FEEL FINE! TAKE "CASCARETi" FOR LIVER, BOWELS Spend 10 cents! Don't stay bil ious, sick, headachy, constipated. Can't harm you! Best cathartic for men, women and children. HrV Knjoy life! Tour system is filled vi'.h an accumulation of bile and bowel poison which keeps you bilious headachy, dizzy, tongue coated, breath batl and stomach sour. Why don't you get a 10-cent box of Cascarets at the drug store and feel bully? Take Cas oaiets to-night and enjoy the nicest, eet.tlesi liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced. You'll wake up with clear head, clean tongue, lively step, rosy skin and looking and feeling lit. Mothers can give a whole Cascaret to a sick, cross, bilious, feverish child any time—they are harmless—never gripe or sicken.—Advertisement. KEEPS KsDNEYS ACTIVE WITH A GUSS OF SALTS Must flush your Kidneys oc casionally if you eat meat regularly. Noted authority tells what causes Backache and Bladder weakness. Nn man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by lushing-the kidneys occasionally, says i well-known authority. Meat forms iric acid which clogs the kidney pores so they sluggishly Alter or strum only part of the waste and poisons from the blood, then you get sick. Nearly nil rheumatism. headaches. liver trouble. nervousness. constipation, dizziness, sleeplessness, bladder dis orders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of pediment, irregular of passage or at tended by a sensation of scalding, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from nny reliable pharmacy and take a tablespoonful in a glass of water be fore breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act tine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined with lKhia, and has been used for generations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate tlietn to activity, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder dis orders. Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot Injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which all regular meat eaters should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney complications.—Adv. Acid Stomachs Are Dangerous (union >ense Urlot by a Xew ork Physician "Acid'' stomachs are dangerous be cause too much acid irritates and in flames the delicate lining of the stom ach, thus hindering and preventing the Firoper action of the stomach, and iead ng to probably nine-tenths of the cases oi stomach trouble from which people Buffer. Ordinary medicines and medici nal treatments acting only upon the stomach walls, or as an artificial di g. stant, are useless in sucli cases, for tlicy leuve the source of the trouble, the excess acid in the stomach, as danger ous as ever The acid must be neu tralized. and its excessive formation prevented, and there is nothing better for this purpose than a teaspoonful of pl.iin bisurated magnesia, a simple ant - I •cid, taken in a little warm or cold i water after eating, which not only neu- i tralizes ttio acid, but also prevents the I fermentation. Foods which ordinarllv distress may be digested perfectly if 1 the meal is followed with a little bi'sur- ■ *ted magnesia, which can be obtained j from any druggist and should always be : kept handy. —Advertisement. Are You Weak, Nervous, Exhausted? Jjou't fori like working, everything go- ! liitf wrong? Digestion poor, blood im poverished, cannot sleep? Dr. Emerick's Body Builder a Reconstructive Tonic, is prescribed by the famous Dr. EMERICK for these conditions. Valuable after a severe sickness. Price SI.OO, prepared by the J)r. M. L. F.mcrick Co.. Kidgway. Pa. hold In Harrlsburg at tiorgas' Drag Store. Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect June 27. 1915. * RAINS leave Harrlsburg— For Winchester and Martinsburg at 6-03. *7:52 a. m.. *3:40 p. m. For Hagerstown. Chambersburg. Car •3:4o, 6:37, *7:45. *11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mfchanicaburg at 9:48 a. m., 2:16. 3;2| 630, 9:35 a. m. For Dillsburg at 5:0», *7.82 and •11:63 a. m., 2:16, *3:40, 6:37 and 6:30 p in. •Tiaily. All other trains dally exceot Sunday. H. A. RIDDLE. .1. It TONGE. O. P. A, Try Telegraph Want Ads TUESDAY EVENING, \X2o(V)en c»S> V y'T TTfV TT ▼ V ~V▼ ▼V*TTV T▼ W T ► i ► What Happened to Jane • ► By Virginia Terhune Van de Water < ► i CHAPTER XVII Copyright. 1915, Star Co. Mrs. Hardy looked up anxiously as Jane came out upon the veranda. "I was wondering where you were," she said. "I was afraid you might be feeling sick. Mr. Reeves was just ask ing what had become of you." The girl tried to smile. "I—l—was talking to father when you called me." she explained. Sinking into a chiir, she sat dumbly miserable. Had her father really spoken those words that still rang in her ears'." She felt as if she must have been dreaming as she watched Kzra return to the group he had left so short a while ago. and. sitting down by Augustus Reeves, begin to talk about the borers in his fruit trees. For some time nobody spoke di rectly to her. and she listened to the conversation as one half-asleep might listen to talk in another room. The moon was rising slowly and calmly above the treetops and she watched it fixedly. Was it possible that this awful thing had been said to her since Ned and she had watched that moon—"our old moon." as he had called it? He had said that it was smiling on him and her. It was not smiling now, but gazing imperturbably on all the joy and suffering in the world. She clasped her hands together tightly as she heard a train whistle up the valley. That was Ned's train. She listened as it slowed up at the station, and stood, ranting, while the passen gers boarded it. Then It began to puff, slowly at first, then more rapidly, until the sound became once more a con tinuous roar. Another warning whistle from the locomotive as it approached a crossing a mile down the road—then only a confused murmur in the dis tance. and all was still as before. Ilcr Father Makes an Kxcuse to Go Ezra Hardy rose stiffly. "Ma," he said, "there's a little bit of mending I'd like you to do for me to-night. Suppose we leave Jane to talk to Gus for a while and you attend to that for me. We'll be out in about a half hour." he informed his guest. "That's all right—lake your own time," Augustus said. "Jane and I'll get along all right by ourselves, I guess." Mr. Hardy said nothing. and in the moonlight the girl fancied that her mother's face grew a shade paler Jane rose as her parents stood up. When they had gone indoors she sat down again. She remained silent as Augustus Reeves began his speech, first getting up and closing the door that led out upon the veranda. "When I have anything special lo say. I like to know that there isn't anybody listening." he explained. She had an impulse to resent his words, to tell him that her people could not sink to the ignominy of eavesdropping, but as she recalled what her father had said to her only a little while ago she felt that she did not know what he might stoop to. She The Pattern for thin Design Be sides Allowing for All Scams, Gives the True Basting Line and shows Diagrams for Cutting and Making. fjt* 1 Pir« of th* Pattern A! to U UltnJ for lasteboard. "10. Special delivery stamps will, at all times, greatly expediate the de livery of mail matter and the use of the special service is recommended." The proper place to derive the best piano value is at Spangler's, Sixth above Macley.—Adv. INVESTMENTS FOR THE THRIFTY The thrifty money-saver who be comes a client of a reputable invest ment dealer may not reasonably ex pect to do better. Surplus fur.ds up to |SOO ought to be in the custody of a bank—a savings bank if there is one available. . The thrifty person will want a sutrj as large as that where he can get at It to meet the emergencies of life. HARRJSBURG TELEGRAPH i £mtrn:mtm::m:mmm:mtt«t:tttm:tm:jmtmtt::tm::stn«t«:mtt:mtt:mmmm I V' 1 * H * %"'• H jf Di f« 1 1 PREACH Christmas Shopping. H tt i We are prepared as never before to serve you. Four Big stores H tt 1 » full of up-to-date Christmas suggestions of unheard-of values. What H tt makes a handsomer or more useful gift than a Set of Furs for a ladv or nice suit for a boy, etc. tt est i I H Fur Scarfs 98c to $75.00 A . spc ii a L^°- vs ' l ou ; fi V st " rm ti oa t „ tin nn H *♦ proof. $3.98. Includes Hat «p 1 .i/O tO «j>IU.UU ++ tt Muffs $1.98 to $150.00 and Coat, all sizes. I Handsome suits at $4, ♦t ♦! C» x &n OO x /jo Specials in Reefers and Over- $4.75, $5 and $6. Buy ♦♦ tt bets Qj.yo to QZUU.UU coats, #1.98 and up. him one. g tt —♦♦ tt Advertised Articles Are Only Examples of Thousands of Bargains jj H Unadvertised to Be Found in This Big Store H tt Four Great Toy Specials For Wise Santas. They Won't Be Here Long at These Prices tt 8 lm gEtS*39° d " Sho °- F| y Hobb ytS! 1 ♦: arage ror o»c n r> n q « tt us in early summer. The spring in one of the /1Q '°" r cho,ce tt tt cars is worth 39c. Think of it! Two au- Qft This is a folding shoo-fly and aAO Oi7C at I9<\ ihis is a jj a tomobiles and a steel garage for 09C real value ar J#BC """ 98c H ♦♦ ♦♦ tt Specials in Ladies' Blouses, Silk Petticoats, Men's Overcoats and Boys' Reefers tt | HomeGately & Fitzgerald Supply Co. | tt Furnishers 29-31-33 and 35 S. Second Street Clothiers tt tt The Different Kind of a Credit Store ♦♦ ntttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttmn When his surplus rises above tha't mark, he should get In touch with an investment dealer whom the man at the bank is willing to endorse. It is expert help he needs, and he should take advice only from experts. By remembering- this very simple rule, he will be saved from the traps set by specious, get-rich-'juick promoters. The beginner ought, r.ot to buy stocks. He is not equipped to decide the value of a partnership in the average business whoso stock is avail- , able for purchase. New opportunities are opening fast for the small Investor. Let Kie illus trate: Within a month of the date of this writing, I have received from a national bank and an exceedingly so'ind, old-established savings bank A QUICK, SURE WAY TO END CATARRH Catarrh Grrni Breed By Million* in Air Paaangea of None and Throat, Jnat line Way To Drive Them Out To stop catarrh for good you must drive from your system the germs that cause catarrh and that are now feed ing and growing fat upon the swollen inflamed mucous membranes of your r.ose and throat. A splendid means of destroying catarrh germs and overcoming catarrh has long been recognized by physicians in the well known oil of Hyomei (pro nounced Hlgh-o-me) and is now a vry simple matter for any catarrh suf ferer to use it with splendid results at home by breathing its air through a little hard rubber Inhaling device which leading druggists are supplying with each large complete treatment. Just pour a few drops of the oil of Hyomei into this inhaler, place It be tween your lips and then breathe na turally and the pleasant smelling anti septic, germ killing air will penetrate deep down into every fold and crevice of your raw. sore nose, throat and lungs and give you quick certain relief, open ing up the air passages, making you breathe easily, stopping the Inflamma tion and discharge and driving from your system every catarrh germ that haK found lodgement there. If you want to be free from every symptom of catarrh, are tired of trying one thing after another without benefit go to If. C. Kennedy or any other re liable drug store hereabouts and get a complete Hyomei Inhaler outfit, use it every day for a few minutes and if it does not drive the catarrh germs out of your system and give you real last ing relief from Catarrh, your druggist will give you your money hack. Advertisement. and trust company of Chicago, two different pamphlets describing plans for taking carc of investors who can put aside as little as one dollar a week. One of these proposes, when you have paid in SSO at the rate of | Workmen s Compensation! To-day Is the Livest Topic Any Employer Can Consider Every employer must have compensation insurance of some kind on January Ist, next And the best insurance can only be had from a reliable company—one with a sufficient reserve to properly take care of any demand which might be made upon it. Such a company is THE TRAVELERS Assets over $100,000,000 Surplus over $13,000,000 |c Special Reserve for catastrophe hazard $1,000,000 There are many questions not thoroughly understood about the new Penn sylvania law. We will be glad to give expert advice concerning any feature of this law. Phone or write F„ R. LEIB & SON AGENTS 18 North Third Street Jjj DECEMBER 7. 1915. one dollar a week, to lend you SSO so that you can buy a SIOO bond; this bond the bank will hold as security until you have paid off the loan. The bank is a national bank, under the supervision of the federal government; and the bonds it sells to small In vestors on this plan are such as it buys in large amounts for the investment of a part of its own funds.—John M. Oskison in the December Mother's Magazine.