Children Cry for Fletcher's yc iilTVN?ti£ifr£ iV' iV V 1! Vf/i* i- The Kind Yon Have Always Bought has borne the slgna tnre of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision for over SO years. Allow no one to deceive you In this. Counterfeits, Imitations and •• Just-as-srood" are but experiments, and endanger the health of Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castorla is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It de stroys Worms and allays Feverlshness. For more than thirty years it has been In constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Trou bles and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years THC CTNT»M cowmr, HIW VOWK cinr. wmmmmmamamammmmmmmmmmmmmmamm Thin Folks Who Would Increase Weight SIMPLE DIRECTIONS EASY TO FOLLOW Thin men and women that big. hearty, filling dinner you ate last night. What became of all the fat producing nourishment it contained? You haven't gained .In weight one ounce. That food passed frpm your 1 body like unburned coal through an open grate. The material was there, | but your food doesn't work and stick. I and the plain truth is you hardly get enough nourishment from your meals to pay for the cost of cooking. This is true of thin folks the world over. Tour nutrttive organs, your functions of assimilation are sadly out of gear and need reconstruction. If every way you've tried to put on weight has failed try these simple di rections. Cut out everything but the meals you are eating now and eat with Recent Deaths in Central Pennsylvania f fecial to The Telegraph Marietta. Mrs. Susanna Davia, j aged ST, the oldest resident of Good-! ville. died last evening. She was the' head of four generations. * Xewrllle. John Eby died Sunday : night, aged 71 years. He ate his sup-' per and appeared to be in the best! of health. He then retired and was! found dead shortly' afterward. Ti red, Nervous Women Need the Tired . ner ttu vous women ww | - need the help of Hpln Hi a natural tonic which r will build up bodily strength, help the nerves, increase the appetite and improve the digestion. When women find _ themselves in a tired, nervous condi tion > or suffer from sick headache, bili °usness, and loss of appetite, it shows that the system is run down and unable to md to f the demands which Nature imposes on it. .'very woman should know what these conditions mean, , 3™ that the way to find quick and sure relief, is to take SEEWMS PILLS at the first warning which tells that anything is wrong, for these pills quickly make everything right. They are a remarkable combination of remedial herbs, which act favorably on the organs, and are so mild that they cause no discomfort or disagreeable after effects. They remove impurities from the blood, stimulate the liver, regulate the bile, and have a gentle and laxative effect which removes constipation. Beecham's Pills are a great boon to women whenever they feel tired, nervous and depleted, for they carry strength and life to body, blr ' and nerves. Directions of special value to women with every box. | Medicine in the hey Carr At All Druggist*, n. I Strength Body, Blood TUESDAY EVENING, | every one of those a single Sargol tab let. In two weeks note your weight. Sargol does not of itself make fat but mixing with your food its purpose is to help the digestive organs turn the fats, sugars and starches of what you have eaten, into rich, ripe tat produc ing nourishment tor the tissues and blood—prepare it in an easily [ lated form which the blood can readily i accept. A great deal of this nourish ' ment now passes from thin peoples I bodies as waste. Sargol is designed to | stop the waste and make the fat pro- I ducing contents of the very same meals you are eating now develop pounds and pounds of healthy flesh between your skin and bones. Sargol is non-injurious, pleasant, efficient and inexpensive. Geo. A. Gorgas and other leading druggists are authorized to sell it in large boxes—forty tablets to a package on a guarantee of weight increase or money back. —Adv. A GOOD EXAMPLE Noah set us an example in wisdom and good judgment against the ele ments by building his ark on top of j the highest hill in his neighborhood, I although it took some courage to defy ! the knockers. Follow his example when you start out in Ufe. Build your structure above high-water mark, then ! you will not have occasion to go fish ing for your chickens every time the ! creek comes up.—"Zini" in Cartoons : Magazine. HEAD OF MUMMY IS HER HOODOO i Explorer's Wife Feels Sure it Caused Death of Hus band and Son GIVES ROYAL RELIC AWAY Refuses to Have Cranium of Queen, Which Caused Evil Spell Around Sftcial to Th* Telegraph Pittsburgh, Pa., Nov. 16. The 8000-year-old mummified head of Queen Hatshepsutt, or Ilatasu, an Egyptian queen of the line of Thothmes, with gleaming; agate eyes twinkling malevolently under wrap pings. which is believed to have brought a course on the violators of her tomb, wits sent to the Carnegie Museum yesterday. The donor, Mrs. Jere Ban man. of New Castle, whose husband brought the head from Egypt seven years ago, declared to-day that she has sent the gruesome relic of the Nile to museum to break the spell which she savs she believes had some hearing on. the death of her son. J. Howard Uauman, aged 4 and more recently that of her husband, Jere Bauman. on October 21, ■Towels Kor Eyes The royal head, believed so potent of evil, is about five pounds in weight and is covered with the brown-black canvas wrappings of Egyptian mum mies. glued tight to the flesh. An aperture in the covering discloses a section of the skull, and other open ings give a glimpse of what seem to be ages in the deep eye sockets, as If the eyeballs ha J been replaced with jewels. In September. 1908. the head of Queen Hatshepsutt was iineartehed by Mr. Bauman while with an exploring party among the tombs of the Egyp tian kings and queens in the Libyan Hillsfl. Mr. Bauman and his wife were traveling that summer in the Near East. Egypt and Northern Africa. 'Tradition tells us that removing a body from its native soil and tomb will bring ruin to the holder," said Mrs. Bauman to-day. "It certainly seems to have worked its evil spell here." . . SECESSIONIST VVAI! ART "Paris has answered in no uncer tain terms/' says Cartoons Magazine, "the question "What kind of art will be born of the war?' Georges Scott, ,T. Siniont, Sabattier, and others, have been painting history as it was never painted before. The Munich artists are now answering the question in their own way. "Particularly effective are some of the sketches and paintings of the younger secessionists' who profess to paint things as they see them. Much of their work Is daintily symbolical. As visionary as the daydream of a poet is Thor's Shadow,' one of Ernil Pott tier's drawings. The foamy clouds re solve themselves into a war chariot driven through th? sky by mighty steeds, whose course is directed by the war god." PREFER SENTIMENT TO HATRED Picture post cards of the war, which probably reflect popular feeling fairly well, are not quite so merry as in the early days. A year ago caricatures of the kaiser were in great demand, but now the cards that sell best are of a sentimental or domestic type. The kaiser still appears in various charac ters—as a dachshund on crutehes, a guy, a Zepp<*ii gasbag, a burglar, and, in company with the crown prince, as a bad pear—but such cards are no longer in conspicuous positions in shop windows. The kaiser, it seems, can no longer be relied on as the chief stock in-trade of the picture post card artist. The British public—always eager for change—is apparently losing interest in him.—Cartoons Magazine. Reported Betrothed to Prince of Wales y \ v> I <3 . 7 I ' •?' ' ' ■ ■ fx' •' V ■ i' , - . •• ; i , i f&J t ' k ri m U | I Htnurij ft»Trnt <* Princess Margrethe of Denmark l.ondon, Nov. 16. Rumors persist here that after the war the announce ment of the engagement of the Prince of Wales to Princess Margrethe of Denmark will be announced. Although but twenty years of age. the young lady holds a degree of doc tor of philosophy from the University of Copenhagen. She is a daughter of Prince Valde mar and Princess Marie of Orleans and a niece of the Dowager Queen Alexandra. Her father was a brother of the late King Frederick VIII. At the beginning of the war she entered hospital work in England, but lately has returned to Denmark to nuraue her studies. 11 HARRISBURG CTPTB TELEGRAPH 1 / 4 " " • • Shall Present Conditions Continue ? Beginningtomorrow,thiscompany industry immunity from the regula will publish a series of daily articles tions under which other public car on the subject of jitney-regulation. riers are required to operate, as it would be to impose regulations upon <1 That these articles were not pub- the gas company for the supply of lished at an earlier date is due to the light, heat and power, and grant im company's desire not to have the munity to the electric company, or question become involved in any vice versa, sense as a political issue in the cam- _ _ . , paign just closed. But the company is not the only one whose interests are affected by The matter has nothing to do with this present discrimination. politics—it is a business problem WVAI T D . . . ~ ... , pure and simple. ? YOUR interests—the public's— too, are vitally concerned. § From the outset, let it be under- m lf ic , iITI t . stood that this company raises no publication of these articles' to question as to the right of jitney-ex- , pt P fnrth t .Af®.s' ' „ U S hten y° u as t0 how seriously the same regulations as govern the nresent HkrrimtnaHnn affprl* vnur business with which it directly com- f nterests as weJl as its own y gr, ... ... .... <1 Read them all carefully—reserve <| At the present time that condition y our decision until the last article does not exist. k as published—then answer <J And the company submits that it ( s uestion_ is just as unfair to grant to this new <J Shall present conditions continue ? Harrisburg Railways Company . / Copyright, Federal Advertising Agency, Harrisburg. Pa. MOTOR KOAD TO THK SUMMIT OK' 1 PIKE S PEAK Motoring into and above the clouds i is a novel and fascinating feat made possible for the tourist by the comple-, tion of the new motor road to the sum- ! unit of Pike's Peak, says the November j Popular Mechanics Magazine. In the ! operation of the road the trip to the summit will ordinarily be made from Colorado Springs, the route leading through the Garden of the Gods, through Manitou, and up Ute Pass to Cascad which is 011 the edge of the Pike National Forest and is the point where the new road begins. Cascade is located about 12 miles West from Colorado Springs. Prom this point the road passes through some of the finest | scenery in the West, and after 17 miles 1 of winding and doubling through thej [CATARRH GERMS k KILLED! i Only Way to End Catarrh. Wonderful Relief Comes From ■ Breathing the Pure Healing Air of Hyomei Through This New Pocket Inhaling Device If you have catarrh and want to get rid of it you must kill the germs which cause catarrh I and which are now living, breeding, thriving and multiplying by the millions far up in the I recesses of your nose and throat. The temporary relief you have been finding in sprays, douches, creams, ointments, lo- I tions, etc., which for a while open your clogged nostrils and-let you breathe easier, fail to cure f catarrh to stay cured because they do not and cannot kill the catarrh germs which cause it. ' There is just one way to really reach and destroy the catarrh germ life in your system and thus end catarrh forever and that is by breathing through the little inhaling device shown in this illustration, a powerful but pleasant and healing germicidal air called Hyomei. Hyomei is a germ killing liquid but you c-o not swallow it. Simply pour a few drops of Hyomei into this inhaler, and then put the inhaler in your mouth and breathe its healing, germ destroying air—breathe deeply. That's all you have to do. Every time you inhale a breath of Hyomei through this little inhaling device you are drawing into your raw, swollen, inflamed and germ laden membranes an agreeable medicated air which will not only abso lutely and positively destroy every trace of Catarrh germ life it reaches but will stop the dis charge and heal and reduce all the inflammation and swelling and open up your clogged, nose and stopped up air passages. It gives wonderful relief in just two or three minutes while if you use it two or three times a day for a few weeks it will completely banish Catarrh and | every symptom of catarrh. Druggists everywhere are so sure of the blessed, lasting relief that Hyomei brings to i Catarrh sufferers that they furnish a full bottle of it, together with this Pocket Inhaler in a- - H I . . package called the Complete Hyomei Treatment, on an absolute guarantee to refund the full ■ purchase price if you are not satisfied after 30 days'full use. The Hyomei liquid is also sold in separate bottles without the inhaler and without this guarantee so people using it for the first time should be certain to insist on the complete package containing the inhaler and the 1 I guarantee that protects them against all loss. Sold here in Harrisburg and vicinity by all ■ the best drug stores, including ■■l H. C. KENNEDY || canons and along the mountain sides, 1 ! it reaches the summit of the mountain' I 14,109 ft. above sea level. The road skirts many .of the best-known scenic, ■ features of this section of the Rockies, j j such as Crystal Creek Valley, perched 1 110,000 ft. above sea level, and Lover's J Leap, a precipice having a sheer drop j of 2,000 ft. It is estimated that from 1 the summit something like 30,0001 | square miles of the earth's surface is | ! visible, the view extending over a hun-i j dred miles to the east, and including j to the west scores of peaks that arej covered with perpetual snow. 1 Numerous views of the road and i ! scenery at various altitudes accompany j [ the article. [ THE SMALL TOWN FAT ROY | j "Every small town," writes Helena i Smith Dayton in Cartoons Magazine, j "has a fat boy. Upward is the name |of the fat boy in most small towns. Of course he is never called Howard out- I side of the home'circle. Up to the age | of 14 years he is called Patty and after ! that he is called Butch. Howard is I usually seen munching an apple. His I favorite sport is riding around on the 1 grocer's wagon with Bill Chidsey, who | delivers. When Fatty's father falls | heir to a little money he buys Howard | a pony /and he is also the most success i ful raiser of rabbits and white mice of j any boy in town. ! "As a piano player Howard has it Jail over any of Miss Haskell's other | pupils and twice a week all winter you could see his big and broad rubbers reposing outside her door." r iF YOU HAD ft J*NECK *8 LONG A 8 THIS FELLOW, L/L AND HAD IjJ SORE THROAT If tomsk!?! E WOULO QUICKLY RELIEVE IT. 25C. and 50c. Hovpltal Size, Sl* 1 - " AU. DRUGGIST** 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers