2 MUMMERS READY FOR BIG PARADE Lcwisburg Residents Will Cele brate Entry of New Year Special to the Telegraph Lewisburg, Pa., Dec. 31.—The boost ers for the mummers' parade hero on New Year's Day have completed all plans for the big celebration. The parade will form at 1 o'clock and move off promptly at 2 p. m. Four bands, upward of fifty floats, a hundred or more automobiles, several secret so cieties and fire departments. Troop M, Firsb Cavalry, and hundreds of mum liters will be in line. Captain Samuel B. Wolfe, chief mar shal, has selected Colonel William R. Vollmer, lieutenant W. Ralph Bechtel and Lieutenant A. Paul Kline as his aids. Numerous cash prizes are offered for the various features in the parade :md as this celebration will mark the opening of Lcwisburg's first paved street, and th lighting of the Great White Way it is expected that It will be one of the biggest days this town has had since the centennial twenty five years ago. ASK FOR and GET HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Cheap substitutes cost YOU same price* Merchnnfn and Ullner* Tram*. Co. FLORIDA TRIPS "BY SEA" BALTIMORE TO One AVaj- Itouml Trip S2O JACKSONVILLE S»S 1.500 MILES—7-IJAV TRIP. sl-5.00 SAVANNAH 526.20 Including meals and stateroom berth. Through tickets to all points. Fine steamers. Best service. Staterooms de luxe. Baths. Wireless telegraph. Au tomobiles carried. Steamer Tuesday and Friday, 7 P. M. Send for booklet. XV. I*. Tt l(\l:u. <•. I\ A., Hnlto., Mil. Winter weather puts any coal to the test and especially shows up the superior burning and heating <1 u a 1 i t i e s of Kelley's Range and Furnace Fuel. There will be New Year cheer in every home that burns Kel- ! ley's Coal. H. M. Kelley & Co. 1 North Third Street Tenth and State Streets ==Our== 11 Holiday Saving Fund • -Club • i|- Is Now Open I Security Trust Company | \ Third Street, Near Post Office | 81/W W ? THIS COUPON FOR , rican Government AND Panama Canal « f ' FKEDKUIC J. HA SKIN. That Show Uncle Sam at Work. [arrisburg Telegraph IESE TWO BOOKS FOR 98 CENTS Cut ® ' hla paper, present It at our office with 98 :ost of production and distribution, and the an cents extra by mtill. OUT THESE BOOKS Both are the name , i otly alike In heavy cloth. Each has about i fine book paper. Both are profusely lllus etchlngrs, drawings und maps. 1 RS We are distributing these patriotic e of th«ir great educational fnerlt and our old bo In every American home. I > »i VI" ■»VU" w.e diet have proved of the greatest benefit In many cases of neurasthenia. A tend ency to anemia, or bloodlessness, shown by most neurasthenic patients, is also corrected by these tonic pills. Your own druggist sells Dr. Williams' Pink Pills or they will be sent by mail at 50 cents per box; six boxes | $2.50. Begin the treatment at once before your condition becomes chronic. Two useful books, "Diseases of the Nervous System" and "What to Eat and How to Eat," will be sent fre« by the Dr. Williams Medicine Co., ScHen ©ctady, N. Y., if you mention this papar.—Advertisement. , Mrs. Rebecca HogentoAer !l Is Nearing CenturyjMark special to the Tetegrafh I Columbia, Pa., Dec. 31. m| s . Re- j becca Hogentogler, who reslTs at l 1 Klinesville, ii short distance | above Columbia, is perhaps the nu>4 inter esting of the many residents inlhis or I any other section of the couily, be- Icause she is the oldest personln this part, of Lancaster county, and |r one of her years is exceptionally w|l pre served. Mrs. Hogentogler willlbe 98 1 years old in February next, all has I .lived in the section where she rlw re sides, all her life. Her ancestoM were the owners of nearly all the lan] lying south of the Chlckies creek, anil east ward from the Susquehanna rivl, and as far as the present bounda«?s of Columbia. One of the most remarkable ttits of this aged woman is the conditin of her memory, which seems not blhave been in the last impaired. Sl f ran relate events that happened Afore jniost of the people now living kvere j born, and this she does with su j ac curacy that she astonishes thoslwho are now well # advanced in years lcm selves. One of her neighbors, •»,> is a man about 75 years old, has Jated that she has told him of incident<|that happened in his childhood, of Jhlch he has some recollection, but not Jeur ly so comprehensive as that reined by his aged neighbor. Mrs. HaLen togler's sight is good and the oniTde fect in her senses is deafness, \»licli, however. Is not serious, as she lean easily understand anyone who s|Aaks to her should they raise the voicfljust above the natural tone. ANDREW SHULTZ DIES i By Special Correspoita'cnce Marietta, Dec. 31. —Andrew Slilltz, of Brunnerville, a prominent biisijiess man, died from a stroke, age] t!8 years. He was a member of the United Brethren Church and leaves a willow and several children. BIUBACHER-FARMER Special to the Telegraph Marietta, Dec. 31.—Miss Anna j H. Brubacher, of Baniford, and WaiVen W. Farmer, of near here, were mardicd at the home of the bride, the Ilev. Peter Nissley, officiating. Once grapefruit "" ''^^fewj^// were scarce and high-priced—a break- S/zs fast dish fit for kings which only the well-to-do A/S cou ld afford. Now there are thousands of bearing groves in Florida, where grapefruit come nearest reaching perfection, mY and the fruit is plentiful and reasonable in price. Florida is the //jy natural home of the grapefruit and in the long growing season of the \VX\ //// State, nature seals up in the golden globes her life-giving sunshine to be V\ /(// opened and made use of months later in the heart of winter's kingdom. \v\ //// Ask your dealer for Sealdsweet grapefruit; fjl Almost every modern grocery or fruit atora WA II I Instead of Just grapefruit carries Sealdsweet fruits in season VM\ smSf I |? Sea Id sweet oranftes are Just as superior as 1 the grapefruit—try them this year and he wUI Set these fruits for you jl/ \|c Sealdswcet is the appropriate trade-mark of the' Sometimes a Florida grapefruit is rough and 11 I \\K fruit of growers of the choicest oranges and uninviting in looks —but ci\f. it open and you J ( Yoji grapefruit in the world. They are banded will realize the truth of the old adage that j v\i together in a co-operative organization, the beauty is only skin deep. If they have been j I VaV Florida Citrus Exchange, tosee that consumers allowed to ripen on the tree, as are all Seald- jJIJ get Florida's famous fruits in prime condition, sweet grapefruit, you will find Florida grape- t just as nature leaves them on the trees at the fruit filled with delicious, invigorating jlf \V\ end of the season . Sealdsweet oranges juice—food, drink and tonic. Every mem- } TOi and grapefruit can be depended upon, ber of the family will enjoy them. IJ/1 Use Sealdsweet Grapefruit and Oranges For Cookery and Confections //// The Sealdsweet mark is only on boxes Sealdsweet oranges and grapefruit are which contain fruit that will give useful in cookery and confections. you your money's worth, no mat- Recipe booklet mailed free 'i ter at what price you buy it. upon application. Florida Citrus Exchange 111 II I 628 Citiiensßank Bldg., Pretty TcetK Add to the Natural If your teeth are in want of any attention, caU and Have them < •< • amlned, which ia FREE OF CHAIMJE. < >< • I guarantee my work to be of the very beat, both In material and ' ' workmanship, which it ia possible to grive my paUpnts. My 18 years of ~, ' E:* constant practice and study have given me the experience which each and ~, •>< • Warn every dentist moat have in order to do satisfactory work. Ido my work <• < <" ' B®St BWip||M absolutely painless. My assistants are dentists, who have had a vast •• < 1 " 1 amount of experience, and therefore are able to render the very best of 1 " | W services. My office la equipped with all the modern appliances in order to \ ' Office open dally l:(0 a. m. to • p. m-l M»n, Wed. and Sat. till I , l( '' " ' P- m ' Cloned on Sundays. Bell phone, 8822-R. _ <• < ~DR. PHILLIPS. Painless Dentist ill ; 330 Market Street, HARRITsBVI«i" b pA. j 2 On Third Street Close This Evening at 6 O'clock Extend Their Best Wishes For abetter and Happier New Year j = -: J Social and Personal News of Towns Along West Shore Misa Laura Givens of Marysville, is spending some time this week in Philadelphia. Miss Jane Beii- of Marysville, is visiting her sister. Miss Katherine Bell at Brooklyn. Li. C. Eightner has returned to his , home at Marysville after spending the i past two weeks with relatives at Saxton and Huntingdon. I EMPLOYMENT BUREAU ACTIVE Columbia, Pa., Dec. 31.—The free employment bureau connected with and supported by the Merchants' and Manufacturers" Association, has been . quite successful in procurliSf work for i men, to whom its operations, until I recently were restricted. There were . 175 applications for work within a period of five months. ! William Eshelman Dies of Typhoid-Pneumonia Marysville, Pa., Dec. 31. William Eshelman, aged 44 years, died at his home here late yesterday of typhoid pneumonia after a three weeks' Ill ness. Mr. Eshelman formerly follow ed the trade of a barber, but during the past few years his health inter ! fered with his work. > He was a mem ' ber of the local branch of the p. O. 1 S. of A. Funeral services will be held 1 from his late home in Chestnut street ' on Sunday morning at 10 o'clock, the I Rev. C. A. Parson, pastor of the > Church of God officiating. Interment l will be nifde in the Chestnut Grove cemetery here.