PENNSrLVAKiA »/OMEN, ATTENTION! A "Helping Hand" Extended to the Middle Aged Woman. There comes a In every wom an's life when her organism undergoes an important ehknge. This is a critical perloa. It Is a time when a woman needs her full health and strength. For your own sake you should antici pate till* turning point ( CoTy. Pa. —"When passing through the experiences of a woman of forty five. I was in very poor health. Some other remedies were used, but with little benefit, if any. A lady recommended Dr. Pleroe's Favorite Prescription because she bad used it for several purposes. I began taking it and it helped me at once. It tided me over and gave relief. I am very glad to have others know of its verr beneficial application to such cases as mine."—Mas. E. Ji.tsii DAY, 44 Brook Street, Cony, Pa. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription has been recommended for nearly fifty years as a tonic for women who an about to exi>erieiK*e "the turn of life.'' It is helpful In the equalization of thr circulation of the Wood and in regu-' lating the wounded functions. Nerv ousness and low spirits disappear. Hoyr piness and contentment take their place. If you are a sufferer, if your daugh ter. mother, sister need help get Dr. Pierre's Favorite Prescription in liquid or tablet form at any medicine dealer's to-day. Then address Doctor Pierce. .Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., and get confidential medical advice without fee. You can also obtain book on Woman's Diseases, which is sent free. Doctor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets help Nature, inetead of fighiine with her. *'ck and nervous headache,!biliousness, j and ail derangements of ih£ i* ... Mr- - ' '-Mvy r-i r:!tevod. EAT LESS ST AND TAKE SALTS IF KIDNEYS HURT Says a tablespoonful of Salts flushes Kidneys, stopping Backache. Meat forms Uric Acid, which! excites Kidneys and Weakens Bladder. - • I Eating meat regularly eventually i produces kidney trouble in some form i <ir other, says a well-known authority,! because the uric avid in meat excites < the kidneys, they become overworked; ! get sluggish; clog up and cause all { sorts of distress, particularly back- j ache and misery in the kidney region; twinges, severe headache?, stomach, constipation, torpid i liver, sleeplessness, bladder and urin- i ary irritation. The moment your back hurts or kid neys aren't acting right; or if bladder bothers you. get about four ounces qf Jad Salts from any so'od pharmacy.; take'a tablespoonful in a glass" of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys wili then act fine "This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com bined with lithia and has been used for generations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate tliem to normal activity; also to neutralize the acids in the urine so it no longer irritates, thus! ending Madder disorders. Jad Salts cannot injure anyone; makes a delightful effervescent lithia water drink which millions of men and women take now and then to keep j the kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus avoiding serious kidney disease. | Advertisement. CUT THIS OUT OLD ENGLISH RECIPE FOR CATAR RHAL DEAFXESS AND HEAD XOISES If you know of some one who is troubled with Catarrhal Deafness, head noises or ordinary catarrh cut out this formula and hand it to them and you I will have been the means of saving some poor sufferer perhaps from total deaf ness. In England scientists for a long time past have recognized that catarrh is a constitutional disease and neces sarily requires a constitutional treat ment. Sprays, inhalers and nose douches are liable to irritate the delicate air pass ages and force the disease into the mid dle ear which frequently means total deafness, or else the disease is driven down the air passages towards the lungs which Is equally as, dangerous. The following formula which is used extensivel-- in the damp English climate is a constitutional treatment and should prove especially efficacious to sufferers here who live under more favorable climate condi tions. Secure from your Druggist 1 ounce "f Parmint < Double strength). Take this home and add to it pint of hot Mater and 4 ounces of granulated »ugar; stir until dissolved. Take one tablespoonful four times a day. This will often bring quick relief from dis tressing head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and beai ing improve as the inflammation in the eustachian tubes is reduced. Par mint is used in this way as it acts di rectly upon the blood and mucous sur face* or the system and has a slight tonic action that facilitates the recov ery of the patient. The preparation is rasy to make, costs little and Is pleas nut to take. Every person who has atarrh should give this treatment a trial.—Advertisement.' Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In EfTect June 17. 191t TRAINS leave liarrlubur* — For Winchester and M t.Ot, *7:52 a. m.. *8;40 p. m. For Hagerstown, Cbambaraburg. Car* * lisle, Mecbauicaburg and intermediate at *S:OS. '7.52. •«:»* m. a*. 8r*3:40, 1:17, *7:45, >11:00 9. m. T Additional trains for Carlisle aa4 ' Mechiinicsburg at t:4l a. m_ 3..\i; 3:31 •:Su. i;3F. a. m. For Dillsburg at *:•*. *J:H u4 •11:63 a. m.. »:!«. *3:40. »:«7 and «:it p. m. •Da ly. All other trains daily eietpt fcundsy. H. A. RIDDLJS, J. i TOIiOE. 4i F. 4 BEAOdVAKTKKi FOR SHIRTS SIDES & SIDES / ' ' " r ~ > L. C. SMITH & BROS. TYPE. WRITER CO. Geo. P. Tlllotson. Mgr. Have located opposite ORPHEtM 211 I.ocust Street Machines Rented—Exchanged Some second-hand bargains TV ksl>a y evening, PERFECT HEALING ! LECTURE SUBJECT Christian Science Speaker Tells of Miracles Performed in Biblical Times TRANSLATES SCRIPTURES Asserts So-Called Mind Which Includes Belief in Evil and Disease Is False Professor Herman S. Hering, of Concord. N. IL. lectured on Christian Science last evening in the Orpheum Theater under the auspices of the local Christian Science Church. He was introduced by Roy E. Bignall and for an hour and a quarter held the undivided attention of his large audi ence. The lecture in full follows: Christ Jesus, the great physician, the divine healer, has for all time set the standard of perfect healing before humanity, and that many do not yet believe in his gospel results from a lack of understanding of the true na ture and philosophy of the so-called miracles which he performed. His ethical teachings are very generally accepted even by agnostics; although the spiritual records of the healing work as a part of his divine mission, meet with dissent from many of the cultured people of to-day. The gospels record many Instances of the healing of physical disease by Christ Jesus and bis disciples: he re stored a withered hand, he healed an impotent man and a man born blind: he healed paralysis, dropsy, hemorrh age. leprosy, epilepsy and violent in sanity, and he raised the dead. In St. Matthew we read: "And Jesus went about all Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, and preaching the gospel of the kingdom, and healing all manner of sickness and all manner of disease among the peo ple. And his fame went throughout all Syria: and they bought unto him all sick people that were taken with divers diseases and torments, and thotee which were possessed with devils, and those which were lunatic-U, and those that had the palsy; and he healed them." "And. behold, there came a leper and worshipped him. saying, Lord, if thou wilt, thot* canst make me clean. And Jesus put forth his hand, and touched him, saying. 1 will; be thou clean. And immediately his leprosy was cleansed." Furthermore he specifically com manded his disciples that they should continue his healing work, counseling them. "And as ye go. preach, saying, The kingdom of heaven Is at hand. Heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, cast out devils; freely ye have received, freely give." "Verily, verily, I say unto you. Ho that believeth on me. the works that 1 do shall he do also; and greater works than these shall he do, because I go unto my Father." Peter. John. Philip, Paul and other followers healed paralysis, deformity, insanity, lameness, and also raised the dead, in connection with their mis sionary work: in fact healing was practiced quite generally among the early Christians. .Scriptural Teachings Xot Understood Many have always believed these teachings and works but thew have not presumed to understand them, much less have they thought to even under take to repeat them. They have ac cepted the Bible blindly and evidently have not practically apprehended its inspiring truth. From the inception of Christianity, however, some have striven to obey its teachings and to manifest the Christ spirit which brings salvation from both sickness and sin. This spirit was strongly in evidence in the healing works which characterized the early church, until the time when Christianity was engulfed in ritual ism and formalism and its vital spirit was quenched. Even a partial recognition of the demands made by the Master s teach ings upon our life and conduct re veals their redemptive greatness and supreme importance, and these ques tions must appeal to even" thoughtful Christian, viz: whether or not it is possible to obey these teachings; whether they are true or not: if not true, where is the basis of Chris tianity. and. if true, why are not their demands fulfilled? May it not be be cause they are not understood? Many thinking people are beginning to see as they have n6t before that the healing work of the early church is possible to-day, although this heal ing work rebukes the generally ac cepted supremacy of material law. They perceive that there is such a thing as spirtual law, a law apart from physics, and begin to compre hend that this divine law is and should be sovereign over so-called physical law. that it has dominion over what is termed matter: and that in spite of the prevailing educational bias of materialistic thought which declares that any existence apart from the material cannot be conceived, it is high time that the churKh awakened out of its sleep and asserted its right to the freedom of the Children of God. To the materially minded, matter and material law are supreme, and tnev have little belief in any power beyond and apart from physics and less un derstanding of it. Metaphysical power is thought of as belonging to the supernatural which the majority of intellectual people reject, associating it as they do with mysticism and superstition. Asserted believers in th» [Bible, however, cannot ignore the fact that Christian healing was accom 'plished in Jesus' time, by himself and Ihv his disciples, and later by his fol | lowers for several centuries. Scientific Basis of Healing Admitting that this healing occur red. we can but see that It was effect ed through the operation of law, and that there must have been a Principle and a Science back of It. Moreover it Genuine Prescription For All Rheumatism Pain Disappears and Swelling Van ishes In a Few Days Rheuma —that is the name of the scientific prescription that is putting rheumatism out of business. Rheuma cures by driving the uric acid from the biood. It also acts di rectly on the kidneys and is better for them than most so-called kidney cures. Says Samuel Powell of Geneva, Ky.: "For several years I was such a suf ferer from rheumatism I could not straighten out my right arm or le»?. Aftar taking one bottle of Rheuma my limbs are supple and free from pain." Gratifying relief comes in a day, be cause Rheuma acts at one time on the kidneys, stomach, liver and biaod, 50 cents u bottle of TI. 0".-Kennedy and all druggists.—Advertisement. HAJRJFUSBURG TELEGRAPH is very evident that if these were ] known and applied to-day, the same j healing effects would follow. Non-believera in the Bible and in, what are called miracles deny the possibility of spiritual power over material things because they do not understand spiritual law, the Prln- i clple and rule involved. Some good people believe that the spiritual heal- , ins of the early church was a mere; phenomenal exhibition of divine or! superhuman power, and therefore I make no effort to relate spiritual 1 power to present human needs. Could ' they but realize that there is a Principle underlying all existence, j which operates according to law. and quite regardless to time and place, | they would see that the physical j changes accompanying Christian heal- J ins are due to the operation of this Principle, In accordance with law: and that such Principle, law and operation constitute Bcience. It is evident that Christ Jesus con sidered this healing work a very es sential factor of his ministry; indeed he made it a test of Christian diseiple sbip. for he said. "He that believeth on me, the works that I do shall he do also": which means that he who Is a Christian shall be able to heal spirit ually. Surely every Christian must desire to believe in and to practice Christian healing and thereby to ac complish much more than drugs and surgery now do. while freeing men from the fear. pain, and risk of death, j too often attending surgical opera tions and the use of drug nostrums. Most right minded persons, too. would- like to overcome evil with good if they only knew bow: most of us would like to overcome our failings, and be right toward our neighbor. What wc have not known is this, that such results follow naturally the knowledge that good has more power than evil. Few realize that the logi cal the inevitable, sequence of an un derstanding of the Master's teachings and strict obedience thereto would bring about a cessation of all sorrow and sickness in the world. All those who admit that Christian healing is even desirable can but wel come a consideration of what it would involve, what it would depend upon. Let us consider, therefore, whether there is a Science, a Principle and law which can be applied, and how this application can be made. Let us inquire also what we can and must do with the prevailing belief in matter, that greatest stumbling block to belief in the Bible and the fulfil ment of its promises. Phenomena of Nature To the student of nature. It be comes very evident that there is an intelligence operating through law. which explains the marvels of mineral, vegetable and animal formation, that there is a power or creative force, which is materially interpreted in ad hesion, cohesion and attractive; that there is a law whose activities are inti mated in growth, atomic aggregation, structural formation and other phe nomena of the world about us. To human sense there is a creative, gov erning. controlling power or influence, called force or energy, and a substance called matter, in which this force [seems to inhere and through which it I acts. Even in common thought these two are essentially different. Matter is [visible to the material senses, force is not: matter has mass, force has r.one; matter occupies space, force does not. In fact, matter is that which is actuated or brought into evidence by force. They seem to co exist. Matter was formerly believed to be an entity separate from force or energy but recent researches and dis coveries have rendered this view un tenable. The unit called the atom which was supposed to be the small est possible division of matter sub-1 stance, is now affirmed by physicists to ] be itself composed of thousands of what are called electrons. These elec- , trons are infinitesimal particles of electrical energy, composed of positive and negative charges of electricity, which are vibrating with very great velocity. It is thus disclosed that the atom is a manifestation of force, and that atomic aggregation or so-called material substance and growth, is therefore a form or manifestation of energy or force. In short matter !s now regarded as the appearance, ex terna lization or projection of force or energy, and consequently what we touch, taste, smell, see or hear, is.in fact force. Then this brings us to the view point of materialistic philosophy and psychology, from which it further ap pears that the mental faculties which we call sight, hearing, etc.. are differ-'i ent forms of vibration, and conse- j quently what we see, hear, feel, taste, j or smell is a mental impression. In! every case it is not matter or an ob- j ject which cognizes or is cognized but a mental phenomenon experienced ' in consciousness. Thus we sec that 1 we are conscious of existence mentally I and the thing£ we are conscious of I are mental impressions objectified— I sense phenomena. It is evident, there- 1 fore, even from the point of view of ] modern physicists, althought perhaps; not jet admitted by them, that exist-j enee is consciousness and that our; present universe is our individual im pression or concept of the universe, | the way it appears to us through the five physical senses. Thus existence is wholly mental. All its activities, appearance and phenomena are men tal and must be dealt with mentally. Christ Jesus proved the mental na ture of matter and existence when he walked on the water, stilled the temp, est. healed the sick, raised the dead and overcame other material condi< tions. Sense Impress'on Xot Absolute But Relative It is further evident tljat the charac ter.of our existence depends upon the character of our consciousness. W» cannot avoid this conclusion when we think of the differences in personal characteristics, in educational bias, environment, association and experi ence. and what a widely varying sense of existence these differences'produce in different individuals. Sense phe nomena are. therefore, not absolute since they depend upon the charac ter of the perceptive faculties, both native and educated, which vary greatly with different peoDle. For ex ample: let a tree be viewed bV a botanist, an artist and a, lumberman. The botanist views it from the stand point of his botanical knowledge. He sees its hotanical make-uo and struc ture. and notices the character of the leaves, the flowers, the hark, etcetera. The artist views It mainly from a nurely artistic standpoint. He notes the color and form of the tree, and the way it relates itself to its setting. Coincidentally with this he analyzes his impression and thinks perchance of the combination of nigments he must use to reproduce it upon can vas. •The lumberman sees the tree as so much available h'uildihe material. His estimate of Its worth is not in terms nf botany or beautv but in broad-feet. To him" P beautiful branch means a knot In the board, which reduces its value. Furthermore, the so-called actual characteristics of the objective uni verse. siz«\. shane, distance and color, are not the same to anv two persons, for since the lenses of the eves vary, the image made on the retina also varies and the resulting mental im pressions are necessarily different, sbowlng that human perception is relative, not absolute. Physics does not exnlain or account for anything beyond sense testimony. ;and in order to analvze causation, wa must go beyond the reulm of the isenses. and intemret and correct our Tomorrow Another Big Wednesday Bargain Day These Stylish and Seasonable Women's and Misses' Suits & Coats Are Positive Proof of Our Underselling LATEST WOMEN'S AND MISSES' SUITS Made to Sell Tor $16.50 flO 7C and $18; Our Prioe. .. ' ** These are newest models with belted and half belted effects. There are suits with fur collars and cuffs or of velvet. They are one of-a-kind garments. LATEST WOMEN'S AND MISSUS' SVITS Made to Soil For $18.50 * l A 7C and S2O: Our Price.. These Suits are models of smart, higher-priced garments; fur collars and cuffs, braid designs and tautton trimmed. Colors —navy. Belgium blue, Russian green, African brown and black. LATEST WOMEN'S AND MISSES' SUITS .Made to Soil For (IQ ijf* 525.00: Our Price <PI«/«lO A splendid assortment of gar ments; many of them onlv one, two or a few of a kind: all the preferred shades and colors. There are chifTon broadcloths, imported poplins, imported gabardines and whipcords. All are trimmed with fur. Men's Suits & Overcoats (j»Q Hr You save $3.25 no matter what Suit or m #■ Overcoat n this lot you select. And you may s-.ve more. Kaufman's Special, Men's rf» <§ <f Hr and Young Men's SUITS \ I I • ■ and OVERCOATS, at ... V A fir-^ Are the talk of the (own. YOII s*>r S5 and perhaps more on any one of tliese garments. gMjpF' ft> We OfftrTomorrowMen's i HC and Younc Men's SUITS \ I Zl* ' " [J/m and OVERCOATS, at. . Y * * |3Bfl That are offered all over town at $22.50. All I hand tailored: every new model: every new material. Bllt Men s Drill Lined (1 QC IT Corduroy PANTS «P * • JL I Made of tine ril> eord. best of linen thread; L, a real $3.50 value. W The largest and best selection of Boys' Suits, Mackinaws and Overcoats. Lots less than you pay elsewhere. Hoys' Corduroy <*o nf| Norfolk SUITS, at.. That would cost you $4.50 elsewhere. i BOYS' POIjO { -I QC OVERCOATS Values to $3.50 Made in the new models, button to the neck, 3 to 10 years. mental impressions in order to gain|i a knowledge of the facts. Matter Not Substance The chief difficulty in' realizing the ' mental nature of matter is the belief ' that matter is substance. We have ' already seen that it Is simply a form ; or state of energy, composed of elec trons, and that it Is a phenomenon of force instead of something apart 1 from force. We know that what is called organized matter can be de stroyed. for any material object can ! be reduced to atoms; and. if the atoms are then separated into their constituent electrons, the object as such has completely disappeared and what remains is a theoretical mani festation of force, a mental concept. |' One of the fundamental properties i of substance is substantiality, which! is defined as being that which is last-1 ing, that which has real existence,!' that which Is actual and not illusory, j This means that substance is inde- : structible and permanent and matter j cannot therefore be real substance) since it is both destructible and trans | itory; it is relative, not absolute: :i j mental concept, and not a substantive! actuality outside of consciousness. Substance is that of which anything j is constituted, its body, its structure. | Hence whatever exists must have sub-1 stance and this must be indestructible.! iTo illustrate, a mathematical idea, if j 'true, has substance. This substance is [not material, it is not the visible ! figures nor the chalk or ink with Which they have been made, since I these can be destroyed. Its substance is its truth, a right idea which can never be destroyed. Tt is unchanging, permanent, it has the power to re main itself. The substance of all real things is right thought, which we do not see physically but mentally. Mat ter, therefore, is not substance since it is not substantive. Tt is but an ap pearance of suhstance to physical sense. In the analysis of being it is ex tremely important to perceive that there Is substanue apart from What ts commonly called matter. This exists solely in the realm of mind or n>eta physics and is conceived of purely metaphysically, for thus only can the substantiality of truth or spirit be seen, and that which St. Paul refers to as "The substance of things hoped for" he realized. Another difficulty in getting away from the matorlal sense of things Is the dimensional concept of existence. Physical sense can perceive only finite or physical things. For example, the dimensional concept which the senses have of mathematical Ideas Is projected/as finite, concrete figures or quantities. But it is not the mathe matical truth whlfc-h they see, for this truth is not- in the figures. It is in NOVEMBER 2, 1915. 'LATEST WOMEN'S AND MISSES' SUITS Made to Sell For $32.50 &QA *7t£ and $35: Our Price I J Beautiful broadcloths, handsome 11 velvets and poplins. Fine fur trim ! mings around the "collars and cuffs. There are also some with fur trim ! ( mings around the bottom of 'the ' ! coats. A selection of trimmings in j beaver, skunk, opossum, raccoon' and i fitch furs. All the wanted colors and i all sizes. COATS >,AC . KI> ' AAV . 53.00 Values to S 1.50 Made in the new Norfolk models, the newest patterns. Roys' Balinaruc dJ/4 QA OVERCOATS ...... Values to $7.58 For boys Bto 17 years. Out full with velvet and convertible collar. mind and is cognized mentajly through mathematical understanding. Physical things are but the symbols of reality. The ideas which they jnay express are not limited to the physi cal expression but exist everywhere, j Rvery truth is unlimited and thus in finite for it is everywhere and in destructible. There is but one idea six and that six is everywhere, can bo known and used by everyone, it can never be altered, exhausted or de stroyed, and consequently it is infinite. Ufe Apart From Matter All this leads to the perception that there is no life In matter since one of the fundamental characteristics of life is continuity of existence which, as we j have seen, cannot be predicted of mat | ter. • We cannot affect mathematical [truth by anything which may be done !to the figures, nor can we affect the ! real life of anything by what we may j do to its material appearing or symbol. : When figures are written down at. j random without regard to law. they | have no meaning, no power. It is only I when they are correctly used that I they express truth or life. So too when j human thought conceives of ideas ns i fragmentary, discordant, temporary, 1 without Principle or law. this concept lis without substance, truth, life or j power. It is thus seen that there is neither substance nor life in matter or mate rial phenomena: that our existence Is not material but mental, a state of consciousness and that truth and life can only be conceived of metaphysi cally. On this plane a!on% can we analyze existence logically and intel ligently, and solve its problems. In the preface ,to the text-book J>f Christian Science, Mrs. Eddy say*. "The time for thinkers has come," This is surely true., Christian. healing being contrary to tile teachings of physical science, cannot be interpreted on a material basis, it can be under stood only as we gain a metaphysical or spiritual viewpoint. Mrs. Eddy makes it entirely clear that material existence is not real existence; that matter is not what it seems to he, and that we cannot safely, trust the evi dence of the physical senses. Her writings lead thought into the realm of the immaterial and divine, they show us that -we must look beyond physics into metaphysics for causation and truth. The world is now begin ning to feel this demand. Inquiry into the mental nature of things is becom ing more general and the call is for an intelligent interpretation of ex perience. of physical phenomena, and of the nature of the human conscious ness. Many of the points for which Mrs. Eddy has contended are to-day flndine corroboration as a result <y LATEST WOMEN'S AND MISSES COATS Made to Sfll For (C *7 C $10: Our Price 1 a Coats In plaid, mixtures,\ checks, plain colors: a (treat variety, of pure j wool kerseys, in stylish mixtures and wool plushes, in pretty checks and also in novelty cloth. LATEST WOMEN'S AND MISSES' COATS Made to Sell For St 2.5(1 tfJQ *7C and SIS: Our Price " Many of these Coats are to be found in not more than one of a style. They comprise the newest models with all the latest color combinations. The materials are zibeliries, wool velours, cheviots and corduroys. LATEST WOMEN'S AND MISSES COATS Made to Sell For $18.50 (19 7C and $18: Our Price.. . The lateist arrivals in imported zibelines. soft wool velours, flue corduroys, pure wool kerseys, liou cles and astrakhans. Designed from the most expensive models and supplied in all the wanted colors. LATEST WOMEN'S AND MISSES COATS Made to Sell For $lB <l/1 7 C to S2O: Our Price «P l*t. f SJ Popular styles in new Coats. The much wanted new shade of taupe and checks, plaid and mixtures. Some belted, others with fur trim med collars. All sizes. It Will Pay c h SI.OO Bamboo Tables SI 11} With a 12-inch top and ml 01 S-inch shelf. 30 inches /3 H Ml high, can be used as a mii 08 tp l®Phone stand, flower S3 table or center lamp ® table. Special, each j s 49c Cotton Blankets Worth $1.00; now, 69 C a pair . Gray, white and tan Cotton Blan kets, with pink and blue borders; size 60x76 Inches. Woolnap Blankets Worth 82.50: now. jtl 43Q a pair ....*"* ,u Plaid Woolnap Blankets, in four different colorings and patterns; sice 61x80 inches. Woolnap Blankets Worth $2.50: now, $1.97 Fancy Plaid Woolnap Blankets, in pink, blue, gray and tan; size 6,4x76. Cotton Comforts A full line of Fancy Covered Comforts, made of the best mate rials: each $1.39, $1.47, $1.97 to $2.48 vance in physical science and in psychology. We are now ready to concede the. possibility of Christian healing, that which is" effected through spiritual means, the power of divine Mind. j • Those w'ho still have some lingering I {doubt of this possibility should bear j in mind that many physicians are now admitting the mental causation of dls- j ease, the effect of tjie emotions upon 1 the secretions • and upon functional! and organic activity having been abundantly proved. It is further evident that the mind or Intelligence which is the source of . 1 all right ideas, Is the intelligence and power which may logically be looked to as a remedy for all wrong ideas or : conditions of human experience. The natural healing power must be the Nine out of te j have this d f Pyorrhea—the most general in the convenient form of Senreco disease in the world—is the dis- Tooth Paste, ease you should be guarding your Senreco contains the best cor teeth against. It is caused by a rective and preventive for pyor germ Vhich is found in cotry rhea known to dental science, human mouth. Used daily it will successfully pro- Thousands have already lost tect your teeth from this disease. § some or all of their teeth from this Senreco also contains the best | ,! disease; in thousands it has harmless agent for keeping the reached the stage of bleeding teeth clean and whiti. It has a gums and loose teeth; in thou- refreshing flavor and leaves a | | sands of Others the germ, unsus- wholesomely clean, cool and pleas- fi l pected, is just starting its work taste in the moutn. ( . of destruction. Start today to Start the Senreco treatment guard your teeth from the dread tonight-full details in the folder ' results of this disease by £■> wrapped around every tube. I using a corrective and pre- Symptoms described. _ A .• _ . . . • V —\ 2>c two oz. tube is sufficient ventive treatment in your | for si* or eight weeks of the , daffy toilet. UjM pyorrhea treatment. Get ( To meet the need for such ISenreco at your dniggists i a treatment and to enable \/\ today, or send 4c in stamps ; everyone to take the neces- 1 or coin for sample tube and sary precaution* against folder. Address The Sen . this disease, a prominent I \ tanel Remedies Co., 503 i dentist has put his own pre- Union Central Bldg., Cin scription before the public SampU tu* cinnati, Ohio, i gi— — unit iitore Opens at 8 A. M., Closes at 5.30 P. M. GIRLS' SERGE DRESSES Worth $3.00. QC Sale Price 1, •17 Made of Wool Serge, new styles, nicely trimmed, in navy blue only: sizes 6 to 14. KAUFMAN'S —SECOND FLOOR INFANTS' CAPES Worth $2.50. 1 /\/\ Sale Price 1 »vU Just 15 Capes to sell, in pink and blue, nicely lined und made of Eiderdown. KAUFMANS—SECOND FLOOR WOMEN'S SILK HOSIERY Worth SI.OO. /»Q Sale Price.. 100 pairs of Women's Pure Thread Silk Hosiery, high spliced double sole, toe and heel, in black and colors; silk and lisle garter top. ON SALE. FIRST FLOOR WOMEN'S UNION SUITS Worth SI.OO. Sale Price C Women's Bleached Fleeced Lined Ribbed Union Suits, long sleeves, high neck, silk drawing string. ON SALE. FIRST FLOOR /MEN'S WORK SHIRTS Worth 75c. Sale Price ... Men's Fast Black Satin Work Shirts, with pockets and collars, cut big and full: all sizes. ON SALE, FIRST FLOOR Scrim Curtains Worth $1.50; now, Q r> a pair SJOC Scrim Curtains with Met lace in sertion in white, cream ami ecru. Cretonne Worth Usc and 3»c: now. a >arcl 19c a,,a 25c Fancy Stripe and Figured Ore tonne, iri many good colorings and — ———— Shepherd Check Worth 15c: now, OQr a yard . 4:, c Shepherd Plaid Dress Goods, in neat black checks; 36 inches wide. Double Bed Sheets Worth 75c; now, 59c Full 81x90 Inches and made of Pattern Table Cloths Worth SI.00; now, 69C Hemstitched Pattern Table Cloths, 64x64 inches; fully mercer ized. Curtain Scrim Worth 25c: now. 1 |? _ a yard IOC Fine quality bordered Curtain Scrim, '4O Inches wide, in white and ecru grounds, with beautiful colored borders. Curtain Marquisette Worth 12V«c; now, *7— a yard • C White Curtain Marquisette. 3 2 inches wide: fine quulit; for cur tains. - —— T Mind or intelligence which is thfc underlying Principle of being. It Its obvious that Truth alone correct error, hence the discord or disease i which results from false sense, can >* | put away, or nealed only i Truth. Many who believe in God ;« | the creator are so illogical as to be lieve' that although He knew anougfi to make all things,- He does not knos. enough to correct our false sense of what He has made. Body* Is Mental Having seen that all the phenomena , of nature are mental, the projection I ot imperfect human sense, and that • disease is mental and must be lieal [Cnntinued on Page 7.] 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers