14 I —CLARK'S— I Special Sale of Patent Medicines ! and Toilet Articles Remember, we are never undersold and always give the best service with efficient and courteous employes. We are the originators of cut prices in Harrisburg 29 years ago. Heretofore we have always been uptown, now we are down town and can serve you better. Show your appreciation by giving us your loyal support and you will always get your Drugs, Patent Medicines ■ and Toilet Articles at the lowest rock bottom prices. NO C. O. D., PHONE OR MAIL ORDERS FILLED I Tickets, These Prices Are Special For Friday and Saturday 7 "at** Ivory, Lifebuoy or | Chewing Gum; two C— 1 Witch Hazel, 1 C 1 I 10c Bromo Seltzer £ I f 25c Carter's Liv- 111 f Saymon's Soap, 1 Q I I Castoria, Fletch- 1(\ Lava Soap, 7 cakes for J packages for ' best ? P' nt bottle .. *wC J or JCJ | er Pills for 1A C J cakes XOCj for ..... 1 N > —————— v y f —— —— F KEE DRUGS PATENT MEDICINES PATENT MEDICINES > TOILET ARTICLES Colgate Tooth Paste, 1 One 50c jar Palmolive Shampoo Epsom Salts, lb 7c Bromo Seltzer 57c Rose Ycl flc Mennen's Shaving Cream 17c 20c, 15c Tooth with a purchase of three cakes of Borax. 20 Mule, lb 9o California Syrup Figs 29c Sloan's I.inimont 15c. 29c Sanitol Tooth Paste 15c Brush, both .. . fai C Palmolive soap, Bircl seed, mixed 8c Canthrox 29c S.S.S. for blood 59c, $1.05 Sanitol Tooth Powder 15c rL m Aspirin Tablets, 100 75c Danderinc 15c. 30c Stuart's Dys. Tab 29c, 59c Kolynos Tooth Paste 17c _____ Sugar Milk. Merck 17c Doan's Kidney Pills 33c Stuart's Calc. Wafers 29c I.yon's Tooth Powder 15c FREE Glycerine, pts 34c Diapepsin 29c Sal Hepatlca 15c, 29c Kalplieno's Tooth Paste 17c One 25c Hair Comb TVirpp nlain 25c Aromatic Spirits Ammonia. 3 oz., 15c Kcknian Alterative 05c. $1.29 Swamp Root '29 c, 59c Eutliymol Tooth Paste 15c 7e „ . _ ~ P lickets,. any 25c Ess. Peppermint, 3oz 15c Eagle Milk 12c Sanlflush 19c Calox Tooth Powder 17c „• V! V , /I 7r» Ilavoi, Rul)li Uup,, 75 C pint bot 39c Horlick's Malted Milk $2.85 Tree I.lfe Pills 15c " air Brus h at .jT • 1A _ Sulphur, lb 5c Hay's Hair Health 29c, 59c Wlnslow S. Syr. 15c D J J C "*****——— lUC Flaxseed, whole or ground, lb 6c Hood's Sarsaparilla 59c Wyeth Sage and Sulphur 29c, 59c TECe lOWuerS and OOapS FRFF Boric Acid, lb 15c Jad Salts 43c Walnutta Hair Stain 33c I,aßlaclie Face Powder 34c m . nIV 1° Msterine 15c, 29c, 59c _ Azurea Face Powder 83c One package Herbs free / A Insect Powder, gun Hl 11 *.!!!!!.' 5c "PUensFood 29c Pluto Water 23c Face Powder 19c to each customer if you / .• Peroxide Hydrogen, 4oz 5c Malena I ills 12c Splro Powder 13c ocV f or them " 1 SW! 1 !*-!. Natures Remedy 1 Be, 29c .. Java Rice Powder 28c / imml ' c Olive Tablets 7c, 15c Creme de Meridor 15c Freeman's Face Powder 19c Hill's Pasrara *-m / r; JMSM i Pinaud I ilac Water ißc Stillman Freckle Cream 29c Carmen Face Powder 37c _. . ~f a 11/1 nn&eu*-: W PATENT MEDICINES G - M Wa *;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Qulmne Tablets 1 1 C W Allcock Porous Plaster 10c lMnkhanf^Mip 5 ' "!!!!*!*!!**]!" 63c Hlnd ' B Honcv aiul Almond Cream ... 33c- Soap"" 1 ®! > . Ce^ .." ll7c o f] ~~ Acorn Salve 7c «(„. r„„ <«„ Ingram Milk Weed Cream 29c Palmolive Soap 7c oassatola |C Atwood Bitten ... 15c riso lac scnipre Giovaine 32c Wash Rag and Castile Soap 7c for . . IjC f hnm ,»i. rm,r,H r.™ m »k IK oo Alexander I.ung Healer 15c Pape s Cold Compound 15c I). &R. Cold Cream 15c Palm «nd Olive Soap 7c x ; Armours Ext. Beet 38,- Peruna 59c Woodbury Face Cream 16c Munyon Witch Hazel Soap 5c ——————— lh " Creaine*! Nuts, Blsurated Magnesia 29c Parisian Sage 29c Pebeco Tooth Paste 31c Physician and Surgeon Soap 8c t> u i i OW.U.LI' IK ,2° Bliss Native Herb Tab 48c Plielp's Rheumatic Elix 59c S. S. White Tooth Paste 15c Packer's Tar Soap 15c BabCOck Corylopsis Vsst'd n, Bromo < affeine 6c Palmolive Shampoo 29c Colgate T«v>th Powder 15c Woodbury Soap 16c Talcum, for //^ Oniiite* T'Slt'ilirhm>3c Bellans 15c, 15c Quinine Pills, 100 23c Colgate's Shaving Cream 20c Cuticura Soap 18c 2to customer. 9 /aL V- ■ 1 ' *■ 1 • Remember the Name and Number I A O 300 Market Street 29 Years in Cut-Rate Patent Medicine Business —Jf 306 Broad Street THE NATION'S CASHROOM By Frederic J. Haskin [Continued From Kditorial Pace.] silver coin, stacked up like sacks of' wheat In a long, dark granery. Here labors Jansen, a big Swede, who has developed a peculiar skill in stacking coin sacks, which are treacherous and prone to slide and tumble. $3,000,000 a Day Altogether, this is an atmosphere of PAINFUL EFFECT OF Rheumatism, Gout, Urinary Calculus It is now asserted with confidence that these painful effects due to uric acid In the system are entirely eradi cated. A new remedy, called "An-uric," hat been discovered by Doctor Pierce, ■which is thirty-seven times more po tent than lithia. and is the cause of a drainage outward of the uric acid with which It comes in contact within the body. It will ward off backache, head ache, and the darting pains and aches of articular or muscular rheumatism —of those diseases which are caused by too much uric acid, such as gout, asthma, sciatica, renal calculus. •'An uric" prolongs life because old people usually suffer from hardening and thickening of the walls of the arteries, due to the excess of uric acid in the blood and tissues. Dr. Pierce, who Is director and chief physician at the Invalids' Hotel and Suiglcal Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., has Bringing Up Father # (0) $ <$ • $ # By McManus I wSe-tou L \ ( 1 f THAT'S THE 1 I HORROR!! -• FOR, —' f 1 COULD C TH&bE V 3 WD TirsK Y C HANDS CXMNEf*?,: 4 THVVAJZA, I'M ON- CLE ATS ER 1 *' Its THE J ' \ • ' ■' ' ,? ' m .. —•- . •■■- - r . *--r 7^^,T^ r FRIDAY EVENING, HARHISBURG TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 1, 1915. money such as is breathed by few men ' in the world. Major Quaiffe handles I more money every year than will Car-1 negie and Rockefeller in all their lives. | More than $3,000,000 a day passes j through his hands. This does not! mean that he merely has supervision over a system of bookkeeping through | which $3,000,000 in tigures passes each day. but that he actually handles It In cash. Major Quaiffe, as a very young man,! served three years in the army during' the Civil War. When he was muster- ] ed out he came to Washington and got a job under Francis E. Spinner, | been testing this wonderful medicine for the relief of overworked and weak ened kidneys. The relief obtained by sufferers has been so satisfactory that h? determined to place "An-uric" with the principal druggists in town where people could get this ready-to-us6 medicine.'. "An-uric" Is not harmful or poisonous, but aids nature in throw ing off those poisons within the body which cause so much suffering, pain and misery. For Diabetes and Bright's Disease this remedy is building up a reputation as good as Dr. Pierce's other well known medicines which have been proven reliable during nearly fiftv years, such as Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription for the ills of woman hood. Doctor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets, the liver regulator, and Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery for red blood.—Advertisement. then Treasurer of the United States. He was assigned, to the cash room. Twenty years later. President Cleve land asked Conrad Jordan, another | treasurer, if he could not advance Quaiffe. The Treasurer obtained through Congress a new post for him, that of vault clerk. He has held it for thirty years. He has undoubtedly handled more actual money than any other man who ever lived. Major Quaiffe took charge of the money vaults where he now presides in 18S4. He stands at a high table in a small, low-eeilinged steel-lined vault, literally surrounded by millions. The paper money is received from the Bureau of Engraving and Printing ir. packages the size of eight-inch cubes. There are 4,000 bills in each package. The values of packages de pend on the denominations of the bills they contain. If they are one dollar bills a package of them is worth $4,000, while if they are twen ty-dollar bills It Is worth SBO,OOO. There is one prize package which is made up of ten thousand dollar bills and therefore worth $40,000,000. A few people who have influence at court may get into vault No. 12. may hold this twelve-pound package in their honds and attempt to think in the terms of the wealth It represents. Framed Greenbacks The cash vault has two decorations. One of them is a little frame which contains two ten thousand dollar bills and one five thousand dollar bill. The idea is to show the curious just how these biggest denominations look, as few people are ever likely to see, let alone possess one of them. One of these ten thousand dollar bills is a curiosity because it is a greenback no longer in print. This is the only place in the world where one of this issue may be seen. The other decoration hanging on the door jam is a statement of the amount of money Major Quaiffe has handled during the various years of his serv ice. In his first year as vault clerk he handled $165,730,000. That was In 1884. Ten years later the flow of money through his hands had in creased to $241,098,000. By 1904 the amount had grown to $637,023,000. Another decade registered an equally surprising increase in the funds that ■were passing through the nation's cash room. They passed the billion mark in 1913, during which year Major Quaiffe In his little cubbyhole, directed the course of $1,041,000,000. This Is the measure of the growth in the use of currency in the United States in a single thirty years. It is withal a considerable business that Uncle Sam does in transacting the affairs of the nation. He has 2,- 500 disbursing officers who are author ized to issue checks against this, his central bank. These orders are issued against the treasure house at the rate of 40,000 a day. In the matter of pensions alone, $160,000,000 a year is paid to old sol diers scattered about the country, all of it coming from this little cash room. For the multitudinous task of distributing the mails of the nation there are 300.000 checks a year Issued in payment against this, the Bank of the United States. Billion Dollars In Circulation There Is In circulation among the people of the United States to-day sl,l 42,000,000 in gold certificates. The public is unlikely to pay sufficient at tention to Its paper money to know which are gold certificates, which are silver certificates, and which are United States notes. But there are out among the people more than a htlllon dollars in gold certificates for which there is deposited In the Treasury the actual gold money for its redemption. Then there is out among the people $4 74,000,000 in silver certificates, and silver dollars are held here for their redemption. Finally, there are out $337,000,000 of United States notes. This paper was issued during the Civil War and had nothing back of It but the government's promise to pay. As there seems no reason for not doing j so, the government has continued for j fifty years to use this extension of its [circulating medium. But in order that I this currency might be placed on a [ basis of greater stability, Congress some years ago put aside $150,000,000 in gold to guarantee It. These three classes of paper money, with that which national and reserve banks are allowed to issue under their own names, make up the total of paper money in circulation. With the exception o! the notes issued by the banks, all these come through the Treasury cash room. Not only this, but when bills get soiled or worn, they may be sent to the Treasury and new money will be issued in their stead. This new money, issued in lieu of old, passes through the cash room and contributes to the constant stream of wealth that flows through It. NUXATED IRON Increases strength °- delicate nervous K riflirll rundown people, 400 I LJJJJ per cent, in ten dnys I 1 E 1 IMM in many instances. B HAIJM SIOO forfeit if it fails as per ex fjJTiTjjTj planation in large IfllJ ■ "188 article soon to ap ■bmMAmAM pear in this paper. Ask your doctor or druggist about it. Croil Keller. F. J. Holthouse, J. N. Clark and r'.l lead ing druggists always catry it