2 Cm/tAI PffMYIVAMA AtWS FIRE DESTROYS SHANTY IN YARDS Shelter For Brakemen at Enola Burns; New Build ing Soon Special tr the Telegraph Enola. Pa.. Jan. 11. —The brake wen's shanty on the Amboy hump of the Knola yards was destroyed by fire last evening. The building "as erect ed by the employes of the hump as a shelter for brakemen. The fire was of an unknown origin. A new building will be erected. FIRF ESCAPE BUH.T New Cumberland, Pa.. Jan. 11. A fire escape have been built at But torff's Hall in Third street which is occupied by the Grammar school. /*M*> ff / TVRK/SH s.f jC/GARETrBS gj jlal iUjL inn Ir\ Ask Ihe I Merchants S0 For Whom j|fP We Work As To Our Ability We will gladly furnish you I with the list, but here's a I good plan: Notice the clean- 9 est windows— WE "DID" THEM. Harrisburg Window 1 Cleaning Co. OFFICE—BOB EAST ST. BeU Phone U3l-J Bring Your Old Shoes To Our New Location Larger quarters, more machinery, and just as centrally located and con venient as before, we hope to see all former patrons and many new ones at our new address, 18 X. Court street, rear of Patriot office. The Old Way The New--Our Way rf by the most approved method in best shoe Ts_^ factories and with the same modern ma chinery. Best white oak leather used and •AS OUR. F DR£MTHTRS:DIIT ir good as new. Work Called For, Delivered in City, or Done While You Wait Prices Reasonably Low, Consistent With Best Material and Workmanship City Shoe Repairing Co. PBF* 18 North Court treet **^| C. B. Shope, Proprietor ~ Bell Phone TUESDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JANUARY 11. 1916. Perry County Couple Wedded Fifty Years Special to 11ic Telegraph | New Bloomficld, Pa.. Jan. 11.—Mr. ! and Mrs. Jonas Xoll, of Green Park, celebrated their golden wedding anni j versa ry cn Saturday at their home. : They were married by the Rev. p. W." i Kellev. a former Reformed minister jof New Bloomfleld. at which time i George Myers, of Newport, and Mrs. I Elisabeth Stutzman, of Harrisburg, were present. They were present at the golden wedding. The couple took up housekeeping on the Oliver Rice farm. Center township, near New Bloomfleld. They have lived at Green Park for forty-four years. DRY FORCES ACTIVE Special to the Telegraph Carlisle, Pa., Jan. 11.—No license ! advocates in this county have inau gurated their campaign against the j granting of license in this county by (circulation of petitions of remon strance against several county hotels. Following a mass meeting Sunday, a | petition was circulated against the I Franklin House, Carlisle, conducted by C. J. Mahoney, formerly of Har risburg. The Letort Hotel here and the Roiling Springs Hotel are said to be targets for the dry forces and will be protested in the session of court j to be held on Monday, January 31. ! CHECKER PLAYING IN" COURT . ' HOVSE MAY SOON BE STOPPFD Special to the Telegraph Carlisle. Pa.. Jan. 11.—The report- j ed pending decision of the new board of county commissioners to revoke the j checker playing privileges of the Cumberland county courthouse is causing much discussion among fol lowers of the game. For the greater j part of a century this amusement has, had its headquarters in the county j buildings and the proposal to put an end to it is meeting with some ■ opposition. Since the present courthouse build- j ing was built, about half a century ago, there has been a special room j for the checker players, some times in one location and agiun in another i but with every change and improve- i ment arrangements have been made for the accommodation of the players. OVERCOME BY COAL GAS Special to the Telegraph Marietta. Pa., Jan. 11. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Stafford, of this place. 1 were almost asphyxiated with coal ■ eas Sunday night; that they are alive ! to-day is remarkable. Mr. Stafford i was awakened in the night and was ! deathly sick. In some manner he ; managed to get to a window, and ' after recovering, found his wife in a precarious condition. She was re- I vived with difficulty. RRANDRETH !J ""Jr PILLS, 3 An Effective Laxative jSj Purely Vegetable M Constipation, f J Indigestion, Biliousness, «t«. j 3 QORQ Qat Night Q 1 until relieved M Ohscolate-Coated or Plain s+2 £s<IjmA^UUL£IOCQ[UKL9 : Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect June 27. 1915 ! TRAINS leave Harrisburg— i For Winchester and Martlnsburg at 5:03, •7:5:: a. in.. *3:40 p. m. For Hagerstown, Chambersburg, Car lisle. Mec!ianiesbur_g_ and intermediate stations at *5:03. *7:52. *11:53 a. m.. •3:40. 5:37. *<:4o, *11:00 p. ni. Additional trains for Ca.-lisle and Mechanicsburg at 9:48 a. in.. 2:16, 3:26 6:30. 9:35 a. rn. For Dilisbui g at 5:03, *7:52 and •11:53 a. m.. 2:16. '3:40, 5:37 and 6:30 p. in. •Daily. All other trains daily except Sunday. H. A. RIDDLE. J. H. TONGE. G. P. A. Countess Ida Threatens i Arrest to Get Money to Pay Her Hotel Bills Special to the Telegraph . | Atlantic City. Jan.ll. —"l'm through ,trvlng to get control of my money and • | estate through the courts for a while. • JMy next move will be to cause several r arrests to break up this ring that is , framing up on me." declared the Countess Ida Marie von Claussen Dona • to-day. when asked if she would ap . peal from the ruling of Justice Thomp i kins, of White Plains, denying her mo . tion tor relief from the custody of her ' brother. The Countess didn't seem much wor r ried about the decision of the court , and was Joking with her husband over love letters he had found in her trunk, which arrived from Xew York to-day. | "You know I should have destroyed : those love letters long before we were J married." said the Countess. "They ? 'are over two \ears old and there hasn't i been anybody else since I met my 11 Frank. "My brother has informed the hotel that he will he responsble for our bills here, so we should worry! He has a | right to pay them! Goodness knows I have enough money lying around over thero in New York over which he has control." MRS. KATHARINE YHLER Special to the Telegraph j __ Waynesboro. Pa., Jan. 11. Mrs. Katharine Yhler, I*ebanon, who came i to Chatnbersburg with her sister. Mrs. 1 Harry S. Gillespie, East King street, j several weeks ago and was ill at that; [lime from dropsy, died at the home ; of Captain and Mrs. Gillespie Sunday j evening, aged 61 years. She was a daughter of the late Samuel F. Fa j ber and is survived by a number of brothers and sisters: Mrs. Mary E. Stone. Phoenix, Arizona; Mrs. Clara | Rogers. Johnstown, Pa.: Mrs. James j Haffner, Steelton, Pa.; Mrs. George F. Shaffer. Hagerstown, Mil.; John E. j Faber, Washington, D. C., and Mrs. Gillespie. Mrs. Uhler was a member ! of the Reformed Church of Lebanon, j Burial in Lebanon. JOHN A. SCHATZ DIES Special to the Telegraph j Carlisle. Pa., Jan. 11.—John A. Schatz, a leader in fraternal circles ,: here, died at his home here early I yesterday morning after an illness of 'three weeks of diabetis. He was 4 4 | years old and formerly lived in Dan j ville. coming here about 20 years ago. j He was connected with the Lindner 1 Shoe Company during the greater part ■' of that time, l, ' DIF.S WITH OCT SEEING CHILD Special to the Telegraph ;! Carlisle, Pa., Jan. 11.— Without see i ing his only child which was born i just half an hour before he succumb . jedlo a lingering illness, James Dtir j nin, East street, Carlisle, died at his j home here Sunday. The child was I born shortly before noon and he died I 30 minutes later. | j MARIETTA MAN BURNED Special to the Telegraph Marietta. Pa., Jan. 11. ,T. Barr Spangler, councilman of the Third ward, was badly burned Monday morning, and the furniture and bed clothing in the bedroom were destroy ed. when Mr. Spangler was heating some tui*pentine and lard over an electric heater to grease his children. Luckily, the children were tn the bath • room at the time, or they would have i been burned. Mr. Spangler threw i the burning fluid out the window, and | his hands were badly burned and his i hair singed. MRS. RIIINESMITH BI'RIED Special to the Telegraph I ' B'nln, Pa., Jan. 11.—Funeral serv | ices were held for Mrs. Mary Ellen : Rhinesmitli yesterday in the Reformed ; Church, conducted by the Rev. J. W. ; Keener. Burial was made in the Union j Cemetery, t ; _______________________ ; BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes 0 Indigestion. Onepackage 1 proves it. 25c at all druggists. MOTOR APPARATUS ON PARADE IN HONOR OF JUD 191b Firemen's Union to Hold Second Annual Banquet at Plaza Tomorrow Night: City Officials Among Speakers JUDGE EUGENE C. BONNIWELL ARTHUR L. PATTON. President of State Firemen's Associa- Chairman of Local Committee on Ar ♦ inn I Vonun onto tion. The second annual banquet of thej "1914 Firemen's Union" will be held | at The Plaza to-morrow night. The j guest of honor will be Judge Eugene j C. Bonniwell of Philadelphia, presi dent of the Pennsylvania State Fire-1 men's Association. Other guests will j include Judge George Kunkel, and old j and new city officials. Covers will be | placed for 75. The committee in charge of arrange ments with Arthur L. Patton as chair man. has planned a big celebration, and an enthusiastic reception for Judge Bonniwell. For the first time since the new motor apparatus has been in service, it will be on parade. The members of the 1914 Union in clude all representatives who figure in the big convention during October, 1914. They will meet at 420 Market Sophomore Debating Team 1 Defeats Three Freshmen Special to the Telegraph | Annville, Pa.. Jan. 11.—The sopho more debating team of Lebanon Valley i College won from the freshmen team ; in the Kalozetean Literary Society i rooms last evening. The sophomores defended the affirmative side of the question. "Resolved, That President j Wilson's plan of preparedness should be accepted and adopted by the Con- , Kress of the United States." The sophomore members were P. Shannon. R. Keira and R. Mease. The three first year members were H. Ramsey, E. Snyder and H. Arnold. The three Mills, deputy prothonotary of Lebanon j county, acted with R. Williams and W. McConnel as judges. DIES IX PITTSBURGH New Cumberland. Pa.. Jan. 11. Charles Leihy of Fourth street, re-j celved word of the death of his! brother, John Leihy which occurred, : in a hospital at Pittsburgh from in-1 juries he received where he was em ployed. Mr. Leihy 'left for Pittsburgh Ito attend the funeral. j ACCUSED OF MURDER Sfecial to the Telegraph Hagerstosvn, Md.. Jan. 11. —The jury i summoned by Coroner John Anlteney | to investigate the cause of the death j of Giuseppe Ventorino. who was found , Friday at Security with his throat cut j and his head nearly severed, met in j this citv yesterday and returned a ver dict holding Antonio Cordino respon sible for the crime. Cordino was ar- j rested the day following the murder as J a suspect. UNION MEETINGS PLANNED Special to the Telegraph Mechanicsburg, Pa.. Jan. 11. At a meeting of the executive commit tee of the Mechanicsburg Christian Endeavor Union, which was recently formed for the purpose of increasing unity between the young peoples' societies of the town, it was planned j to hold meetings in the various! churches. A union orchestra and j union choir will furnish music for the | ■services. A banner will be presented! j to the society having the largest pro-! portion of Its members present. The I first meeting will be held next Sun-' I day e\ening at G:ls o'clock in the! i Methodist Episcopal church. ! APPOINTED CONSTABLE i Enola. January 11.— J. H. Haw kins of Enola has been appointed con- I stable by Judge Sadler, of East Penns ! boro township, to ser\ e the unex jpi red term of D. C. Miller, who re ! signed the office. For Pile Sufferers I n g", l. e e <ll i or protruding piles, hemorrhoids and i | all rectal troubles, in the privacy of your own home. 50c a box at all ( druggists. A single box often cures. ' ] I'ree sample for 4rlal with booklet : mailed free in plain wrapper, if you j send us coupon below. ! 1 FREE SAMPLE COUPON ! PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY, Pyramid Bldg., Marshall, Mich. Kindly send me a Free sample of Pyramid PilcTreatment, In plain wrapper. | Name ! Street | City State i Are You Weak, Nervous Exhausted? Don't feel like working, everything go i Ing wrong? Digestion poor, blood lin | povorished, cannot sleep? Dr. Emerick's Body Builder a Reconstructive Tonic. Is prescribed I by the famous Dr. EMERICK for these j conditions. Valuable alter a severe sickness. Price SI.OO. prepared by the I)r. M. L. Emerick Co., Ridgway. Pa. Sold In Ilarrlsburz at Gorgatf' Drug Store, i rangements. | street at 6.50 o'clock, where automo-1 j biles will be in waiting. At S o'clock I I the firemen will meet Judge Bonni j well, who is coming from Philadelphia. The tire apparatus with members of each company will be lined up along | Market street, and the head of the ; State Association will be given an old- I time firemen's welcome. With his es cort he will go to Market Square to review the parade. The banquet starts at 9 o'clock. Howard O. Holstein will be toastmas ter. Addresses will be made by Judge Bonniwell. Judge Kunkel. Mayor E. S. Meals, Commissioner E. 'A. Gross William S. Tunis and Colonel Henry C. liomming. The committee in charge of the ban quet includes Arthur L. Patton, chair man, William .Tauss, Howard O Hol stein and Joseph Hilton. B. M. Bubb, Prominent Dalmatia Man, Dies Special to the Telegraph Dalmatia. Pa.. Jan. 11. —b. M. Bubb, the oldest male resident of this place, and for forty-seven years a Justice of tne peace, died here yesterday follow ing a stroke of paralysis. Mr. Bubb was a school director for twenty-five years and during tne civil War was •postmaster. He was active in Sunday school and church work. Mr. Bubb was born here November 21, 1833. n e re am! e b, ,h«r < i" t " a K on in t,,e io,ai 301,001 VI j, h ! reeburg Academy, where [he studied engineering. Ho was en gaged in the mercantile business for M nn x» y .f, ars and was a candidate o.i the Republican ticket for tlie Legis lature. b ut was defeated. He is sur rhiwl * w 'dow and the following i chlklien. Mrs. Pauline Albert, of Sha mokin; T S. Bubb, cashier of the First National Bank, Milton: Henry, of Har risburg. and Lewis, of Millersbursr, who rv>™ « e Penns >'lvania Railroad Company; Arthur S., of Pen Argvl foreman for the Index Publishing w "" am »•»«—•» SUPERVISORS TO MEET Special to the Telegraph , t ariisie. Pa„ Jan. 11,—Judge S. B. Sadler will deliver the address of • welcome at the third annual conven l tion of county supervisors to lie held j here to-morrow morning. Ex-Con gressman Arthur R. Rupley and State 1 Highway Department men will be I the other speakers of the day. CAPTURE ESCAPED P \TIEVT special to the Telegraph York. Pa.. Jan. 11—William Dutton. who escaped from the York Hospital last Friday night, clad only in a night shirt, to escape arrest for assault and battery, was caught near Glen Rock yesterday and committed to Jail. Both his feet are frozen. RECITAL AT MECHANIC'SRI RG Special to the Telegraph Mechanicsburg. Pa.. Jan. 11. _ An i organ and song recital will he given i'] le Methodist Episcopal church on i Friday. February 4, by Clara B | Cromleigh. organist or Bethlehem j Lutheran church. Harrisburg, and Charles Harrison, tenor soloist of the ; Brick Presbyterian church. Fifth Avenue, New York City. Mr. Har rison is one of the prominent tenor singers of this country and sings for the Victor, Columbia and Edison companies. FREIGHT TRAIN'S HELD UP Special to the Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., Jan. 11.— Owing to the congested condition of the rail roads. freight trains loaded with goods of every description, on the Western Maryland railroad are being held on sidings along the entire length of the line. MARRIED IN HAGER.STOWX Special to the Telegraph Waynesboro. Pa., Jan. 11. Glen Ogle, a well-known young man In athletic circles of this place, and Miss Ethel Fisher, Greencastle, were mar ried in Hagerstovvn, Saturday even ing, by a Lutheran clergyman. Mr. and Mrs. Ogle left yesterday lor York, where they will make their future home, the groom having a position with the York Pattern Company. DIES AT AGE OF 00 Marietta, Pa., Jan. 11. George Morrison, aged 90 years, the oldest resident of Newcomer's Mills, died on Sunday night from infirmities of old age. after a long illness. He was one of the organizers of the Mountainville Mennonite church more than a half century ago. CLASS WILL MEET New Cumberland, Pa., Jan. 11. The Ever Faithful Bible class of the Church of God Sunday school will meet at the home of Mrs. Harry Breece in Ninth street on Thursday afternoon. DEPUTY INSTALLS OFFICERS Special to the Telegraph Annville. Pa., Jan. 11.—John H. Gallitin, of Annville. district deputy State councilor of the Fraternal Patri otic Americans, with a number of members of the Annville Council, Xo. 954. installed the officers of the council at Lebanon last evening. BANK ELECTS OFFICERS Special to the Telegraph Annville. Pa.. Jan. 11.-*—The People's Deposit Bank elected the following officers for the present year: Presi dent. John M. Early: vice-presidents, H. L. Klnports and Samuel Fry: cashier. J. Frank Smith: teller. M. H. Willielm: clerk, Austin J. Brandt; so licitor, E. E. McCurdy. Nine out of ten persons have this dread disease Pyorrhea—the most genera! 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 rectivc and preventive for pyor germ which is found in every rhea known to derttal science, j 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 whit;. 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 pected, is just starting its work ant taste in the mouth. ( 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 £"s L wrapped around every tube, using a corrective and pre- £ Symptoms described. A ventive treatment in your 25c two oz. tube is sufficient daily toilet. \\ A forsix ° r e ' ght f we< * sof^« t .. ~ , \II jHI pyorrhea treatment, (jet lo meet the need for such \W/\\ Senreco at your druggists a treatment and to enable U/ \ today, or send 4c in stamps everyone to take the neces- I or coin for sample tube and sary precautions against folder. Address The Sen this disease, a prominent I tanel Remedies Co., 503 dentist has put his own pre- fci—Union Central Bldg., Cin scription before the public Sample iiu cinnati, Ohio. ■inKiiiuiiniimtiiisiuMiiiiiHuiiiiuiwiitQjMMiiiiiiciiwoiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiuiiitiaiiiiiiiiiiiiinmiiiHiHintiiiiiHiiiiniiiMiniiit BREAKS A COLD IN A FEW HOURS "Pape's Cold Compound" is the Surest, Quickest Relief Known—lt's Fine! Belief comes instantly. A dose taken every two hours until three doses are taken will end grippe misery and break up a severe cold, either in the head, chest, body or limbs. It promptly opens clogged-up nos trils and air passages in the head, I , - 1,0 ur Librs '-A E w MINI ATEST BOOKS The Message. By A. J Dawson. (Published by The Page Co., $1.25 net.) "War Extra! War Extra! J.ondon Captured by the Germans!" is the headline that will catch your atten tion in looking over the varied list of fiction, history, and biography that nowadays makes one's brain whirl in the effort to know just what to read. "The Message" is a striking story in which the author forecasts the mighty struggle now being enacted on the istage of Europe, and it is, in truth, a ; fanciful flight of the imagination upon I which the reader is taken. The plot involves a German invasion of England and the capture of London by the Kaiser's army, and finally portrays the ultimate result of the war—an alliance | between England and America. Nat urally, the author must needs inter- | polate some romance into the story of , bloodshed and horror, and so there is, included the love tale of Dick Mordan and the engaging girl from Australia,; the Red Cross nurse, and the two j threads are woven together through- i out. | Perhaps the best idea of how the; story goes may be had from a logical j linking together of some of the more , important chapters which make a : readable whole, as follows: A stirring] week closes with an unusual Saturday night in London. The demonstration: in Hyde Park is followed by the au- j thentic news and Sunday night occurs in Eondon, a Sunday night long to be rente ibered. Eollows a tragic week, concluding with a black Saturday, proving England to be asleep. Wak ened at last, preparations are made, the sword of the lord is brought into play, blood proves to be thicker than water and hands are stretched out across the sea. Penalty, peace and the great alliance, and then —curtain. Kiiltur Cartoons. By Will Dyson. (The Page Co.. Boston. $1.00.) This set of rather extreme cartoons, made up into book form, are supposed to be a complete and just repudiation of the belligerent theory of life. Will Dyson, the artist, takes a figure based on the Kaiser, but essentially a sym bol on which to concentrate his hatred of the foolish assumptions, the cruel vanities, the waste of opportunity, the perversion and destruction, which is his case against militant monarchy, j It is undoubtedly a telling portrayal of his ideas concerning the Kaiser, but whether the majority of Americans agree with him or not is a matter that can be decided only by an examination j of his drawings. There is evidently no attempt to be aesthetic. The Fall j of Icarus, the. symbol of the sorceress | Circe, and others are used in an at tempt to portray the overwhelming vanity of Germany as seen by the ar tist. An Angel or Angel City Shortly after the publication of "Back llome," Mr. Cobb's first collec tion of Judge Priest stories, the au thor visited the Pacific Coast and spent a few days in Eos Angeles with his friend Charles E. Van Loan, author | of "Buck Parvin and the .Movies." The Angel City newspapermen were very kind to Cobb, interviewing him copiously, and Van Eoan suggested that it would be a graceful thing to re pay their courtesies with autographed copies of the new book. "Fine!" said Cobb. "Let's go buy 'em now." With Van Eoan he visited six book stores in rapid succession, and the fol lowing is a sample of the conversation which took place in each one: Cobb —Have you "Back Home?" Clerk—What is it—a book or a| magazine? Cobb —It's a book. Clerk —Ah —er —do yot. recall the name of the author? Cobb (surprised)—A man named Cobb wrote it—C-o-double-b, Cobb! Clerk (hopeful)—Sylvanus or Ty? Cobb (exploding)—No! No! No! lrvin S. Cobb. Clerk (disappointed)—Oh! Some other Cobb, eh? I don't think we have it. There hasn't been any call for it. Probably not a popular work, sir. And so on, with variations. No body had a copy of the book, appar ently nobody had ever heard of It. In the sixth store Cobb's patience left him and he leaned over the counter with a glare in lii* eye. He had just stops nasty discharge or nose run ning, relieves sick headache, dullness, feverishness, sore throat, sneezing, soreness and stiffness. Don't stay stuffed up! Quit blowing and snufling! Ease your throbbing head! Nothing 1 else in the world gives such prompt relief as "Pape's Cold compound" which costs only 25 cents at any drug store. It acts without assistance, tastes nice, causes no in convenience. Be sure you get tlio genuine. Don't accept something else "just as good.'' Insist on getting "Pape's Cold Compound," if you want to stop your cold quickly.—Advertise ment. - ja ary Tabl^i OTES wiTH p i & M ar. A7i TV been asked if he was not mistaken in the name of the book or the author or something. "Listen to me, stranger!" said the exasperated Kentuckian. "The name is 'Back Home,' and there is such a book, honest Injun. I know It because I wrote it myself. It's a right nice little book, I'm told, and if you can't afford to buy any copies of it I'll send you one with my compliments! Good day!" Cobb spent the rest of the after noon abusing the boneheaded booksell ers of Los Angeles. The only thing that lie didn't know was that Van 1.0-in had gone over the route earlier in the day and rehearsed the clerks, preparing them for Cobb's visit and | having them remove all copies of the | book from sight. Don't Let Soap Spoil Your Hair ; 1 When you wash your hair, be care- I ful what you use. Most soups and ' prepared shampoos contain too much I alkali, which is very injurious, as it j dries the scalp and makes the hair i brittle. | The best thing to use is just plain j mulsified cocoanut oil, for this is pure ! and entirely greaseless. It's very cheap, and beats the most expensive soaps or anything else all to pieces. ! You can get this at any drug store, | and a few ounces will last the wholo I family for months. I Simply moisten the hair with water ■ and rub it in, about a teaspoonful is 1 all that, is required. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, ! cleanses thoroughly, and rinses out | easily. The hair dries quickly and ! evenly, and is soft, fresh looking, bright, fluffy, wavy and easy to | handle. Besides, it loosens and takes i out every particle of dust, dirt and j dandruff. MEAT CAUSE OF LAME BACK AND KiDMEY TROUBLE 1 Take a glass of Salts to flush Kid neys if your back is aching. Noted authority says Uric Acid from meat irritates the Bladder. Meat forms uric acid, which excites •end overworks the kidneys in their efforts to filter it from the system. Begular eaters of meat must flush the kidneys occasionally. You must relieve them like you relieve your bowels, re moving all the acids, waste and poison, else you feel a dull misery In the kid ney region, sharp pains in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stom ach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheu matic twinges. The urine Is cloudw. full of sediment' the channels get irritated, obliging you to get up two or three times during the night. | To neutralize these irritating acids : and flush off the body's urinous wasto get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy: take a table spoonful In a. glass of water before 1 reakfast for a few days and your kid revs will then act fine and bladder dis orders disappear. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and '■ lemon juice, combined with lithia, and ! has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys and stop bladder irritation. Jad Salts is inexpensive; harmless and makes a delightful effervescent litlila-water i drink which millions of men and women take now and then, thus avoid ' ing serious kidney and bladder dis eases.—Adv.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers