Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, May 07, 1915, Page 14, Image 14

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    14
Dreaded An Op
More Tha
Tried Fruitola and Traxo and
Has Never Since Been
Troubled With
Gall-stones
Mrs. Mary E. Franse, whose ad
dress Is West Point. Nebr., Box 411,
has written to the Pinus laboratories
« very strong endorsement of Fruit
ola and Traxo. In her letter, Mra.
Franse says: "About ten years ago I
•was about to undergo an operation for
gall-stones when I heard of your med
icine. Dreading an operation above
everything I determined to try Fruit
ola and Traxo and have never been
Borry I did so, as I have never been
troubled with gall-stones since."
Fuitola Is a powerful lubricant for
the Intestinal organs, and one dose ia
usually sufficient to give ample evi
dence of its efficacy. It softens the
congested masses, disintegrates the
hardened particles that occasion so
much suffering, and expels the accum
ulated waste to the intense relief of
♦he patient. Following a dose of
"•'rultola, Traxo should be taken three
-»>r four times a day in order to rebuild
and restore the system that has been
weakened and run down by constant
suffering. It is a splendid tonic, act
ing on the liver and stomach most
beneficially.
iHira"
GOES OVER 10 JUNE 2!
Board Accedes to Request of the
Counsel For Property Owners;
Lawyers to Combine Forces
June 22 was fixed to-day by the
"Hardscrabble" board of viewers for
hearing the remainder of the property
owners on the west side of Front
street between Herr and Calder streets,
who have not yet presented their
claims to the viewers.
To-day had originally been fixed for
hearing the last of the claimants but
half a dozen or more attorneys ap-
Suppose We
Pared These Tires
Suppose this AU-Weathertread ments. We spend on-'experts
—now double-thick—was pared SIOO,OOO yearly to seek out new
to the thinness of the usual anti- improvements,
skid Would it endure like this Our All-Weather tread al
one? Or so resist puncture? ways doub | e . thiclc _ js made
Suppose we used—as some do still thicker in some sizes.
—one less fabric ply- Or made our lnner Tubeg hflve bepn
the whole tire lighter. Suppose we thickened per cent on (he
omitted our exclusive features: average.
OurNo-Rim-Cut feature- Our fabric has been strength-
Our "On-Air'* cure — ened.
Our rubber riveU- Yet on February Ist we made
Our 126-piano-wire base. our tb i r d big price reduction in
All rivals do omit them. All of y ears - bringing the total to
them are costly. Our "On-Air" 45 per cent. Now you are getting
cure alone costs us $450,000 j 0 Goodyear Fortified Tires the
yearly to save needlesstblowouts. }. va ' ue ever known in tire
But could Goodyear Fortified m sking.
Tires retain top place if we did not , It is due to yourself that you
give those extras? this year join
Cost Added r> ! his , a TT y of con '
Prices (jOOD/pYEAR
Lowered ak*okom» | argest
army in I
Instead of that, Fortlfsed TireS Tiredom. Any
we all the time d f aler wili su^
add costly better- L—ply you. (2331)
HARRISBURG—Bowman & Co.
Central Garage
I. W. Dill
Ford Motor Car Co.
Harrisburg Auto Co.
Heagy Bros.
Geo. W. Myers
Plank-Werner Tire Co.
Rex Auto Co.
Jno. T. Selsman
Square Deal Auto Co.
BERRYSBURG—P. H. Keboch.
DILLSBURG—Dillsburg Auto Supply Co.
ELIZABETHVILLE—C. T. Romberger.
LYKENS—Lykens Motor Car Co.
A. A. Rudisil.
MIFFLINTOWN—Juniata Garage.
MILLERSBURG—W. H. Tyson.
NEW CUMBERLAND—Brooks
NEWPORT—Newport Auto & Garage Co
TOWER CITY—J. B. Watkins.
MYERS, The Tire Man
Distributor For Goodyear Tires
South Cameron and Mulberry Sts. Bell Phone 1248J
FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MAY 7, 1915.
ft
i - 'W
\ W
/
MRS. MARY E. FKANSK
In the files of the Pinus laboratories
at Montieello. 111., are many letters
gratefully acknowledging the satis
factory results following the use of
Fruitola and Traxo. . Arrangements
have been made for the distribution of
these excellent remedies by leading
drug stores everywhere. In Harris
burg Fruitola and Traxo can be ob
tained at Gorgas' the druggist. 16
North Third street, and P. R. R. Sta
tion.
peared before the board and com
plained that they ha.l not been allow
ed sufficient time to get necessary data
together and that the city conse
quently might have the advantage of
them in this respect. Because many
of them will be busy with court from
now on the viewers decided to grant
the request to let the hearing date go
over until June 22.
While It is hoped to clear up the
remainder of the testimony on that
day. Chairman Karl Steward, of the
viewing board, said that if it required
the following day or two to complete
the work, the viewers would accord
ingly extend the sittings.
LIGHT BRIG ARK OFFICER DIES
By Associated Fress
London. May 7. Lieutenant-General
William Henry Beaumont de Horsey,
who commanded the famous Light
Brigade in its charge at Balaklava,
died last night at the age of 89 years.
He entered the army in 184 4, became
a major-general in 1878 and retired
in 1883.
US DROP BOMBS
Oil CONSTIIOPLE
First Attack on Turkish Capita!
Reported in Dispatch
From Athens
EXTENSIVE DAMAGE DONE
Three Aviators Said to Have
Traveled Over City Dropping
Explosives
Paris, May 7, 12.30 P. M.—The first
attack of the war oil Constantinople Ls
reported in an unofficial tlispau-li from
Atlieus. It is said three Russian avia
tors flew over the City dropping sev
eral bombs which are !»ellevcd to have
caused extensive damage.
The message says also that the
Russian Black Sen fleet bombarded
the Turkish forts on the left lxank of
the Bosphorus ou Wednesday. Several
Russian shells fell within about ten
miles of Constantinople.
Scene of Land Battles
and Generals Fighting
1 e^-^7 —
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GENERAL IAN HAMILTON
GENERAL D'AIIADE
This is the scene of the land bat
tles for possession of the Gallipoli
Peninsula between the Turks on one
side and the allies on the other, back
ed up by 100 warships. The allies
sometime ago landed troops on the
Asiatic side of the Dardanelles under
the command of General D'Amade.
The Turks now claim he has been
driven off. At least their reports
positively state there is no allied
force on the Asiatic side. But Gen
eral Hamilton landed just the other
day on the peninsula and the heavy
fighting has been at Gaba Tepe some
ten miles north of the point of the
peninsula. The Turks claim to have
driven most of the troops back, but
their story has been discredited. It
ls believed that General Hamilton has
many men and is fighting his way
north.
It is his purpose to attack the forts,
which the battleships have been un
able to batter down, from the rear.
He believes he can overpower the
garrisops and thus clear the way to
Constantinople.
Death Toll of Wind
Storm in Mississippi
and Louisiana Is 21
hy Associated Press
New Orleans. May 7.—The death
toll of the wind storms which devas
tated Acadia Parish, in Southwestern
Louisiana and Coahoma county in
Northwestern Mississippi yesterday,
to-day stood at 21. All but one were
negroes. Fifteen were killed at Egan
and Mermentau, in Acadia Parish, and
six near Clarksdale and Jonestown,
Miss.
Forty-five more persons are known
to have been injured.
PRINCETON AI VMM MEETS
Kansas City, Mo., May 7.—Delegates
and visitors to the sixteenth annual
meeting of the Western Association of
Princeton Clubs, began arriving here
to-day and will spend to-night and
to-morrow reviewing college days and
enjoying the entertainment arranged
for them. Alumni from all points
west of Pittsburgh, Pa., are in at
tendance.
TRAFFIC IS INCREASING
Washington.May 7.—Traffic through
i the Panama Canal during March was
considerably greater than for any pre
ceding months. A total of 136 sea
going vessels passed, carrying 635,057
tons of cargo.
(IRfS) We have a p air in
\V4« aw IU ■ :;;ss:: .
WmtMW of Beacon Shoes |||
that were made Jlp
for you . J|j|r
«,;5J22JJ15J2225* **•••• ••••■•
UNION
■ A...... A p
** B¥i wJ EL
JljF They will fit SHOES
J||r right, feel right,
look ngnt, be / \a
•IIMMI 0 ' yfiTO' JAT it;;
111 right, nnd \
HI stay by jKg _
F. M. HOYT SHOE CO., Maker* • • • • Manchester, New Hampthir*
SOLD IN HARRISBURG BY
M. & M. WILLIAMS SHOE SHOP
a south rorirrn street.
LOVE STANDS OUT
AS SUAI OF LIFE
Friendship Is the Bright Star,
Declares Ella Wheeler
Wilcox
BY ELLA WHEELER WILCOX I
(Copyright, 1915, by Star Company)
Love stands alone in the solar sys
tem of the affections like the sun,
unmated and incomparable. From it
all other emotions derive their worth,
yet they must not expect to imitate its
light, warmth or power.
Our friendsships are the stars next
in magnitude to the orb of light.
There can be but one true love, as
there is but one sun visible to the
earth. But there may be as many or
ders of friendship as there are varie
ties of stars in the firmament, though
few, to be sure, of the first magnitude.
A great nature can enjoy and be
loyal to a great number of friends
It is time to do away with that old
idea, ground in human selfishness,
that a man should have but one
friend. Study the persons who are
fond of proclaiming. "I care but for
few people.' and you will find them
at the core selfish, narrow and un
sympathetic. The broad-gauged and
noble-hearted man goes out spon
taneously to his fellow beings and
gives affection and loyalty to many
He attracts as many true friends as
his varied characteristics render him
capable of enjoying.
You appeal to his intellect and are
a mental comrade. In the association
he arrows fond of you and Interested
In your personal life, but you cannot
expect him, to shut out from his heart
another who amuses and entertains
him with a flow of cheerful spirits
which you lack. You show no evi
dence of affection if you are jealous
of this other friend. You simply show
a narrow-mindedness grounded in
self-love. You have your own sphere
in that man's life and cannot be
crowded by another any more than
one star crowds another in the
heavens.
The moment my friend says to
me, "I must be first in vour affec
tion, no matter what other claimants
for your resard come knocking at
your door," I reply:
"My friend, it is yourself you love,
not me; the absolute friend asks only
for what I choose to give, and, confi
dent of his own worth, never doubts
his true place In my affections. Were
you my true friend you» would re
joice to see me enriched by other
friends. It is yourself you love, and
you desire me to add fuel to the flame
which is already consuming you. But
1 can only bestow what yotS inspire.
Look to it that you inspire the best
within me and it will be yours."
With each new friend our capabili
ties of affection increase.
'Love is to the human heart what
the Koran is to the Mohammedan, or
the Bible to the Christian. There can
be but one. But we may have as
unany choice friends as we have
choice books In our library, if our
heart wealth is great enough to pro
cure them. I need not appreciate
Dickens less because I injoy Thaek
eray also. Ido no wrong to the prose
This Is Mutual Masterpicture
"THE HOME OP THE $25,000 PIPE ORQAIN"
To-day we present "The Lost House"—a 4-part Mutual Masterpicture production that will keep you right on edge from start
to finish. Mutual Masterpieces will be shown here every Tuesday and Friday.
authors because I revel in the poets.
There are moods when the humorist
cheers and en.ertains me, and again
I need the philosopher, and all are
equally admired ; nd esteemed by me,
and there is no one I could spare.
I once heard a person say, "I love
my friends so intensely I am jealous
of any ray of light that falls upon
their paths, save through me." This
Is not friendship. It is self-worship,
self-aggrandizement—self to the core.
Distrust any act of kindness shown
you by such a friend. It is done, not
to give you happiness, but to win your
gratitude. The real friend never
thinks of gratitude, though he would
be hurt by your ingratitude. Rut he
"would as soon bestow a favor un
known t6 you, and he rejoices to see
you benefited by others, and takes
pleasune in anything which helps yoa
no matter how remote it may be from
his own interests.
Old friends endeared by years of
memories are best. Yet I have no
right to reproach my old friend if he
outgrows me in his tastes and habits,
and 1 have no right to call him
changeable if he finds new friends
more congenial in these things, and
who keep step with him. He may
have found me sufficient for him when
we both studied simple fractions to
gether, but if he has passed into
higher mathematics I have no right to
complain if he no longer enjoys sing
ing the multiplication table to the air
of "Yankee Doodle" w'ith me as in
our early school days. 1 had better
blame myself for not making at least
sufficient progress to appreciate him,
even if 1 can not enter into full sym
pathy with his higher development- If
1 am worthy the name of a true "old
friend," I will rejoice to see him speed
on and up even if our paths of neces
sity diverge.
Not long ago I heard a thinking
woman say that she could forgive the
sin of commission in a friend far
sooner than a sin of omission. "An
unkind act or word may spring from
a hasty temper or a mistake of judg
ment, but the friend who sits still
and silent when I need a defender or
a mentor commits an unpardonable
sin." she said, and said truly.
When I would prefer my friend to
be the first to praise me for well do-
A NON-ALCOHOLIC TONIC
Many people need a tonic at this
time of year, old folks, weak folks,
thin people, people who are run down
from too much work—and vacation
still many weeks away. Nervous peo
ple also need a tonic but cannot safely
take alcohol.
A non-alcoholic tonic that will build
up the blood and strengthen the
nerves is what most people need and
I)r. Williams' Pink Pills are exactly
that.
The one symptom of thin blood that
everybody recognizes is pallor. It
shows so gradually that other people
are liable to notice it'before you do.
But it is important that you should
notice and heed the warning because
the thin blood that causes the pallor
betrays some drain on the body or
some poisoning by its own waste ma
terials that, if not corrected, will re
sult in physical breakdown and ill
health.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills not only
build up the blood but they have a
direct strengthening action on the
nerves. As they are free from nar
cotics and any harmful or poisonous
drugs they are safe for every mem
ber of the family.
Your own druggist sells Dr. Wil
liams' Pink Pills. Write to-day to the
Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Schenec
tady, N. Y., for the free booklet,
"Building Up the Blood," and, if your
stomach troubles you, ask for a diet
book also.—Advertisement.
Quality Counts
We know that shoes of quality are the kind that
build business for us, because they are the kind that
please you. When we please you, we please our
selves, because our first consideration always is oar
customers' satisfaction. Try our quality shoes.
■ —^
Do Not Overl
Specials For Tomorrow
Men's Shoes and Oxfords, Black and
Tan. Rubber Heel and Sole. Regu
lar $3.50 and $4.00 QC
Values. Saturday Special . .
Men's and Boys' Dress and Work
Shoes. Black or Tan. Regular $2.50
and $3.00 Value. For (|*l QP
Saturday Only tpl.l/D
Ladies' High-Grade Pumps and Ox
fords. Goodyear Welts. High and Low
Heels Regular $2.50 and $3 (jj 1 AC
Grades. Saturday Special . .
White Pumps of Select CI Hfi
Stock. Tomorrow Special . <PI»fU
Regular $1.75 White
Pumps. Saturday Special . . . vi/C
Children's High-Grade Shoes of all De
scriptions of Leathers QET f y|C
Tomorrow Oniy . . 173 C & sl/13
SO MS AGENCY FOlt THE FAMOUS FLORSHEIM SHOE.
M. & M. Williams Shoe Shop
5 South Fourth Street
The New Store—2 Doors South of Market Street
ing, I can excuse hirr. for being the
last, if he is the first to warn me when
lam doing wrong. He is no friend if
he sees me drifting toward the rocks
and does not tell me so; if he sees me
preparing for the b.-fttle with a flaw in
my armor, and does not point it out
to me before the fray begins.
If he has not discovered it until we
are in the thick of battle, then the
true and wise friend will keep silent,
lest the sudden consciousness of my
weak point should unnerve me; but
he will keep his own eye upon it, and
stand ready to come to my assistance
if the flaw proves my failure.
I do not want my friend to feed
and clothe me, for that would ener
vate my strength and roll me of my
self-reliance. I do not want him to
carry my burdens unless he sees my
strength failing me. let him not per
form my tasks for me, but rather
stimulate me to labor; instead of do
ing my work let him encourage in me
a belief of my own ability. him
chide me for my idleness, and spur
me to achieve results with my own
po»vers.
In Charles Kingsley's delightful lit
tle book the "Water Babies," there is
a wonderful weird water-sprite who
makes people make themselves; she
does not create anything, but she
teaches thli.g.s how to create them
selves; tills is the office of the trus
friend —to tell us how to create our
selves and to urge us to action.
Peerless Automobile
GOGGLES
FOR
Publicity Run
ۤ
FOR SALE BY
RUBIN & RUBIN
320 Market St., Second Floor
MILLER & KABES
7 NORTH MARKET SQ.
THE HUB >
320 MARKET STREET
Evolutionary Racial
Struggle Latest Cause
of Great European War
By Associated Press
London, May 7.—Dr. William
Kidgeway, professor of archaeology at
Cambridge University in an address
last night before the Eugenic Society
declared the present war resulted from
evolutionary racial struggles.
"Hard facts seen from scientific
viewpoint," said Dr. Ridgeway, "indi
cate that the present war is only of a
lonpr scries and that each new struggle
will be more serious. The earth's
waste places are getting filled up and
these wars are part of evolutionary
racial struggles for existence and are
not the result of mere kingly ambi
tions."
BANKRUPTCY PETITION FILED
Charleston. W. Va., May 7. —A peti
tion in involuntary bankruptcy was
filed here to-day for the New River
nnd Ohio Coal Company. The com
pany's liabilities are estimated at
$285,000 with assets approximating
$115,000.
AMUSEMENTS
t \
VIVIAN MARTIN
in a Shubert production of
"THE ABHIVAI, OP PEHPETUA"
Five reels of artistic film.
Our I>ally CliniiKt-: "Hf \V«i n
Traveling Mini," Knlem, Hud "Mon
key IlllHilH-HM," Lublii.
SATURDAY ONLY
FRANCIS X. BUSHMAN
in "THIO BATTLE OF LOVE"
ALICE JOYCE In
"THE SCHOOL FOR SCANDAL."
* *
SEE THE WHIRLWIND DANCING
In
"A Royal Cabaret"
With
3 Other New Acts
nn<l a
CHARLES CHAPLIN PICTURE
Main., 5 and 10e» 10 nnd 15e.
PHOTOPLAY TO-DAY
PAWNS OF MARS
Special 3-reel Vltaicrapli,
Hnmihtny Feature
"A Race Far m "THECONSPIR-
A ivace r»r a ACY AT THE
r_ • M CHATEAU."
crossing Euan nay 2 reel*.
Eplande No. 24 Saturday
of lln/.nnln of CHARLIE
Helen, Hnllruad CHAPLIN
Scrle*. "BY THE SEA."