Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, January 11, 1916, Page 10, Image 10

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    10
WOMENrizjATERESTS
WHAT HAPPENED TO JANE
By Virginia Tcrhune Van de Water
Chapter XXXI.
(Copyright, 1915, »Star Company)
The night of Jane's arrival in her
husband's home was one of the dreary
occasions of her life.
She had fortified her fainting spirit
with the hope that in Augustus
Reeves' house was a woman who hav
ing been young herself and having
known sorrow of one sort of another,
would have at least a feeling of inter
est in the girl who was to live with
her.
So to-night, as the depot wagon
driven by Dan turned in at the
farmgate, the young wife looked out
eagerly for the lights that she was
certain would be shining to welcome
her. But instead all the main part
of the big house was dark. Only from
the kitchen a light glimmered.
The front door was locked and he
knocked loudly. A moment later was
the sound of bolts being drawn and
the door swung open, revealing Mary
Baird standing there with a candle in
her hand.
"Why have you got everything dark
like this?" Reeves asked gruffly.
"What kind of a v/ay Is this to have
the house when we're coming home."
"I was in the kitchen," the woman
replied in a sullen voice. "Here's the
lamp on the table where it always is.
There aro matches by it."
By the time that Jane had climbed,
unassisted, from the wagon, Augustus
had lighted the lamp.
"Put the bags down here, Dan," he
said. "Don't step on the carpet with
your dirty boots. Come in, Jane! I
expect you're most frozen."
Mary Baird, after standing for a
moment, had started back in the direc
tion of the kitchen as Jane entered the
hall.
"Good evening, Mrs. Baird!" the
girl called.
She was determined to make friends
with this, the only companion of her
own sex in the house.
Mary hesitated, glanced around and
nodded. "Good evening!" she mut
tered, then added, "Supper's about
ready."
"That's nice," the sir! said. "Tt's
a bitter cold night, and I know your
supper will taste good."
But Mary went on into the kitchen
without another word.
WOULD BOLSTER
NATIONAL GUARD
Plan Provides For Strengthen
ing of This Force Instead
of Continental Army
Hy .Associated Press
Washington, 1). C„ Jan. 11. Plans
to strengthen the National Guard, in
stead of ostablishing a continental army
as contemplated by the War Depart
ment, were proposed to President Wil
son to-day by Chairman Hay, of the
House-military committee.
I'nder Mr. Hay's plan the National
Guard would get regular pay and a
provision would be included in the army
bill for taking it into the regular army
in time of war. He said that at first
this plan would bring only about 130,-
"00 men into the regular army, but that
he felt sure that within two years there
would be *IOO,OOO. The plan also pro-
Cut Out Coupon Below-Worth
Twenty-Five Cents to You
Good, at Local Druggists, Long as the Free Supply Lasts,
for One 25-cent Package of the New "External" Treat
ment That Relieves Colds Over Night—Croup in Fif
teen Minutes.
Vick's Vap-O-Rub salve, the
new treatment recently introduc
ed here from North Carolina, re
lieves croup and cold troubles by
external application. There is no
need to dose the stomach with in
jurious medicines.
Its use is especially recom
mended to mothers with small
children, as Vap-O-Rub can he
used freely and often without dis
turbing the delicate stomachs of
the little folks. Plenty of fresh
air in the bedroom at night and a
little Vap-O-Rub applied at the
first sign of trouble is the best in
surance against croup and pneu
monia, and will keep the little
chaps free from sore throat, head
and chest colds. Vap-O-Rub is
absolutely harmless the form
ula is on every wrapper.
For croup or cold troubles you
just apply Vap-O-Rub weil over
the throat and chest and cover
with a warm flannel cloth. Leave
the covering loose around the
neck, as the body heat releases the
HARRISBURG
Rrindle Pliar., Kitzmiller Fliar.,
J. Nelson Clark, p G Leidic ,
Lotterel s Phar., . '
C.M.Forney, Logan Drug Co.,
John K. Garland, m * E. Marshall,
Chas. T. George, C. A. Moller,
Golden Seal Drug Store, - Park's Drug Co.,
Geo. A. Gorgas, A. M. Rickert,
E. Z. Gross, W. F. Steever,
Kauffmati's Drug Store, Thompson's Pliar.,
Croll Keller. T. A. Thorley,
C F. Kramer, Waite's Phar.,
H. C. Kennedy. S. K. Wilhelm.
DILLSBURG MARYSVILLE
W. M. Britcln-r. Holme's DriiL' Stores
DUNCANNON WTT „
E. C. Smith. MILLERSBURG
ENOLA John W. Starr.'
Holme's Drug Stores. NEW CUMBERLAND
Nace's Eb - V ' s Modern Phar -
HERSHEY LIVERPOOL
Hershey Store Co., Drug Dept. S. M. Shtiler,
TUESDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JANUARY 11, 1916.
. "May Igo up and wash for supper,
Augustus?" Jano asked tremulously.
"Sure! Pick up that other bag •
I've got two myself—and come on
up."
"1 guess Mary's got water and everj
thing here," Reeves remarked as he
deposited the bags at the foot of the
bod. "This is our room, though there's
h smajler one next to it that X some
times use. There's a bed in there, too.
You can keep your clothes In on f>
room, and I'll keep mine in the other."
He went into the adjoining cham
ber and lighted the lamp. Jane fol
lowed him.
"This is a nice little room," she
said. "I wonder if 1 might not use it
ae a dressingroom."
"I don't care." the man replied.
"Call it a dressingroom if you want to.
!It amounts to the same thing—a room
I where you keep your clothes."
| She removed her hat and coat, and
I going over to the washstand bathed
her face and eyes. The cold water
served to check her hysterical inclina
tion to cry.
She heard Augustus go down stairs
while she was arranging her hair in
front of the mirror. Then, as the
only exit from the small room was
through the large one, she put out
her lamp and went into the room she
and her husband were to share. A
chill seemed to strike her as she
crossed the huge apartment.
"I hate this room! I hate it!" she
whispered.
She paused for a moment, battling
with the sensation of dread she felt
croeping over her. It was foolish, she
chided herself—senseless.
As she stood still, battling with her
own weakness, she recalled vividly a
story she had read years ago. It was
about a house in which a man had
committed suicide, and any sensitive
person who tried to sleep in the room
in which the poor wretch had died
was always seized with a sense of in
describable horror.
She shook her head Impatiently.
"I ain getting to be a silly fool!"
she muttered. "I will try to behave
j myself like a sensible Christian and
i go down to supper."
lAnd, extinguishing the light, she
hurried downstairs.
(To Be Continued)
| poses to increase the present regular
regiments of Infantry t6 war strength
instead of adding ten new regiments,
as planned by the War Department. Mr.
Hay thinks that would give the same
increase in the regular army without
adding to overhead charges.
President Plans to
Attend Pennsylvania
State Society Dinner
I
Word was received at the Capitol
I to-day from the committee which in
| vited President Wilson to attend the
I first annual dinner of the Pennsyl
! vania State Society, to be organized
j to-morrow, that Ilie President would
I endeavor to be present at the dinner
!to be held in Philadelphia about
j February 29. The Society will be
j formally organized here to-morrow
and it is the plan to have monthly
luncheons with the Governor presid
ing and to have an annual dinner.
The President Was invited by a
committee including Chairman W. D.
B. Ainey, of the Public Service Com
mission; State Librarian Thomas L.
Montgomery, Senator Boies Penrose,
Congressman H. J. Steele and others.
ingredients in the form of vapors.
These vapors are inhaled, all
night long, with each breath open
ing the air passages, loosening the
phlegm and carrying the medi
cation direct to the affected parts.
In addition, it is absorbed through
and stimulates the skin, aiding
the vapors inhaled to relieve the
congestion.
\ ap-O-Rub will be found better
than internal medicines for all
forms of cold troubles and, in ad
dition, is a delightfully cooling,
soothing application for the sur
face inflammations, such as burns,
stings,-bruises, itchings and mus
cular soreness.
, . N
COUPON NO. 10—
Good for one 25c package of Vlck's
Vap-O-Rub Halve free, as long as
the free supply lasts. If your drug
| gist has given away all his Tree
; packages, try a jar on 30 days' trial.
■
j Name
: | " -
1 Address
FOODS
THEY BUILD OR DESTROY
Amazing but Rarely Suspected Truths About the
Things You Eat.
(Copyright. 1916, by Alfred W. McCann.)
CHAPTER 2.
The house that we live in is built
of selected materials, but the inmates
of that house, in building their own
tissues, leave everything to chance.
We spend time, energy, money and
employ the skill of architects and de
signers in building n home. We see
to it that the foundation stones are
well laid, the bricks and mortar of the
best, the beams solid, and strong; the
woodwork and plaster without flaw,
skillfully joined. We superintend the
installation of the boiler and inspect
tile steam fittings. There must be no
guesswork about the gas pipes. The
electric wires must be carefully insu
lated and. protected by proper fuses.
All the workers are trained and skil
ful men.
But the work is not done. A city
inspector examines the plumbing to
see that it is not defective. Thorough
ness is the price we pay for durabil
ity in house construction, for we know
that poor material, sham and veneer,
mere surface and show, will betray
themselves inevitably.
Oh, the pity of the shell house! But
even for such a house what careful
scrutiny is exercised in selecting rugs,
carpets, furniture and curtains. What
intolerance is declared at the discovery
of sham velvet,- loaded silk, imitation
leathers, shoddy fabrics, inferior
woodwork, cheap plaster, leaky pipes,
and badly fitted windows!
The house that we build to live in, to
rear our children in, to call our home,
must be an honest house.
But the inmates of that house, the
mother, the child, what of them?
What mysterious building process
takes care of them when we ignore the
building materials with which exact
ing nature does her work and of
which the exacting skill of man is.
but a symbol and a shadow?
You solid house, it was not per
mitted that your parts should be
thrown together by chance! It was
not fitting that your owner should say,
"Let there be a house," leaving all
else to capricious fortune or the haz
ards of a guess.
You were no blind accident, no
wliini, caprice, or empty dream, yet
you were miide to shelter little, living
children, ministering women, useful
men.
What of that? What of the human
framework, the supporting bones, the |
connecting tissues? What about the i
human boiler and the human pipes,
the Internal organs, arteries and
glands? What about the human wires,
the nerves, and fibers that carry light
to the human brain and convey its or
derly messages to the other parts of
the human machine? What about
tho humhn laboratory where all life's
processes are regulated? What about
the human chemicals wherewith these
processes are carried on?
When the house is built the work is
done, but the wonderfully organized
inmate of that house is constantly
wearing and wasting away. Repair is
necessary; incessant, never-ending re
pair.
What about the proper repair ma
terials? Is it not known that they
Woman For Vice-President
on the Socialist Ticket
Special to the Telegraph
St. I.ouis, Mo., Jan. 11. For the first
time in history a woman Is a candidate
for the nomination for Vice-President
of the United States. She is Mrs. Kate
Richards O'Hare, a prominent Socialist
in the West. Her name will appear on
ballots to be circulated among Social
ists this week and she is a popular can
didate for nomination.
Deaths and Funerals
LEO BOLDOSBER
Funeral services for IJOO Boldosser,
aged 26, who died Sunday afternoon
at the Harrisburg Hospital, will be
held Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock
from the home of his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. David B. Boldosser, 6.18
Seneca street. Burial will be made in
the Enola Cemetery.
I.ITTI.E ORPHAN OIKS
Mary Louise Kuhlwind, 12-year-old
daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Wil
liam Kuhlwind, died at the Doysvllle
Orphanage yesterday morning of heart
trouble. Funeral services will be held
at the home of her sister, 2020 Brlggs
street, on Thursday afternoon, at 3
o'clock, and conducted by the Rev. J.
B. Markward, pastor of the Bethlehem
Lutheran Church. Burial will he made
at the East Harrisburg Cemetery.
MRS. MARY M. JACOBS
Mrs. Mary M. Jacobs, aged 6;i, widow
of Dr. George Jacobs, died at her home,
105 Rellv street, last evening, after a
short ilness of three days of pneu
monia. She Is survived by the follow
ing children: Mrs. Davis Switzer, Jerry
Mart man and Harry Jacobs. The funeral
services will be held at the homo Thurs
day afternoon, at 2 o'clock, and con
ducted by the Rev. S. K. Rupp. Burial
will be made at the East Harrisburg
Cemetery.
MRS. 101,1.KN MILLER
Mrs. Ellen Miller, aged 51, died at the
home of Mrs. Smith, 1703 Green street,
on Saturday evening after a lingering
illness. The funeral services were held
this afternoon, at 2 o'clock, conducted
bv ihe Rev. Mr. Bassler, pastor of tho
First f'nited Brethren Church. Burial
| was made at the Harrisburg Cemetery.
RICHARD HKF.SKH
Funeral services for Richard Reeser,
aged 80, a resident of this city all his
life, were held yesterday afternoon at
the home. 2335 North Fourth street.
For a number of years ho was janitor
at the Susquehanna open-air school.
The school children attended the ser
vices in a body yesterday. He is sur
vived bv his wife and three children,
George, Charles and Mary Reeser.
MRS. SADIP3 M. FIRST
Mrs. Sadie M. First, aged 53, wife of
Samuel First, died on Sunday evening
at her home, 612 Peffer street. She Is
survived bv her husband, three daugh
ters. Mrs. E. C. Grundon, Mrs. U M.
Bashore, of this city, and Mrs. H. I.
Shoop. of Auburn. N. Y.; a son, Samuel,
this citv; two sisters and a brother,
Mrs B. F. Knupp. Mrs. Ylngst and Ab
ner Forest. also four grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held at the
home Thursday afternoon, at 2 o'clock,
the Rev. A. M. Stamets. of Augsburg
Lutheran Church, officiating. Burial
will be made at East Harrisburg Ceme
tery.
MRS. MARY A. FRITZ
Mrs. Mary A. Frit*, aged 70, widow
of Henry C. Fritz, died yesterday morn
ing at her home, {lO6 Oowden street, of
Uphold fever. Funeral services will lie
held this evening at the home, at 7:30
o'clock. Burial will be made at New
Rloomlield.
cini.n duos
Funeral services for Doris Mae
Booser, two-year-old daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles E. Booser, 1.126 Derry
street will be held to-morrow after
noon, at 2 o'clock, the Rev. William N.
Vates. pastor of Fourth Street Church
of God, officiating. Burial will he made
at the East Harrisburg Cemetery.
Olßsi AT CHICAGO
George H. D. Smith, a resident In this
citv for thirty-six years, died last Fri
day in Chicago. He was ft member of
Dauphin l>idge. No. 160, Independent
Order of Odd Fellows, and Bayard
Lodge, No. 150, Knights of Pythias. He
is survived by his wife, Sarah A. Smith,
and two children, Brltoinarte B. and
Seniors 11., all of Chicagn,
are to be found in food and food
alone? Honesty for the sheltering
house and sham, fraud, makebelieve
for its suddenly careless, indifferent,
whimsical owner.
No businessman tolerates an ineffi
cient unit in his organization. No
musician tolerates a Jarring note in his
symphony. No physician tolerates,
knowingly, the presence of incompatl
blcs in his prescriptions: but In twen
ty million homes throughout the
United States to-day there is complac
ent toleration for food frauds, consum
ed with smacking lips and smiling
eyeß, that are cruelly crippling the
race.
Perhaps you believe that these are
wild words, but I intended to prove
every statement here set down so con
vincingly and so conclusively that not
one of them can be challenged suc
cessfully.
I nave spent many years at this
work, but until 1912 made little prog
ress. My public utterances were
greeted in high places with lofty sar
casm and swept aside by the authori
ties as unworthy of consideration.
Then came a long period of drag
ging the truth into the courts. During
the three years dating from January,
1913, to the end of 1915, in municipal.
State and federal courts I have obtain
ed the conviction of three hundred
food fakirs who, prior to their prose
cution, hid profitably behind the
screens prepared by the authorities
who denied emphatically that my "un
supported charges" were true. The
court records In all these cases, with
out a single exception having with
stood the scrutiny of judge and jury,
have finally opened to my story the
independent newspapers of the coun
try, and at last the fruits of a long
and strenuous struggle are to he given
to the people.
A hundred food frauds constitute
the building material upon which
"Young America" depends for growth
and sustenance under the eyes of the
law. Every pound of these food frauds
is a pound of excess baggage borne by
the growing child, the prospective
mother, and the invalid.
Every pound of food that has been
juggled, changed, denatured, or drug
ged Is balanced by a pound of human
flesh. Commercial wizardry attempts
to perform the impossible task of sup
plying the human family with food of
a kind that will not support the life
of animals, and at the same time
maintain indefinitely the dignity of Its
position.
It parades the signatures of chem
ists and learned scientists in order per
haps that by the same process of
magic these eminent names may sup
ply the missing elements on which
life depends.
Wondrous are the ways of Nature,
but she will suffer no wilful abuse.
Her laws were established by a Higher
Power, and poor man, who feebly at
tempts to imitate those laws In his
construction of a house or a machine,
turns his back in the presence of a
growing child, and forgets that the
child also is subject to those laws.
Liner Threatened With
Destruction Docks Safely
New York. Jan. 11.—The French
| liner Lafayette which was threatened
with destruction in anonymous mes
sages sent to Henry Clews, Jr., and
j others who booked passage from
Bordeaux, arrived here to-day and re
ported that neither a submarine nor
a mine had been sighted during the
voyage.
B. J. Morrison, a Philadelphia coal
engineer, who has been touring in
France, Spain and Italy, was another
arrival.
"Foreign orders for coal," he said,
"are greater than can be filled. The
demand will continue after the war
and it has been estimated by competent
authorities that France alone will be
compelled to import approximately
20,000,000 tons of coal annually for
the next twenty years. This is due to
the crippling of the coal mining indus
try by the war and by the demand for
fuel that will have to be met from
Industrial establishments."
Warships Talk by Radio
Over 2,500 Miles of Land
/ Special to the Telegraph
Washington. D. C.. Jan. 11. Flag
ships of the Atlantic and the Pacific
fleets were In radio communication
yesterday across about 2,500 miles of
intervening land. The battleship Wy
oming, near Cape Ilenry, reported to
the Navy Department that messages
exchanged with the San Diego at Guay
maa, Mexico, were strong and easily
I read.
I Unusual static conditions probably
made possible this conversation, the
feat of communication between the two
I fleets over such an extent of land never
| before having been accomplished. Im
proved apparatus recently installed on
the big ships of the navy also aided to
I the success of the test.
j PJAJMBKKK' EXAMINATION JAN. 17
The Plumbers' Examining Board
I will hold the first examination of the
Jyear for master and journeymen
11 plumbers Monday. January 17, in the
j offices of the City Health department.
I Quickest, Surest Cough ®
I Remedy is Home- |
Made
ft Kfinllr Prepared la a Few Mia- ffi
| utea. (heap but I nrqualrd ®
Some people are constantly annoyed
from one vear s end to the otlier with a
persistent bronchial cough, which is whol
ly unnecessary. Here is a home-made
remedy that gets right at the cause and
will make you wonder what became of it.
Get 2% ounces Pinex (50 cents worth)
from any druggist, pour into a pint bottle
and hll the bottle with plain granulated
sugar syrup. Start taking it at once.
Gradually but surely you will notice the
phlegm thin out and then disappear al
together, thus ending a cough tnat you
never thought would end. It also loosens
•he dry, hoarse or tight cough and heals
the inflammation in a painful cough with
remarkable rapidity. Ordinary coughs
are conquered by it in 24 hour's or less.
Nothing better for bronchitis, winter
coughs and bronchial asthma.
J his Pinex and Sugar Syrup mixturs
makes a full pint— enough to last a
family a long time—at a cost of only 54
, Keeps perfectly and tastes pleas-
Easily prepared. Full directions
with Pinex.
Pinex is a special and highly concen
i trated compound of genuine Norway pine
I extract, rich in guaiacol, and is famous
the world over for its ease, certainty and
promptness in overcoming bad coughs,
' shest and throat colds.
! . the genuine. Ask your druggist
I for .?.% ounces Pinex," and do not accept
invthing else. A guarantee of absolute
latisfaction, or money promptlv refunded
roes with this prec ration. The Pinex
i It. Wa>u.#j InlL
Commerce Chambers to
Hear Talk on Holland
Members of the Harrisburg Cham
ber of Commerce nave been invited to
attend a. dinner at the Engineers'
Club,, Front and Chestnut streets
Thursday evening at 6 o'clock, to meet
A. A. Pfanstichl and J. Bendiln, of
Amsterdam, Holland, representing the
American Export Chamber of Com
merce. Mr. Pfanstiehl will
deliver a short talk on "Holland,"
illustrated with lantern slides. Hol
land is the big gateway to Germany
at this time.
APPOI NTS COM MITTKKS
FOR MEN'S BIBLE CLASS
Nathan Burnom, newly elected pres
ident of the men's Bible class of the
Lutheran Church of the Redeemer
has appointed the following commit
tees for the ensuing year: Social com
mittee, 11. E. Jones, C. Glenn Fickes,
D. A. Shaffer, R. H. Sheesley and
William Pensingor; lookout committee,
J. W. Highlands, F. Stouffer, Jesse
Wells, Jr., Joe Scott and C. E. De-
Hart.; membership committee, Harry
Beaver, Henry Geisel, E. S. Hoerner,
W. J. Shuey and P. Longenberger; de
votional committee. John Hauck,
Frank Bowers, E. Flohr and Hugh
Cover; paper committee, A. L. Hieh
ener; class picnic committee, J. W.
Colestock, George Witmerj Frank
Stouffer, A. L. Miehener, Howard E.
Jones, C. Glenn Fickes, David Shaffer,
William Pensinger and Raymond
Sheesley.
The newly elected officers who will
assume their positions at the first
business meeting this year which will
be held Tuesday evening, January 11,
follows; President, Nathan Burnam;
vice-president, William Pensingor;
treasurer, George Witmer; secretary,
R. H. Sheesley; chorister, Frank
Hartman; reporter, J. D. Wells, Jr.;
pianist, Margaret Cover; librarians.
Guy Sprout, John Witmer and Jesse
Wells; assistant secretaries, Joe Scott
and A. L. Miehener; assistant pianist,
Esther Stouffer.
The clafcs banquet will be held next
month when the part of the class rep
resenting the color blue will be the
guests of part representing the color
red, the former having defeated the
latter in a contest for attendance dur
ing the last quarter.
WILLIAM STERLING BA'PIIS
AT FAHNESTOCK IIALI
The pages of Dickens will come to
life when William Sterling Battis, the
celebrated impersonator, comes to
Fahnestock Hall to present "Life
Portrayals" of a long line of the im
mortal characters created by the
great English novelist and presented
by Mr. Battis in "Life Portrayals," and
Nicholas Nlckleby. Three recitals will
be given— to-morrow evening, Thurs
day, January 20, and Thursday, Jan
uary 27. Course tickets are now on
sale at the Y. M. C. A. building. Sec
ond and Locust streets. The issue is
limited to five hundred.
A Prescription i nr.. » rom Girl
hood to Old Age- Has Been a
Blessing to Womanhood.
Johnstown, Pa. —"I can speak high
ly of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip
tion. It has been used by myself and
one other member of our family. We
have always found it just, as repre
sented and perfectly satisfactory. We
have also used Dr. Pierce's Pleasant
Pellets. They are a reliable medi
cine." — MRS. ELIZABETH BOYLE, 303
Haynes Street, Johnstown.
When a girl becomes a woman, when
a woman becomes a mother, when a
woman ]lasses through the changes of
middle life, are the three periods of
life when health and strength are
most needed to withstand the pain and
distress ofien caused by severe or
ganic disturbance- 0 .
At the.se critical times women
best fortified by the use of Dr. Pierce'
Favorite Prescription, ail old remedy
of proved worth that keeps the entire
female system perfectly regulated and
in excellent condition.
If you are a sufferer, if your daugh
ter. mother, sister need help get. Dr.
Pierce's Favorite Prescription in liquid
or tablet form from any medicine dealer
today. Tiien address Doctor Pierce,
Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo. X. Y., and get
confidential medical advice entirely
free. You can also obtain a free book
on woman's diseases.
Dr. Pierce's Pellet*-, regulate and in
vigorate stomach, liver and bowels.
Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical
Adviser —a great doctor book —a family
book of over 1000 pages, cloth bound—
answers many important question re
garding sickness. Your free, copy will
be sent on receipt of three dimes (or
30 one-cent stamps) t" pay wrapping
and mailing chaws I'Om Dr. Pierce,
Invalids' llote! N 'tili Alain Street,
Buffalo. N. Y.
TETTER^
Multigraphing, Typewriting. Address
ing. Folding, Inserting:. Sealing:. Stamp
ing, and all mailing- work a specialty.
P. O. Box 436, Harrlsbuig, Pa.
THE LETTER SHOP, Bell 44)38-.).
EDUCATIONAL
School of Commerce
Troup Tluildliig 15 So. Market Sq.
Day and Night School
22(1 Year
| Commercial and Stenographic Courses
Bell Phone 1946-J
Harrisburg Business College
Day and Night
Bookkeeping, Shorthand. Civil Service
Thirtieth Year
.129 Market St. Harrisburg, Pa.
OFFICE TRAINING SCHOOL
Kaufman Bide. 4 S. Market Sa.
Training That Secures
Salary Increasing Positions
In the Office
Call or send today for interesting
booklet "The Art of Getting Along In
tlie World." Bell phone 694-' R.
" Foc M For Headaches M "
II I «wr
Jonestown. Pa., 1-31-15
I have tried au iniiuy remedleii (or
headaches and nonr proved aatla.
factory aa the t.'af-a-so Anll-Pa| n |
Tableta. I would advlaa all who aof- '
fer with headaches and neuralgia ( n
try theia. I think thay have no '
ei|Bul. I
MRS. W. H. ZEHKINO.
Children Cry for Fletcher's
IV'mIIi!! M
Tho Kind You Have Always Bought lias borne the signa
ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his
personal supervision for over 30 years. Allow no one
to deceive you in this. Counterfeits, Imitations and
•• Just-as-good " are but experiments, and endanger th«j
health of Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Castoria 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 Rowels,
assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children's Panacea —The Mother's Friend.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years
THE CKNTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY.
A REAL FLESH BUILDER
FOR THIN PEOPLE
Who Would Increase Weight And
Put On Healthy Stay-There
Flesh
Thin men and women who would
like to increase their weight with 10
or 15 pounds of healthy "stay-there"
fat should try eating a little Sargol
with their meals for a while and note
results. Here is a good test worth try
ing. First weigh yourself and measure
yourself. Theji take Sargol—one tab
let with every meal —for two weeks.
Then weigh and measure yourself
again. It isn't a question of how you
look or feel or what your friends say
and think. The scales and tape meas
ure will tell their own story. Many
people, having followed these simple
directions, report weight increases of
from five to eight pounds with con
tinued gains under further treatment.
I This Week II
I Will Be Your j
Final Opportunity I
To become a Member of our
Christmas Savings Iji
Cliab ||
J For the Year 1916
Union Trust Company j
of Pennsylvania j
■ ■
iCLIP THIS COUPON FOR >
The American Government
AND
: The Panama Canal
' By FREDERIC J. IIASKIN. !
< » The Books That Show Uncle Sam at Work. .
The Harrisburg Telegraph 1
<• « L
HOW TO GET THESE TWO BOOKS FOR 98 CENTS Cut f
| this coupon from this paper, present it at our office with 98 §
, cents, to cover the cost of production and distribution, and tho f
t set is yours. Fifteen cents extra by mail.
\ SOME FACTS ABOUT THESE BOOKS Both are the same
size and bound exactly alike In heavy cloth. Each has about
i 400 pages printed on line book paper. Both are profusely illus- 1
' trated with official etchings, drawings and maps. *
< ' TO OUR READERS We are distributing these patriotic I
9 books solely because of their great educational merit and our I
belief that they should be In every American home.
| BuyT LESS Coal
/ The better the coal yo« bur —the leas you hire to bay—and the 1
lees you have to bay, the lower becomes your anrrecata coal expend!- I
tare. I
, Slnca all cool —good, batter and kaat— coete the sane pair ton, doat .
1 you think It the part of wisdom to cat the bast (Or your mo nay. and I"
1 , keep the total expendltara down? I
Buy Montgomery Coal —its Quality has bean knuown tor yiws 1
I there Is none better. I '
J. B. MONTGOMERY
1 Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets j
Try Telegraph Want Ads
Sargol does not of Itself make fat
but mixing with your food itß purpose
Is to help the digestive organs turn the
fats, sugars and starches of what you
have eaten, into rich, ripe fat produc
ing nourishment for the tissues anil
blood—prepare it in an easily assimi
lated form which the blood can read
ily accept. A great deal of this nour
ishment now passes from thin people's
bodies as waste. Sargol is designed
to stop the waste and make the fat
producing contents of the very sama
meals you are eating now develop
pounds and pounds of healthy
flesh between your skin anil
bones. Sargol is nonlnjurious,
pleasant, efficient and inexpensive.
George A. Gorgas and other leading
druggists are authorized to sell it in
large boxes —forty tablets to a pack
age on a guarantee of weight increase
or money back as found in every pack
age.—Advertisement.