8 WMFMsJjV7FR£Sn "THEIR MARRIED LIFE" Copyright by Interim lon*] Xfm Service "Dear me. Warren," said Carrie, caustically, "wherever did you set the money to buy Helen sueli a stunning coat and right on top of that give her a chaise tongue? Seems to me divi dends are paying well in the Curtis family." Carrie and Fred had Just arrived with little Roy, and Helen could see that she would have her hands full. Already Carrie was sarcastic about her sister-in-law's possessions, a subject that they had quarreled about more than once. "That was a little speculation of Warren's," explained Helen as she took Carrie into her room to remove her things. "Seculation? You don't mean to tell uie that Warren is doing any thing reckless with his money?" "Not anything particularly reck less. Yon can be sure that I would not allow that." Helen resolved that Carrie would not learn any thing more about it. so she changed the subject adroitly. Carrie fluffed up her hair at Helen's dressing table and examined her toilet silver minutely. Then she turned to the chaise longue which was piled with cushions and stood at the foot of the bed. "I must say that you and Warren do the craziest things with your money. To see this apartment any one would swear that you were a millionaire." Helen laughed gaily, and followed Carrie back to the living room. Bob and Louise were sitting on the Davenport, a book of engravings between them. Bob was still the eager boy that ho had been when Louise had married him, and they were still in love. Bob was always reaching for Louise's hand under neath the table and Louise still flushed when he looked at her. Helen had noticed it plenty of times and thought it delightful. Frances a Guest Frances Knowles was sitting in the big window chair, the sun strik ing lights from her red hair. As tliey all sat down together Helen excused herself and went into the diniiig room to see about dinner. She was having the family with her this year, and it always meant a great responsibility. When she had suggested having Frances Knowles at the little party she had added that it might be just as well to have an outsider present so that Carrie could not as easily start a family discussion. Warren had hesitated, not knowing whether be angry or not, but had finally decided to be good tempered and had laughed. "Have things th e way you want them, but try to keep peace in the i family by all means." And so Helen had asked Frances, and in the afternoon a few others were dropping In for late tea. Car rie and Fred always went home early on account of Roy and old Mr. Curtis, who was very feeble now that his wife had died. P. 0. Aspirant Swears He Is Loyal to Flag Special to the Telegraph Wiikes-Barre, Pa., Jan. 12.—1n an affidavit which he sent to the Post master General denying that he slurred the American flag. Dr. D. C. Melbane, who has been tentatively selected by j the President as postmaster of this city offers as proof of his patriotism the fact, that he has three American flags In his home. One of these flags he swears, is 10 by " * 5 War upon Pain! * Pain is a visitor to every homo ana w usually it comes quite unexpectedly. But you are prepared for every emergency it M you keep a small bottle of Sloan'a H Liniment handy. It is the greatest Ijjlfl S!S!|il]iH jiiiijiiil Hii! P** n JWfef ever discovered. _ | ill ji) jlj'l Simply laid on the skin— *|j; | [jjl ! I no rubbing required—lt drives Bl the pain away instantly. It is M' MI! |j I jlj really wonderful. ■ * Sloan's |«| S i! i ■ BUS FAIK H jj|l LinimentJgp SORKMUSCI.I*!J ( The New Labor Law The new Workmen's Compensation Act is now in ef fect. If you are an employer of labor you should be familiar with every phrase of this most important piece of legislation. We are prepared to supply this act in pamphlet form with side headings for easy reference. Single copies 25c with very special prices on larger quan tities. The Telegraph Printing Co. PRINTING—BINDING—DESIGNING PHOTO-ENGRAVING HARRISBURG, PENNA. *• J i WEDNESDAY EVENING, Dinner was a series of long, tedi ous courses, punctuated by frequent remarks from Carrie concerning her new maid, which made Mary flush and Helen furious. Frances saved the situation several times by a light conversation which she used to cover awkward pauses. Dinner ended with more Jollity and good will than a family dinner had ended in some years, as Helen remarked to Warren in an aside. "Helen," said Farnces, slipping her band in Helen's arm, "who all is coming up this afternoon?" "The Bells, of course, and Jack Parmelee, and Dr. Marshall, and a girl from the West that I haven't met." "Are you going to have friends this afternoon, Helen?' questioned Carrie, who stood just behind them. Carrie Protests. "Some people are coming up for late tea." "Late tea. that will be after we have left, of course'."' "About 5:30," said Helen, hoping that Carrie would not take an op portunity to make things uncom fortable. "t'f course, we are leaving early, so that you need not be worried." Poor Helen groaned inwardly. "Since you and Warren have met this Bohemian crowd you certainly have put your relatives out of sight and hearing." "Now, Carrie." remonstrated Helen weakly. She never knew what to do when Carrie started these tactics and Carrie knew it quite well. "It seems to me. however, that you are Influencing Warren. He never used to be this way. Warren was always a great family man." "And he still is." said Helen firmly, "and so am I, and we both shall always be glad to have you meet our friends. The fact Is so obvicuv that it hardly needs an argument to confirm it." Carrie sniffed and with flaming cheeks sailed out into the living room. "Fred. I think we had better take an early train," she said, with ominous quiet. "Leave now; why of course not." said Warren, who was comfortably smoking, "We might interfere with Helen's tea." said Carrie harshly. Warren met Helen's eyes and rose to the emergeijcy beautifully. "I am sure that Helen never gave you tbat impression, r'arrie." he said calmly. "We'd be glad to have you meet our friends. Sit down and don't he foolish." Ca-rie, much to Helen's surprise, down, and the conversation be came general. Helen, slipping out five minutes later, met Frances in the ball; "What an awful woman." said France 3 with mock seriousness. "This family business is terrible, isn't it, dear? I certainly feel for you." ( \no(lior instalment of tliis inter esting story will appear here soon.) 1 15 feet, "and is one of the largest and I handsomest flags in the city." I In the atfldavit Dr. Melbane swears I "that the charges contained in a letter from one Maurice Zeizler, to Joseph H. j Tumulty, dated January 4, 1916. in ! which Melbane is charged with utter ances derogatory to the American flag, are absolutely false. That he never used the language charged to him by the said Zeizler, either in his store or 1 elsewhere, or any language to any one reflecting in any manner on the Amer ican flag, and any charge that he did so is a malicious falsehood." Zeizler gave out a statement in re ply, in which he says that he has made affidavit that Dr. Melbane in sulted the flafe by claiming "it is not my flag; I am a Southerner." NOVEMBER TOLL WAS VERY LARGE Industrial Accidents Greater Than Have Occurred in Quite a Long Time Unusual activity due to war orders and the heavy demands for domestic use are believed to be the reason why- November showed the largest num ber of industrial accidents of any month in years according to reports made to the Department of Labor and Industry. Plants making reports to the State numbered 20,571, the larg est number on record. The number of accidents in No vember totalled 6,098, ninety-eight re sulting fatally, in September, which has held the record, the accidents numbered 5,613, there being 54 fa talities. Just 606 of those hurt in No vember were hurt seriously and twen hainS , ® e injured were women, one being hurt seriously. „ M'° n , al »d steel plants had the most accidents, the total being 2,464. 21 M., while on Wednesday only 537 were hurt. . .>■»«». The results of the December acci dent reports are now being worked out. s,ince January 1 all accidents must he reported to the Workmen's Compensation Board. MILLERSBURG IS AMONG BUSIEST TOWNS IN STATE [Continued from First Page.] son in the town who is willing to work. o .I s - out of em Plo.vment just now. but this era of prosperity is not spas modic. Millersburg has always been noted for its thrift and when other towns were battered by hard times, [his town was merely touched, and touched so lightly that recovery was a matter of but a few days. This borough lias a population of approximately 3,000 and a conserva tive estimate of the number of per sons employed shows that more than one-fourth of the entire number of residents in the town are working in the various_ industrial plants. There a h°ut 830 men. women and voung folks working in the mills and fac tories and this leaves approximated 2,150 persons to take care of the stores, offices and homes. Included in this number, too. are the school children, and the men who work on the railroad. There are few towns in Pennsylvania where a record of this kind has been attained. "Get There" Spirit Millersburg has a real, true "get there spirit and its progressiveness is evidenced on every side. Paved streets, good water and electric lights are among its valuable assets. Its schools are established on an excel lent basis and all of its stores are modern and seemingly prosperous. Pretty homes are to be found in all parts of the town and with co-opera tion on the part of every person the borough has grown to be a .self sustaining settlement and just pack ed to the borough limits with spirit which would do credit to a much larg er town. All of Millersburg's industries are housed in good substantial buildings and everything possible is done to care for the employes and make them comfortable. Materials For Allies ar materials for the allies are playing a part in the industrial life of the community, too, and dyes, taps and reamers made here are either be nig shipped to the allies' governments of Europe or to plants in the United States which are manufacturing mu nitions for them. Millersburg products are shipped to all parts of the world and the freight agent here never ex presses surprise, no matter how far a crate or box is to be shipped. The largest industry in the town in the Johnson-Baillie shoe factory where 17,000 pairs of shoes are manu factured weekly. The plant was start ed about 20 years ago and at that time a very few persons were em ployed. The factory and the • town grew up together and now during working hours the factory buildings hojuse one-sixth of the town's entire population. More than 500 persons are on the payroll and this number is kept rushed at all times, "overtime" frequently being recorded on the com pany's books. Misses', children's and ladies' shoes are made at the plant and these are worn by persons in all sections of the United States. The Johnson-Baillie plant is made up of big roomy frame and brick buildings. The company's original building could be placed in a corner of one of the present structures. Keg Stave Machinery A short distance from this shoe fac tory is the P. K. Lenker Machine Shop where machines for making staves for nail kegs and small bar rels are built. Mr. Lenker designed the machines and has been building them here for many years. Five ma chines make up a set for a stave mill and an average of eight sets are built each week. A dozen men are em ployed at the shop and they have never been known to be idle. At the present time there are orders on hand IF YOU WORRY, READ THIS Worry never brought any good to any body. But, yoa say, "I don't worry be cause I want to, I worry because 1 can't help it." Or, "I worry because I have so much to worry about." \\ e all have our troubles and worry, of course, makes matters worse. The patient generally recognizes this fact without be ing influenced in any way by it. The doctor who could meet this nervous condition and cure it would be the most popular medical man alive. But he can not do it because the form of nervousex haustion known as neurasthenia, of which worry is a characteristic symptom, must be cured bv the patient hiro-elf. That is yrhy yoa should write today for the book '-Diseasesof the Nervous System" and read the chapter on"Neurastnenia." So many people have read it and written back, This hits my case exactly, lam giving the treatment a trial and being benefited," that the Dr. Williams Medi cine Co., Schenectady, N". Y. has had a lot of these books printed and will send y?u a copy free on request. Ask for a diet book also if your stomach is off. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are a non alcoholic tonic, particularly suited for nervous, neurasthenic people. Your druggist sells them or they wilt be mailed postpaid on receipt of price. 60 cents per box, six boxeq for #2.50, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH 7 FOODS THEY BUILD OR DESTROY Amazing but Rarely Suspected Truths About the Things You Eat. (Copyright, 1916, by Alfred W. McCann.) J) CHAPTER 3 In the last four years one million five hundred thousand children under ten years of age have died in the United States. With little knives and forks, with little baby spoons, with chubby little hands that show many of the out ward signs of health, the nation Is digging graves. The stricken parents of children who are sent away before their time should move the world to prevent these preventable tragedies, but the impulse does not come, as a rule, until it Is all over. It Is no time to educate parents after the child Is laid low. The time to do it is now. for all the food knowl edge this side of heaven will not put life and health Into the tissues of a corpse. But parents, bound up with old fashioned traditions, heed the work of child conservations as a whirring and exaggerated warning out of the mouths of faddists. They will not ac cept the plain facts unless they are proven in some picturesque fashion. I intend tq provide such picturesque proofs. They will not peep behind the traditions unless they receive a shock that excites their curiosity. 1 In tend to provide such shock. They will not stir from the beaten path tramped hard with the little feet of millions of children unless they are pushed by brute force. I intend in this series of articles to employ such brute force. In the last four years in the United States three million little feet have ceased their pattering and still the world refuses to heed. No, this is not an idle statement made in a year of sensations. Its proof is found in the mortality statistics prepared by the bureau of the census, Depart ment of Commerce, and submitted, in 1915, to the Hon. William C. Red field, secretary of commerce, by Wil liam J. Harris, director of the census. Gruesome? Yes. True? Yes. But what of it unless we are ready to take soundings, even though to do so means parting with much old-fashion ed. care-free, happy-go-lucky indif ference that sits on an eggshell of happiness, ever ready to crack? There Is a peg in our shoe. It hurts our foot. It bruises and cuts the flesh. It sets up a serious irrita tion. We go to a doctor. He applies oil and lotions. He carefully band ages the sore spot. We go right on with the treatment and complain that in spite of our physician's skill we can't get that foot to' heal. Of for more than thirty sets of machines for firms in Virginia alone. 1.000 Cliair Seats a Bay Chair seats used by hundreds of residents of Harrisburg and Central Pennsylvania in general are made in this busy borough. In the plant of the Halifax Chair Seat Company, owned by J. H. Klingman and Arthur J. Fas nacht, 1,000 seats are turned outi daily. These are sold to the vari ous chains of five-and-ten cent stores in the East and also to many de partment and hardware stores in many towns and cities. During last year 251,480 seats were manufactured, and this year Mr. Klingman, the senior member of the firm, hopes to pro duce a total of 300.000. The seats w.hich have a covering of imitation leather, have a cotton and seagrass fitting and a metal bottom. They find ready sale but there are not many persons who know they are made here. The plant, which employes five men, was originally located at Halifax and it was because of its location that it came to be known as the Hali fax Chair Seat Co. When Mr. Kling man decided to move to Millersburg he permitted the original name to stand. Taps, Dyes and Reamers At the plant of W. L. Brubaker & Brothers, near the depot, taps, dyes and reamers are manufactured by the hundred. The majority of them at the present time are being fur nished jobbers in New York and a great many are being forwarded to the allies, where they are put to their respective uses. Some of them are being carried on auto trucks which are doing duty on the battlefields of Europe. The Brubaker shops employ 75 men and when hundreds of in dustries all over the country more than a year ago were forced to close down, this was one of the plants which continued to work as though (the country had been enjoying great pros perity. The company is so rushed with orders now that recently a num ber of new ones were turned down. There are enough orders on hand now to keep the 75 men busily engaged for the next six months. Besides supply ing many concerns in this country, the Brubaker products are shipped direct to Italy, Japan, England, Aus tralia and Russia. Thera are two other concerns in Millersburg which manufacture taps, dyes and reamers and they are the plants of A. J. Polk & Son and the Al vord Reamer Company. The former shops are at the present time sup plying taps and dyes for the allies. They are being used to make up .lets of tools which are in use on the bat tlefields. Reamers are supplied, too, to an American plant making muni tions for the allies. The reamers made in the Polk shops are used in the manufacture of shrapnel cases. This plant also does work for the Amer ican government and at present has orders on hand for some of its pro ducts which are to be shipped to the Panama Canal Zone. Twenty-five men are employed at the shops. Will Put on Night Shift At the Alvord Reamer Company's plant 38 men are employed and with in the next few days an additional force of fifteen men will be put on to make a night shift. The concern manufactures reamers and mill cut ters of various sizes and ships them al over the world. For the past sev eral months the company has been so rushed with work that it was necessary to make plans for a night force. This shop is one of the most prosperous in the borough. Adjoin ing it is the Millersburg Fifth Wheel Works where parts for wagons are made. In addition to welded rings which are put to various uses. Among the most noteworthy are those which are manufactured for a certain ship building company on the Atlantic coast. The company at present is en gaged in building submarines for the American government and the rings which are used to encircle the tor pedo tubes are being produced at the Fifth Wheel plant. This concern em ployes fifteen men. Another Shoe Factory At the extreme upper end of Mil lersburg is a shoe factory where in fants' and children's shoes are made. Eleven years ago this factory, owned by the Millersburg Shoe Company, was a barn. It was remodeled and eight or ten persons were employed. The business adventure was a success and the concern has been running steadily ever since. There are 85 j persons employed now and this force Is capable of producing from 75.0 to 1 1,000 pairs of shoes daily. The out course not. Some day it will occur to us to remove the peg from our shoe. Nature, helped a little anil encour aged by the physician, will do the healing, but not until the cause of her woe has been removed. All the fancy serums, anti-bodies, tonics, and therapeutic agents of modern science will not insure us against physical disorder while that peg remains in the national shoe. That peg is the preventable tubercu losis, preventable pellagra, prevent able cancer, preventable anaemia, pre ventable nervous prostration, prevent able diabetes and Briglit's disease, preventable illness of childhood. It is the mysterious cause of the baffling disorders which defy the deft scalpel of the surgeon and the skilful treat ment of the physician. It is the unseen force whose work, unknown to doctor and nurse, laughs defiance at the soundest scientific truths ol' the hospital laboratory, sus pending the power of medicine's most useful knowledge and defeating the purpose for which it is applied. It was named at the Sixth Interna tional Congress on Physiotherapy held in Berlin. April, 1913, in the follow ing words: "Natural immunity to disease is very closely allied to nutrition. An infection of the mouth with thrush is not possible in a normally born and breast-fed child. As soon as a slight disturbance of the nutrition occurs the child loses this natural immunity. "The bottle-fed child is at a great disadvantage as compared with the breast-fed child. One-sided nutrition with carbohydrates (starches, sugars, glucose, syrups, candies, white bread stuffs. denatured breakfast foods, etc.) injures the immunity of children. "Tuberculous children, nourished with such carbohydrate foods, suc cumb more easily than when nourish ed on natural food. "The water content of the body is inversely proportioned to the natural Immunity. Refined foods increase unnecessarily the amount of water in the tissues and permit a rapid rise in the body weight. Children fed on such a carbohydrate diet become water-logged, fat. and show slight re sisting' power against infection. The lack of absorbable calcium salts in the diet favors the water-logging.' These words, describing the peg, mean little to you now, but before we have proceeded very far they will be read under such a clear, white light that you will marvel over their sim plicity. You will then understand why the peg must be removed, and perhaps you will help to remove it. look for the future Is exceptionally bright and at present the factory is rushed with orders for Spring goods. In recent years additions have been built to the factory and the most modern machinery installed, so that it is now one of the most up-to-date plants in Central Pennsylvania. Wood Workers Busy Two wood wor* plants and two broom factories make up the remain der of Millersburg's Industries. The A. Douden Planing Mills, which were established more than 30 years ago, make a specialty of veneered wood work and to carry on this branch of the trade a mammoth press is used. This mill has furnished the wood work for hundreds of building opera tions in this territory and many places in Harrisburg are adorned with the Millersburg product. The plant em ploys sixteen wood workers. The Mil lersburg Manufacturing Company also produces wood work for buildings and the 20 men employed there are al ways busy. This concern was founded forty-five years ago and like the Dou den mill, furnishes much material for building operations in Harris burg. 4,000 Brooms Made Daily Four thousand brooms a day is the record of the Union Broom Works, owned by C. W. Day & Brother. This factory has been in continuous op eration for thirty-three years. There are 35 men employed. Twenty-five grades of brooms are made and in their manufacture broom corn, reed, bamboo and rat'an are used. The broom corn brooms are for general house work and the heavier material is used in the brooms made for fac tories, shops and cars. For many years past the. Union Works have been furnishing brooms for the Pennsylva-. nia, Cumberland Valley and a num ber of other railroad companies. The standard at the plant is 1,000 brooms daily but sometimes the output is above this figure. The Keystone Broom Works, where five men are employed, produces from fifteen to twenty dozen brooms daily and ships them to various stores in all parts of the State. Fifteen grades are made. The company's business is exceptionally good and indications are that the present conditions will be greatly improved. Active in Building Millersburg, besides her industries, is interested in building and during the past few years many homes and other buildings have been construct ed. One of the largest, structures erected during the last year or two is the Brubaker building. The first floor of this contains seven store rooms, the second seven apartments and the third floor Is given over en tirely to the Masohs. On this floor the lodgemen have their meeting rooms, kitchen, banquet hall, ipool and billiardroom and cardroom. The entire building is one of the most up to-date in this part of the State and shows again the spirit of progressive ness which exists in Millersburg. SUNDAY AT PRINCETON Special to the Telegraph Princeton, N. Y., Jan. 12.—Conserv ative Princeton was stirred for the second time within the year this morn ing by "Billy" Sunday, who came from Trenton to speak in the First Presby terian Church on There was not a word of criticism in the whole of his sermon about the university with which he has had some ditficul ties, and which last year refused him permission to preach to the students In Alexander Hall, the university au ditorium. A large number of towns people were present, and the students filled the gallery, overflowing into the aisles. EVANGELISTIC SERVICES Hummelstown. Pa., Jan. 12.—The United Brethren congregation, the Rev. Arthur S. Eehman, pastor, is holding evangelistic services all through the month of January. Don't forget to keep in mind the Telegraph's surprise for next week. A Telegraph coupon is all you need to take part in it.—Adv. Of THE HIGH DISTRICT——^—< LESTER PIANOS \ tmmmmmm—m—mH. C» DAY e 1319 Derjry Streeet. Both Phones m^mmmmmmmmm Jf JANUARY 12, 1916. ] \ | An Honest January Clearance I At "The Woman Shop" i We are now sacrificing our rich, new Fall and Winter stocks of Suits, Coats, Dresses, Separate Skirts, Waists and Blouses, House Dresses Kimonos, Furs and Marabous at prices we are sure will be hard to match, in order to make room for incoming new Spring stocks. f Prices arc now at a mere fraction of former selling prices and you will be amazed at the radical reductions on gar ments which you can wear now and later. PLEASE REMEMBER. We are clearing our own stocks, and not garments made and bought for sale purposes. ■►Low Expenses Must Mean Low Prices^* WHERE YOU BUY By Frederic J. Haskin fContinued from lCditorlal Paste.] a small salary all his life, became the credit manager of his firm ' after studying the subject by mail. So technical education in his calling has opened new opportunities of advance ment to the salesman. When such training has become general and when all of the stores examine their prospective employes with a view to determining their spe cial fitness for salesmanship, the wage problem will solve itself. For the prlnlclpal cause of the low rate of payment is that the stores are over run with unskilled persons, chiefly women, who are willing to work for less than a living wage. A study of the salesgirls in various cities shows that most of them work in a retail store as a means of tiding over the period between leaving school and getting married. Most of them live at home and are therefore willinc to work for less than a living wage. Practically all of them hope to pet married and therefore do not study salesmanship as a permanent calling. For all oE these reasons the majority of them are of a low grade PAPFS DIAPEPSIN FOR INUI AN llffl STOMACH Instant Relief from Pain, Sourness, Gases, Acidity, Heartburn and Dyspepsia-No Waiting! Wonder what upset your stomach — which portion of the food did the damage do you? Well, don't bother. If your stomach is in a re volt; if sour, gassy and upset, and what you just ato has ferme_nted into stubborn lumps; head dizzy and aches; belch prases and acids and eructate undigested food; breath foul, tongue coated—just take a little Pape's Diapepsin and in a few moments you wonder what became of the indigestion and distress. Millions of men and women to-day know that it is needless to have a 1 22 ORJUNSMANOULM OP V I DIAPEPSIN IHi H MAKES DISORDERED STOMACHS PpjpiM FEEL FINE IN FIVE MINUTE& I J JJ STOPS I-N.DICESTJON, DYSPEPSIA, lO CO Z EAT THEM LIKE CANDY LARGE 50 CENT CASE—ANY DRUG STORE ——w jum I.M--_J» . gca—acacErrrrz.\ <. I- jajut Most Eminent Medical Authorities Endorse It A New Remedy For Kidney, Bladder and All Uric Acid Troubles. Dr. Eberle and Dr. Braithwaite as well as Dr. Simon —all distinguished Authors —agree that whatever may be the disease, the urine seldom falls In furnishing us with a clue to the prin ciples upon which it is to be treated, and accurate knowledge concerning the nature of disease can thus be ob tained. If backache, scalding urine or frequent urination bother or dis tress j«ou, or if uric acid in the blood has caused rheumatism, gout or sclati- Ica or you suspect kidney or bladder 'trouble Just write Dr. Pierce at the Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y.; send a sample of urine and describe symp toms. You will receive free medical advice after Dr. Pierce's chemist has examined the urine—this will be care fully done without charge, and you will be under no obligation. Dr. Pierce during many years of experi of efficiency and worth to the em ployer little more than he pays them. To the retail merchant the wages of his salesmen are his greatest sell ing < ost. This lie calculates as a certain percentage of his total sales, and the percentage varies all the way l'rom 2% to 12 in different stores. About 7 per cent of sales is consider ed a fair expenditure for the service , of salesmen. Now it is evident that. * Ihe merchant cannot greatly increase this percent age and still keep his business on a paying basis. But if he has fewer and more efficient sales men, each of them will receive more. TKUHKHS Wil l, MI.ET Special to the Telegraph Hunimelstown. Pa., Jan. 12.—The borough teachers will attend the joint district institute to be held at Oberlin on Friday evening and Saturday. Misses Elizabeth Z. Price and Annie B. Nye. of the first and eighth grades, respectively, will give discussions on "Morals in the Public Schools" and the "Problematic Method of Teaching Geography." Principal W. A. Geescy will also speak on the purpose of reci tation. WKDDKD IN lIAGKR.STOW V Special to the Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., Jan. 12.—Craw ford Verdier, of this place, and Miss Annie McFerren, daughter of William McFerren, Mont Alto, were married in Hagerstown by the ltev. Mr. Lynn, of the Methodist Chursh. bad stomach. A little Diapepsin oc casionally keeps the stomach regu lated and they eat their favorite foods without fear. If your stomach doesn't take care of your liberal limit without rebellion; if your food is a damage instead <>: a help, remember the quickest, surest, and most harmless relief is Pape's Diapepsin which costs only fifty cents for a large case at drug stores. It's truly wonderful —it di gests food and sets things straight, so gently and easily that it is really astonishing. Try it! mentation has discovered a new rem edy which is 37 times more powerful than lithia in removing uric *&■' from the system. If you arc suffering from backache or the pains of rheu matism, go to your best store and ask for a 50-cent package of "Anuric" put up by Dr. Pierce. Jf he does not keep it, you can obtain a large (rial pack age by sending 10 cents to Dr. Pierce. or 50 cents in stamps for full treat ment. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prcscrlf tion for weak women and Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery for the blood have been favorably known for the past forty years and more. They ' arc standard remedies to-day—as well as Doctor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets for the liver and bowels. You can have a large (rial package of any one of these remedies In Tablet form by writ ing Dr. Pierce and enclosing 10c. Advertisement.