Pennsylvania Mothers and Daughters. Ridgway, Pa. —"I hare had a satis factory experience w#i Dr. Pierce's Favorite Preserip -11 on. Sometime Sep ago I needed medi- Mm. i3t Clne ' or kidney My trouble. I pro •'ffjaib ,V-\ jggwg cured 'Favorlta three bottles, helped me won came the trouble and I grew better •''» ' * every day. I had so much confidence in this remedy that I recommended it to my daughters. They used it with very marked benefit. We consider 'Favorite Prescription' a reliable and valuable remedy."—Mas. C. L. WOODWARD, X. Broad St. An affection confined to women must have Its cause in the womanly nature. There is no doubt that a diseased con dition of the delicate womanly organs, is in general responsible for feminine nervousness and an undermined con stitution. For headache, backache, hot flashes, catarrhal condition, bearing-down sen sation, mental depression, dizziness, fainting spells, lassitude and exhaus tion women should never fall to take this tried and true woman's medicine. Prepared from nature's roots and herbs, it contains no alcohol nor nar cotics, nor any harmful ingredient. In either tablet or liquid form. Write Dr. Pierce, Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., today. Book on women's diseases sent free. Write also for free and confidential medical advice. The modern improvement in pills— Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. Thev help Nature, instead of fighting witfi her. Sick and nervous headache, bili ousness, costiveness, and all derange ments of the liver, stomach and bowels are ~*H<»ved. cured. Take Your Own PICTURES During Improvement Week keep the views of scenes and events as souvenirs. You will enjoy them for years to come. Can No Experience Required. Snap the KODAK and you have it. We will develop your films and do the printing at the lowest prices for good work. KODAKS All sizes. Films—Supplies Outfits Gorgas, The Druggist Ift N. Third Street Penna. Station SAFETY] FIRST The object of "Safety First" is prevenUon. Tou can prevent your adverUsing from meet ing the fate of the waste basket If you will make It attractive with proper Illustration. Bring your next copy to us for Illustrative treatment. One treat ment will convince you that our methods are a success. The Telegraph Art &Engravitig Departments 216 Locust Street (J Coal For Winter There are many homes in this city kept com fortable during the long winter months with Kel lev's Coal . If you have heating troubles, get acquainted with the superior burn ing quality of Kelley's Coal. Best for heater or range because it is all pure coal and clean, with all the impurities that retard combustion eliminated before it goes into your cellar. H. M. KELLEY & CO. Office, 1 N. Third Street Yard, 10th and State Streets Kesorts DOUBLING GAP, PA. White Sulphur Springs Hotel DOTJBI.ING GAP. PA., Via Kfifrtlie Noted for Its refined patronage, numerous medicinal springs, natural beauty, and abundance of fresh vege tables which aid In emphasizing ex cellent table service. Special attention along with reduced rates will be given to Harrlsburgpatrons during the month *>f August. For prompt reply inquire ®f Mrs. G. A. Freyer. TUESDAY EVENING, INDUSTRIES WILL BE GIVEN SURVEY Department of Labor and In dustry Planning to Find Out All About Plants An Industrial survey of Pennsylva nia, covering all the large manufac turing plants and other establishments where more than five children are em ployed, will be conducted by the State Department of Labor and Industry, with the co-operation of school au thoriUes, within the next few weeks, with a view to locating continuation schools where they are most needed. The survey will be made by a corps of 10 competent factory inspectors. Because of the provisions of the new child labor law, requiring all working children between the ages of 14 and 16 to attend continuation clas ses at least eight hours a week—these hours to be deducted from their regu lar working schedule—some employers are dispensing with the services of children. Already, it is estimated, 1,500 boys and girls have lost their positions. One of the principal ob jects of the industrial survey will be to determine Just how many children will be retained in service when the law becomes operative on January 1. The whole problem of education for working children is being considered by the State Committee on Juvenile Employment. On this committee are Jacob Lightner, chief of the Bureau of Employment, Department of Labor and Industry; Paul N. Furman, chief of the Bureau of Labor Statistics; Millard B. King, of the State Depart ment of Public Instruction; H. H. Wheaton, consulting expert of the De partment of Labor and Industry, and F. N. Brewer, president of the Public Education Association. One plan suggested for the solution of the problem in this city is the or ganization of a division of vocaUonal guidance in connection with the Bu reau of Compulsory Education. The need for this additional agency, ac cording to those who have studied the question, is urgent. The primary ob ject of the proposed division of voca tional guidance would be to study the needs of children seeking employment land of employers desiring to hire chil dren. Juvenile employment work has been' undertaken by several cities in con nection with vocational guidance. In Boston the placement bureau has worked for several years in close co operation with the certificate bureau in the offices of the Board of Educa tion. In the Boys' High School of Brooklyn excellent work has been done. Wherever the work has been undertaken it is said results have been obtained which prove not only the ne cessity for, but the great value of such supervision and assistance. If the suggested plan is adopted Phila delphia will be the first city to estab lish a comprehensive Juvenile employ ment bureau in connection with the public school system. Road Accidents Hurt Half Dozen Hagerstown, Md., Sept. 21.—Half a dozen persons, Including two from Pennsylvania, were Injured in auto mobile and motorcycle accidents around Hagerstown over Sunday. While Leslie Garvin and Jiis wife, of Tork, Pa., were coining here in an automobile to visit Mr. Garvin's par ents the machine overturned when It struck a bridge. Mrs. Garvin and her husband were pinned under the car. the former with her head in a small stream. Mr. Garvin released himself and rescued his wife, who was in dan ger of drowning. Both were injured. Jacob M. Drury was pinned under his car when it turned turtle or the Western pike, sustaining serious In juries. Cecil Whitehead and Frank Dyer, of Washington, were hurled from a motorcycle when It crashed Into a fence near Boonsboro, both being badly hurt. William Kreigh collided with a colt near Clearspring and was thrown from tis motorcycle, sustaining a double fracture of the collarbone. Wm. Potteiger Freed on Attempted Robbery Charge Special to The Telegraph Penbrook, Pa., Sept. 21.—William Potteiger, charged with having at tacked Frank Budnlck, a Steelton jit ney driver ten days ago for the pur pose of robbery, was discharged by Squire McGarvey.last evening for want of sufficient evidence. Biidnick swore positively that Potteiger was one of the two men who assaulted him but his evidence could not be coroborated by other witnesses. The State Police made the arrest but when other pas sengers y, pres ent owner and occupant, to Andrew Adair, of Southwest Madison town ship, for $11,500. The farm contains about 165 acres of farm land aud 44 acres of timber land, 11