag in the good old way, right at the front!" "Heavens! I hope they do It!" "The flag'B down!" "Another man has It—lt's up!" "Now —now —splendid! They're In!" "80 they are! And the flag, too!" "Yes, what's left are In!" "And Lanstron was there—in that!' "What if—" "Yeß, the chief of stafT, the head of the army, in an affair like that!" "The mind of the army—the mind that was to direct our advance!" "When all the honors of the world are his!" Their words were acl<)-tlpped nee dies knitting back and forth through Marta's brain. Was Lanny one of those black specks that peppered the slope? Was he? Was he? "Telephone and —and see If Lanny Is —is killed!" she begged. "I'll go—l'll go out there whe. he is!" she said incoherently, still look lng toward the knoll with glazed eyes She thought she was walking fast as she started for tho garden gate, but really she was going slowly, stum bllngly, [To Be Continued] SUIT FOR LOSS OF HORSE Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., Oct. 28.—Charles R. Hennlnger, of Pottsgrove, to-day brought suit against Daniel Smith, of the same place, seeking $350 damages for the loss of a horse, when Smith's automobile frightened the animal. It ran away and was severely hurt. Hen nlnger says that as a result he had to kill it and asserts that Smith was negligent. STATE HMf OPERATIONS TOLD First Issue of the Bulletin Has Been Made by the Department on the Hill The State Highway Department last night issued the first number of the official departmental bulletin which will be issued from time to time to furnish detailed information of what the department is doing. Similar bul letins are published by other States and contain facts and figures that are worth reading in the light of the un fair criticisms that have been fired at the department by men in parties anx ious to get control of the State govern ment. The bulletin was edited by W. R. D. Hall, the statistician of the depart ment, and gives the departmental chiefs together with a review showing what the department has really done, the work on State highways, State aid highways, the manner in which the State highways were repaired after Young and Powell loosened up on the automobile money following the orders of the courts; the maintenance work in general; the manner in which the bureau of township highways is aid ing by giving expert a,dvlce and plans; the vast work of the automobile divi sion; the bridge division; the financial end of the department and figures on contracts recently let and work done. The whole bulletin gives information about operations that has never been put out by any other department, con tract prices, including engineering costs, being quoted. The Dauphin county information shows $68,949 spent on the riverside road and $13,392.01 on the Swatara township link between Harrisburg and Steelton, the engineering and inspec tion costs on the former being $2,28:> and $913 on the latter. Cumberland was given six plans for township bridges and Dauphin eight. Cumber land also asked for road surveys for a [township road in Frankforcl and Dau phin for surveys for roads in Susque hanna and Upper Paxton Uebanon asked for four surveys to be made for township roads. The whole publication is replete with valuable information. UNCONSCIOUS FOR A WEEK Sunbury, Pa., Oct. 28.—Mrs. Sarah Campbell, 37 years old, died at her home at Espy, of a complication ol' diseases, after having been uncon scious for a week. She was a daugh ter of John Snyder, who was twice sheriff of Columbia county. AN EASY WAY TO STOP HEAD NOISES Good Advice For Thowe Who Krar OeafueMN Men and women who are growing hard of hearing and who experience a stuffy feeling of pressure against their ear drums, accompanied by buzzing, rumbling sounds in their head like water falling or steam escaping should take prompt and effective measures to stop this trouble. Headnoises are almost invariably the forerunners of complete or partial deafness and most deaf people suffer from them constant ly Sometimes these head noises be come so distracting and nerve racking, with their never ceasing "hum" they drive the sufferer almost frantic and complete nervous breakdown and even violent insanity have been known to r6 Thanks to a remarkable scientific discoverv made recently in England it is now possible to almost instantly lessen the severity of these headnoises and in a very short time to completely and permanently overcome them. With the disappearing of the head noises, the hearing also greatly Improves and very frequently can be restored to nor mal. This English treatment is known as Parmint and can be easily and safely self administered at home. W. H. Ken nedy and other leading druggists in Harrisburg and vicinity now have it in stock. Get from your druggist 1 oz. Parmint (Double Strength) and mix it at home with U pint of hot water and 4 oz. of granulated sugar. Stir until dissolved and then take one table spoonful four times a day until the noises disappear and hearing improves. Par mint is used double strength in this way not only to reduce, by tonic action, the Inflammation and swelling in the Eustachian tube and thus to equalize the air pressure on the drum but to correct any excess of secretions In the middle ear and the results it gives are both remarkably quick and effective. Advertisement. MEAT INJURIOUS TO THE KIDNEYS Take a tablespoonful of salts if Back hurts or Bladder bothers We are a nation of meat eaters and our blood is filled with uric acid, says a well-known authority, who warns us to be constantly on guard against kidney trouble. The kidneys do their utmost to free the blood of this irritating acid, but become weak from the overwork; they get sluggish; the eliminative tissues clog and thus the waste is retained In the blood to poison the entire sys tem. When your kidneys ache and feel like lumps of lead, and you have sting ing pains in the back or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment, or the blad der is irritable, obliging you to seek relief during the night; when you have MVare headaches, nervous and dizzy spells, sleeplessness, acid stom ach or rheumatism in bad weather, get from your pharmacist about four ounces of .Tad Salts; take a table spoonful in a glass of water before breakfast each morning and in a few days your kidneys will act line. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys, to neutralize the acids in urine so It is no longer a source of irritation, thus ending uri nary and bladder disorders. Jad Slats Is Inexpensive and cannot Injure; makes a delightful effer vescent llthia-water drink, and no body can make a mistake by taking a little occasionally to keep the kid neys clean and active. —Advertise- ment. «————- —————— Do Not Throw Your Old Tires Away Use Maxotires and Get All the Wear Out of Them THE SHAFFER SALES CO. 80-88 S. CAMERON ST. We sell all makes of PNEUMATIC TIRES L OCTOBER 28, 1914. STOMACH FINE! INDIGESTION. MS. SOURNESS GONE-PIPE'S DIM In five minutes! No stomach mis ery, Heartburn, Gases, or Dyspepsia "Really does" put bad stomachs in order—■"really does" overcome indiges tion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and sourness in five minutes —that—just that makes Pape's Diapepsin the largest selling stomach regulator in the world. If what you eat ferments Into stubborn lumps, you belch gas and eructate sour, undigested food and acid: head is dizzy and aches; breath sour; tongue coated; your in SPECIAIi RALLY PROGRAM Lewisberry, Pa., Oct. 2 B.—Rally day services were held on Sunday in the Methodist Episcopal Church. The Sun dju' school session, was held at 9.30 oTlock, followed with a special rally day program entitled "The Bugle Call.'' The choir, composed of nineteen voices, with Mrs. Elmer C. Wise, pian FRUIT LRXITI FOR MAIM, DUO. SHOT. "CALIFORNIA SYRUP OF FIGS" Better than calomel, oil or salts for liver, bowels and stomach Mother, daddy and the children can always keep feeling fine by taking this delicious fruit laxative as occasion de mands. Nothing else cleanses the stomach, liver and bowels so thorough ly without griping. You take a little at night and in the morning all the foul, constipated waste, sour bile and fermenting food, delayed in the bowels gently moves out of the system. When you awaken all headache, indigestion, sourness, foul taste, bad breath, fever and diz- I'OIJTICAI/ ADVERTISEMENTS POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENTS ©For Representative in the General Assembly \ FIRST DISTRICT Augustus Wildman I pledge myself that if elected. I will sup port only such legislation as is to the liest in terest of the people. YOUR SUPPORT KINDLY SOLICITED I CITIZENS' I j INDEPENDENT RALLY | FOR OI R HOME CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNOR 1 VANCE C. McCORMICK j Thursday Evening, Oct. 29, at 8 O'clock | j Chestnut Street Auditorium "E SPEAKERS: DEAN WM. DRAPER LEWIS, HON. C. E. ! £ SWIFT, REV. R. M. LITTLE, OF PHI LA.; HON. ARTHUR R. 3 j »= RIPLEY, CONGRESSMAN-AT-LARGE; HON. JAMES A. - ! ijj STRANAHAN AND OTHER PROMINENT SPEAKERS. ! i | Let Everyone Join, Without Regard to |= | Party Affiliations, and Help p | "Clean Up Pennsylvania" | Pictorial Review Patterns jßk Make the prettiest and simplest iff rw,— 3V7i—tie now ready for you 5990—15* Dives Pomeroy fSL Stewart sides filled with bile and indigestible waste, remember the moment Pape's Diapepsin comes in contact with the stomach all distress vanishes. It's truly astonishing—almost marvelous, and the joy is its harmlessness. A large fifty-cent case of Pape'a Diapepsin will give you a hundred dollars' worth of satisfaction, or your druggist hands you your money back. / It's worth its weight in gold to V men and women who can't get their siomnehs regulated. It belongs in your home—should always be kept handy in case of a sick, sour, upset stomach during the day or at night. It's the quickest, surest and most harmless stomach doctor in the world, —Advertisement. ist, and the Rev. D. L. Dixon, choir leader, rendered special music, includ ing an anthem, "O liod, My Heart Is Fixed;" Miss Anna Sutton sang a solo; recitations and exercises were given by the chihldren. Addresses were made by the pastor and the assistant superintendent, P. C. Bell; Harry Spangler, superintendent, read th'o program. ziness is gone; your stomach is sweet, liver and bowels clean, and you feel grand. "California Syrup of Pigs" is a fam ily laxative. Everyone from grandpa to baby can safely take it and no one is ever disappointed in its pleas ant action. Millions of mothers know that it is the ideal laxative to give cross, sick, feverish children. But get tlie genuine. Ask your druggist for a 50 cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs,' which has directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown ups on each bottle. Refuse with con tempt the cheaper Fig Syrups and counterfeits. See that, it bears the name—"California Fig Syrup Com pany."—Advertisement.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers