2 OPEKGB i ' FOR IDLE WORKMEN Lackawanna Iron and Steel Com pany Will Help Employes at Cornwall Specicl to 77: e Telegraph Lebanon, March 31.—Idle furnace-| men at Cornwall were made happy to day by the announcement that the ; 1 .ackawanna Iron and Stei 1 company officials here have arranged to throw! open a large tract of company ground i for gardening and general agriculture by the employes. The officials have secured the consent of the main de partment to open a large tract of land. | ■which'will be cut up into garden plots. | and turned over 1o the idle workmen i to raise vegetables for their families.; B. A. Shutts. superintendent of the; 'Cornwall plant, is in direct charge, un-l der the supervision of W. 1.. Wolfe, i ; thc general superintendent. Arranse-i ments have been made for distribution! of various kinds of seed, and tor thej jirotectlon of the gardens when thej vegetables ore maturing. I'IRF DESTROYS FARMHOVSE ! Lewistown. Fa.. March 31.—Fire to tally destroyed the dwelling house rpo'n the farm owned and occupied by K .E. Fultz. near here, yesterday. ] • ; ! Quickly Relieves Without Distress | • I I i The congestion of waste and? j ♦ refuse from the stomach, ferment-1 i ing In the bowels, generates poi-T * soivous gases that occasion dis-| i tress and invite serious illness, i 1 Health and comfort demand thatf ? this congestion be speedily re- j • lieved and the foul mass expelled. J * The well-founded objection mostj 2 people have to the violence of oa-i • thartlc and purgative agents is. ? ovcrcumc by usiujj the combina-. • ttion of simple laxative herbs with, | * pep-in that is sold in drug stores! I under the name of Dr. Caldwell's| ■ i Syrup Pepsin. A dose at night? . ■i relief next morning, with-J » out discomfort or inconvenience.? | ' A free trial bottle can be obtained; j 1 bv writing to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, l i I 452 Washington St.. Mor.ticcllo,, I i llls - n Cumberland Valley Railroad; TIME TABLE In Effect May Ct. 1914. TRAINS leave Harrisburg— l or Winchester ami Mnrtlnsburg at r ft" *7:50 a. m., *3:40 p. ra. For Haserstown. Chaiubersburir, Car -1 -!e. Mechaiiicsburg and intermediate Mations at .":03. *7:50, *11:53 a. in.. »3'40. 5:32. *7.40, *11:00 p. 111. Additional trains for Carlisle and y.'chanlcsburg at 9:4S a. m., 3:1S; 3:27, ! i; •;;<) a:3O a. m. For Dillsburg at 5:03, *7:50 and! «i 1:53 a. m.. 2:18. *3:40, 5:32 and 8:30 i ''"•Pally. All other trains dally except' sunday. H. A. RIDDLE J. H. TONGI3. G. P. A. ( EDUCATION AD iiut nsDUi'g i>usuie*s College 329 Market St. . I Fall term, September first. Daj and night. 29th year. Harrisburg, Pa. Begin Preparation Now Day and Night Sessions i SCHOOL OF COMMERCE I 15 S. Market isq., Harrlsburs, I'a. Did You Receive The Telegraph Yesterday on Time? IS Tins VOIR CARRIKR? Each day a strict record is kept in this office, of the ac tual time consumed in serv- „ ing the Telegraph to its sub- * scribers. £ '**" 1 Vf From the time the papers , leave the press every minute must be accounted for and Front street, 500 to end; JQHN STOLL Tuscarora street. Carrier No. 28 12 minutes from the time (he papers left the press the carrier's bundle of papers was delivered to him at Front and Vine streets. 2 minutes were consumed by the carrier in recounting Ills papers. 2 minutes more and subscribers were being served with the Telegraph. 17 Minutes From PreSs to Home If you reside in this section, or any other section of Harrisburg you ran enjoy the same prompt service and have the Telegraph delivered at your home within the hour. Give your subscription to the carrier or telephone the Circulation Department (or fill in the subscription blank below). 6c HARKi:BURG TELEGRAPH a Week Delivered at Your Home SUBSCRIPTION BLANK ♦ Date 1 »....♦ Harrlsburf Telegraph: t ! Please deliver the Telegraph dally until further notice at tliej rate of six cent i a week and have your regular collector call fori paym snt every two weeks. I ! Name | Address i WEDNESDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH 31, 1915. 1 Recent Deaths in Central Pennsylvania Special to The Telegraph Sunbury. Mrs Sarah R. McCann. ! mother of Mrs. Florence Rurg.a prom- Jinent musician and pipeorgan player here, died Tuesday afternoon. She was aged S2. Shlppcnsburs. Mrs. Elizabeth Vainer died on Monday. She is sur vived by several children. Ship|H'iisbiirg. - John Kent/, died on Monday from lockjaw, lie tramp ed on a nail a few weeks ago. lie is survived by one sister and one child. Mount Uollj—George 15. Snyder died Sunday night from tuberculosis, lie was 52 years old. l.ititz. Samuel K. Snavely. ased 68, died yesterday after along illness. He was a former resident of Harris burg. and a cigar manufacturer many years. His widow, three brothers and a sister survive, the latter living in Harrisburg, Uopclnnd. Mrs. Elizabeth Zent myer, died yesterday. aged S». A son sur\ ives. Mount Joy.—lsaac Watson, aged T9. for many > ears a resident of Mount Joy, died in Toledo. Ohio, at the resi dence of his son Albert Watson. His body was brought to Mount Joy for burial. Columbia. Mrs. Elizabeth Conlev died at the home of her son, Albert B. Conley, aged 81. She was the mother of 18 children, of whom six survive. Columbia. Jlrs. Nancy Elizabeth Keener died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. George P.est, aged 03. Dlllsburg. Funeral services of Mrs. Isaa> Smith who died at the home of her daughter. Mrs. Willis Lease, near Bermudian, w ere held yesterday morning with services in the Dillsburg Metnodist Church by the Rev. J. W. Long. Merchants' Ice Co. to Deliver by July 1 With $40,000 of the $50,000 capital subscribed end contracts let for the plans and machinery, the Merchants Ice Company of Harrisburg expects to be delivering ice to its customers by July 1. In order that the people may understand the policy and plans of this company a public meeting will be held at the Harrisburg Board of Trade hall next week. An enthusiastic meeting of the stockholders and directors was held at the Metropolitan Hotel yesterday. Contracts were awarded to the York Manufacturing Company, of York, for a York single acting refrigerator ma chine. and to the De la Vergne Manu- j facturing Company, of New York, for an oil stationary engine. At a meeting next week a building committee will be named. Work on the plant at j Berryliill and Cameron streets is under way. The new plant will have a ca- j paeity of fifty tons a day. NO PREMIUMS %A Makers ofthe Highest Gate Tur&j't at crj fypiic. I Ggcnttes in the IWi M CHDIB IS lUGMENTED FDR EASTER SERVICE Double Quartet Will Sing "Death and Life" at Pine Street Church "■•■•""■■■■■■■■■ l The special Eas ter musical service at Pine Street Pres byterian Church will be at the even ing service, It will •"4 begin with an or * fc&yi fran rec * ,a ' at .*.i ifi »*" Frank MeCarreli. ' church organist, r. ' /afcj . The sermon will tie ifetSl; IKHJL. preached by the Mml "ItBH 1 Rev. L >r. Mudge. "J The special musi- I'V"' A .-T", cal feature will be ti ll — *.. . *J the cantata. "Death and Life." composed by Harry Rowe Shelly. The cantata is a brief musical narrative of the Crucitixion, the En tombment and the Resurrection. The text is taken partially from the scrip tures in the original form. There aresix numbers of alternating choruses, solos and a short soprano and baritone duet. The usual quar tet choir of the church has been aug mented and the double quartet which will sing this cantata is composed as follows: Soprano, Mrs. Roy G. Cox. Mrs. D, J. Reese. Altos, Mrs. 11. L. liertzler, Miss Ruth Hoover. Tenors—M. D. Hollenbaugh, Ralph Steever. Basses. George Sutton. George M. Klineline. Union Presbyterian Service. —Mem- bers of Market Square and Pine Street Presbyterian Churches held a union meeting last evening in the Market Square Church, the Rev. Dr. Lewis Miulge, of Pine Street church, having charge of the service. The Rev. Wil liam B. Cooke, of Market Square church, will have charge of the union meeting of the two congregations in Pine Street church Saturday evening. Other services will be held in each church each evening during the re mainder of Holy week. Special Services at Grace M. K.— : Special music by the choir and short j addresses by the Rev. Dr. John I). . Kox. mark the observance of Holy I week each evening in the Grace Meth odist Church. The Rev. Dr. Fox is giving a short account of the closing I events in the life of Christ prior to | bis death. Mrs. Emily C. Miller and (Professor C. A. Ellenberger sing at the i services. ; BISHOP CONFIRMS CLASS OF 10 Forty-six persons were confirmed in •St. Luke's Episcopal Church, Altoona, j by Bishop James H. Darlington. Music i was furnished by tlie vested choir. The Iconfirmation was held in the St. Luke's i church, it being lhe oldest one in the ; uari: : h. The following were in the 'chancel with the bishop: The Rev. Leroy F. Baker, general missionary; the Rev. William Jones, of Barnes boro: the Rev. Amos Anne, of Bedford; the Rev. H. B. Pulslt'er, of Marietta; the Rev. M. D. Maynard. of Hollldays burg; the Rev. Frederick Cook, of Ty rone: the Rev. A. A. Hughes, of Jer sey Shore. Bishop Darlington will conduct con firmation services in St. Chrysostom's t'htjreh. New ilarket; St. Elizabeth Church, Elizabethtown; Mt. Calvary Church. Camp Hill, during the remain der o.f the week, and in St. Paul's and St. Stephen's Churches on Easter Sun day. EXTRA SESSION OF DIET By Associated Press j New York. March 31.—The East j and West News Bureau received to-day I the following dispatch from Tokio: , "The Emperor has called for an extra ! session of the Diet, to open on May ' 17 and continue for tlirre weeks." FALL OUR ~ NEIGHBORHOOL There Is Hardly A Womar Who Does Not Rely Upon ! Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound. Princeton,lll. —"I had inflammation, hard headaches in the back of my neck r ...... .. i and a weakness all • caused by female t trouble, and I took Lydia E. Pinkham's " ; ''T|ss) pR Vegetable Com ,[ pound with such ex ; s*l : \ f cellent results that I S ' am now feeling fine. I recommend the ' / // Compoundand praise / //I to have you I ' ' 'publish my letter. There is scarcely a neighbor around me who does not use your medicine." —Mrs. ! J. F. JOHNSON, 11. No. 4, Box 30, Prince , ton, Illinois. Experience of a Nurse. Poland, N.Y.—"ln my experience as a nurse I certainly think Lydia E. Pink -1 ham's Vegetable Compound is a great medicine. I wish all women with fc i male troubles would take it. I took it when passing through the Change of i Life with great results and I always re- II commend the Compound to all my pa tients if I know of their condition in time. I will gladly do all I can to help others to know of this great medicine." —Mrs. HORACE NEWMAN, Poland, Her kimer Co., N. Y. If you are ill do not drag along until an operation is necessary, but at once take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable j Compound. If you want special advice write Lydia E. Pinkliam Medicine Co., ; (coniidential) Lynn, Mass. EASTER at the SEASHORE Sixteen Day Tickets at reduced rates on sale for all trains. Saturday April 3 \ via Reading Railroad AUDITORS FINISH REPORT FOR 1915 Messrs. Reigle and Huston Put in Their Bills For 58 and 61 Days, Respectively ■ ■I I ~ . Dauphin county's; !< f/jj audit for 1914 was jPH for presentatior to 1 Port comparer to 1 [ j| lo sa jup jJ s shown by the books of County Controller H. W. Gougn, at the beginning of the I year. In the "controller's' accounts,! however, *5,045 lor the Middletown '• bridge, $2,702 for the Miilerslmrg j bridge and SOOO for the construction of the county's share of the South Hanover township State highway was charged off and set aside and t,hese sums, naturally could not he included in the auditor's report. Colonel F. M. Ott, the county solicitor, will likely present the report to the court Mon day for conflrmaiion. At noon to-day Auditors Francis \V. : Reigle and Fred W. Huston had not j filed the report as they were waiting j for John W. Cassel, the president, to, put in his bill. Auditors Reigle and \ Huston put in tlieir bills amounting "to ! $225.84 and $184.44, respectively, rteigle charged for fifty-eight days at $3 per day and 864 miles at six cents per mite for the mileage; Tluston ] charged for sixty-one days and for! twenty-four miles at six cents per, mile. What Cassel's bill will be is | problematical, as Messrs. Reigle and! Huston say he has only been on the Job J half a dozen or more times Cassel, ac- | cording to Reigle. cautioned the oth- ! ers yesterday, "not to be to fast about 1 putting in their bills." At the Register's Office. —The will ol Theresa F. Adams was probated to- 1 day and letters were issued to John J. ; Adams, Jr., Fort Hunter. Letters on 1 the estate of Benjamin F. Crane were issued to Katie Crane. , County Pays Employes for March. —Dauphin county settled its monthly pay to its employes for March to-day. All told the vouchers totaled about $3,200. 1 Bowman Mcll Co. Appraisers File Report. Redsecker Brinscr and George W. Carter, appraisers appoint ed to report on the property of Bow man. Mell and Company, druggists, in the hands of Receiver John C. Orr, Hied their report with Prothonotary H. F. Holler yesterday. The report! shows that the furniture and fixtures! are worth $<599.50; machinery, $1,1(59; I stock. $4,7157.30, and amounts receiv able, $4,309.05, a total of $1 0,944.55. j City to Hold Walter For Damage Claim of Woman Who Fell in Hole in Street j Alderman Charles P. Walter, the! city repair contractor, will be held re sponsible by the city for the claim for damages Hied against the munici-! < pality several months ago by W. H. and Lula O'Brien for injuries Mrs. • ' O'Brien is alleged to have sustained j by falling into a hole in the asphalt ] 1 in Court street near Market. The ac cident occurred in December of 1913 during the administration of Elmer E. Fritcliey, former highway eommis-1 sioner. Suit was filed by O'Brien for SI,OOO I' in his own right and $5,000 for his wife. Mrs. O'Brien contended that she was carrying her baby In her arms at the time and that the fall injured her so seriously that she has been an invalid since. It is listed for common pleas court during the week of April 12. Jf necessary Alderman Walter de clared he will defend the ease in the courts. Counsel Confers With Court and Commissioners Relative to Back Fees of Constables Following a brief conference this! morning with the county commission- j ers, Attorney W. L. Loeser and Rob- | ert Fox, assistant district attorney, re- : quested Additional Law Judge Mc- ! Carrell to prepare a supplemental opinion, relative to the liability of the county for payment of back fees for j constables between the years 1902 to 1905. If the court will approve of their i contention the two attorneys will pre sent the bills to the county commis sioners again and ask for payment. ; Suits may be brought if the eommis- j sioners do not pay the bills. CHANGE POLLING PLACE Because foreigners are occupying the premises owned by Charles Row in the West precinct of Williams town ship formerly occupied as polling place, the county commissioners to-! day complied with the request of a number of petitioners to move the! voting place to the basement of the! building in Pottsville street owned by j Mrs. Jonathan Hawk. CUPID WASN'T BUSY IN MARCH March wasn't a particularly busy I month for Mr. D. Cupid according to the figures compiled for the past j month from the county marriage li-! cense docket. All told there were i only 87 licenses issued. Deaths and Funerals SERVICES FOR M Its. CASSEL Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Cas sel, aged 75. who died yesterday at the Ilarrisburg hospital from a stroke, will be held to-morrow afternoon at 2 o'clock, at the home, 1119 Derry I street. Further services will be held i in the Hummelstown Lutheran Church,! the Rev. John Witmer officiating. Bur ial will be made in the Hummelstown Cemetery. Mrs. Cassell is survived by the, two sons, Amos and Frank Cas-1 seitwo daughters, Mrs. Maggie Gype, of Carthage. 111., and Mrs. Kate Wal-1 raer, of Shellsville, and the following brothers and sisters, John and Wil-1 liam Brown, of Piketown; James, Brown, of Irrington. Mo.; George) Brown, of Palmyra: Mrs. Maggie Fet terman, of this city. SERVICES FOR JAMES WELLS Funeral services for James R. Wells. 1 North Ninth street, will be held at the homo Friday afternoon, the Rev. Mr. Miller, of Penbt*ook, officiating. Burial will be made in the East Har risburg Cemetery, tie is survived by his wife and the following sons and daughters: Charles, Oliver. Jesse, James and Edward. Misses Gertrude Maud and Celia Wells. DIES FROM PNEUMONIA George G. Main, aged 29. an em ploye of the Adams Express Company, j didc of pneumonia at Ills heme. 120l> ; Market street, shortly before 9 o'clock \ this morning, lie is survived by his' wife and one child. Funeral services j will lie held Saturday afternoon, the I !!cv. 11. W. A. Hanson, pastor of the Messiah Lutheran Church, officiating. ' FOSTER TO LEI, IS REPORT TODAY Highway Chief Engineer Declines to Make Any Statement on the Rumors Rumors were flying on Capitol Hill to-day that Samuel D. Foster, of Alle gheny county, had resigned as chief engineer of the State Highway De partment which position he had filled since the middle of 1911. and that Wil liam N. Uhler, assistant chief engi neer of the highways of Philadelphia, would be named to succeed him. i Mr. Foster was a lieutenant colonel land aid on the staff of the Governor and his commission expired when John IK. Tener retired. For some time there | has been rumors that he would resign I immediately upon the retirement of K. ! M. Bigelow as highway commissioner, j To-day Colonel Foster saw the Gover nor. but what transpired was not made public. Colonel Foster refused to dis cuss his visit in any way and the Gov ernor's otllce said that whatever an nouncement there was to make would come along in due season. The appointment of R. J. Cunning ham to succeed Mr. Bigelow Is expect ed soon. Mr. Bigelow last night issued this I statement: "I accepted the position of State 1 Highway Commissioner with the dis ! tinet understanding that I was to or j ganize the department, survey and . plan B,SOO miles of roads made State i highways by the Legislature. 1 was j to have $50,000,000 to begin this work i and. acting under authority of the | Legislature 1 completed the surveys i and plans and had them ready on Jan- I uary 1, 1913. Two session's of the I Legislature approved the $50,000,000 i bond issue, but the people defeated I the measure and placed the State I Highway Department in the position lof being ready to go ahead with the work without money. "I believe the present Legislature, | with the help of owners of automo ! biles, will have sufficient money to j maintain the State highways in good i condition during the next two years, j but no money for extensive construc- I tion work. As 1 did not take charge of the department for maintenance work, but to make a road system for the State, suitable for the. present and the future and as there is no money in si;rht to carry out our plans, T respect fully retire." MISS XI IDIG RESIGNS Miss 'Margaret Neidig, 233 South street, night supervisor at the llar risburg Hospital for the post six months, resigned to-day. She will take a post-graduate course at the Johns Hopkins Hospital. PROTECT FIGHT SPECTATORS By Associated Press Havana, March 31. —Arrangements have been c ompleted for affording po lice protection tor the crowds during the Johnson-Willard fight next Mon day. The race track and Havana streets leading to stations of the electric line to the track will be policed by a double force. Fairy Dreams of Appetite One Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet Will Enable One to Digest Any Meal, Any Time. Makeup your mind to go to your next meal with the desire to eat wha{ you will and do it. i "Every Meal Smiles at Me Now Slnee I've Been 'i'aklnK Stuart's U>'«peii«ln Tablets." After that meal take a Stuart's Dys pepsia Tablet and fear no evil effects from the food you have eaten for it will be digested easily, quickly. I Then gradually fairy dreams of ap petite will come back to you and in a short time the old romping appe , tite will return to you. All druggists carry and recommend ' Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, 50c a box j Trial free by sending coupon below. Free Trial Coupon F. A. Stuart Co., ISO Stuart Hide., Marshall. Mleh., send me at once by return mail, a free trial pack i ago of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. | Name j Street City State BE PRETTY! TURN GRAY HAIR DARK Try Grandmother's old Favorite Recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur ! Almost every ono knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compound ed, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streaked or gray; also ends dandruff, itching scalp and stops falling hair. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com pound," you will get a large bottle of this famous old recipe for about 50 cents. Don't stay gray! Try it! No one ' can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as It does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this ) through your hair, taking ono small 'strand at a time; by morning the gray i hair disappears, and after another i application or two. your hair becomes beautifully <lnrk, thick and gloary.— i Advertisement. Copyright by Ondenreod & Underwood. H. T. WOMEN YOLONTEERS London, England. Not to be out done by the male sex who are doing glorious work at the front, there has been organized the Women's Vol unteer Reserve. A body of trained women skilled in first aid, cooking, signaling, telegraphing, marksmanship. Here in England we see the heroic work of nurses who are on duty day and night. There is devotion, self sacrifice, suffering patriotism—qualities which only a great war and its terrible consequences can inspire to the high est development. The women ev.y where are helping and everywhere one sees self-sacrifice and devotion to country. The women of the United States do not know how fortunate they are. Here there are plenty of women who suffer in silence, whose strength is out of proportion to their ambition. Their hands are tied by some chronic dis ease common to womanhood; that weak back, accompanied by pain here or there, extreme nervousness, sleep lessness, maybe fainting spells or spasms, are all signals of distress for DEATH OF MRS. «M, A. KMNE Blain, Pa.. March 31.—Mrs. William A. Kline, died on Tuesday at her home here. Mrs. Kline was the mother of twelve children, six of whom were at her bedside. Air. Kline, her husband, died just two months ago, and since his death her decline has been rapid She was tiO years old. Eleven chil dren survive. Mrs. Myra Spohn. Car lisle: Prof. I. E. Kline, Atlantic City, X. J.: Airs. Marcellus Zeigler and Mrs. Howard Spldle, York, Pa.: Prof. G. A. Kline, Camden, X. J.; Mrs. X. F. Uutshalt, Lewistown; Hussel Kline and Mrs. Walter Miller, Waterloo, la.; When the P. I. E. Was Opened! It Was on March 25th The P. I. E. is the Pennsylvania Insurance Exchange and it was chartered on the date named. This corporation has been formed with the object of offering to the citizens of Harrisburg and district, clearly written and absolutely sound insurance policies—Life, Fire, Liability, Accident, Health and Auto mobile. None but the strongest and most reliable companies will be represented, and none but the most eligible business accepted. The Slogan of the P. I. E. Is SERVICE—STRENGTH The Officers Are: President, WM. C. WANBAUGH Secretary-Treasurer, WM. H. EBY, Jr. Offices at 34 Union Trust Building These are young, aggressive men of ability, integrity arid jrestige—live wires, with your interest at heart. PHONE, WRITE OR CALL ON THEM "DO IT NOW!" Sample the P. I. E.—You'll Find It Good! J|| New Universities Dictionary 11 nil J f/# Present or mail to this rtOW lO KJCI It paper one CoU p on H ke the MW«V«r r ; above with ninety-eight ft cents to cover cost of IGOUPOR fl (Q j-g, handling, packing, clerk gjflj UOC hire ' etc ' secure this NEW authentic MAIL AUioiPo^,.. Dictionary, bound in real ORPERS : •!? flexible leather, illustrated WILL u P ,<» iooomii« .20 with full pages in color ML and duotone 1300 pages. FILLED 3 25 DICTIONARIES IN ONE All Dictionaries published previ ous to this year are out of date woman. She may be growing tn»m girlhood into womanhood, passing from womanhood to motherhood, and later suffering from that change which leaves so many women wrecks. At any or all of these periods of a wom an's life she should take a tonic and nervine, prescribed for just sncli cases by a physician of vast experience in the diseases of women. Doctor Pierce's Favorite Prescription has suc cessfully treated more cases the past fifty years than any other known remedy. When you feel dull, head achy, backache, dizzy, or perhaps hot flashes, there is nothing you can ac complish, nothing you can enjoy. You can find permanent relief in Dr! Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It is sold by medicine dealers, or trial box by mail from Dr. Pierce, Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., on receipt of 50 centoj or one dollar for large box. Weak and sick 'women, especially those suffering from diseases of long standing, are invited to consult Doctor Pierce by letter, free. At. correspond ence is held as strictly private and sacredly confidential. , Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are easy and pleasant to take. A most effective laxative. They cure constipation and biliousness. Keep clean inside as well as outside and yon will be healthy.—Adv. Mrs. CreiKh Patterson and Mrs. 1). 11. Snyder, lilnln; Miss Margaret Kline, Phialdelphta. Tho funeral will be held on Friday afternoon. IIORSEH RUN INTO FIRE Special to The Telegraph Shippensburg, Pa., March 31.—A barn on the Harper Main farm near town was burned on Monday after noon. When tbe blaze was first dis covered tho men were in the field and they quickly ran to the barn. While they were at the lire the horses ran into the structure and were burned. Several head of stock were lost.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers