Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, January 21, 1916, Page 7, Image 7

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    "Reliable Hams" V
Have Been the Standard \\V
of Quality For Over I VV
Only reliable products can
be continuously advertised
Kingan Provision
arrisburg,
MOTOR-PROPELLED VIXISHKK
FOR CONCRETE ROADS
For saving labor in the construction
of concrete roads and basts for street
pavements, a motor-driven template
has been Invented which is capable of
working approximately 500 feet of 16-
ft. roadway a day. The apparatus,
which is shown in the Popular Me
chanics Magazine, is carried on ear
wheels- which roll along the tops of
steel forms used to hold the mixture in
n our no
Win "MSB OIL"
jet a Small Trial Bottle-Rub Pain, Soreness, Stiff
ness Right Out of Joints and Musclis-lnstant
Relief! Best Liniment, Doesn't Blister
I'.lieumatism is "pain only." Not
tine case in fifty requires internal
treatment. Stop drugging. Rub sooth
ing, penetrating "St. Jacobs Oil" right
Into your sore, stiff, aching joints and
muscles, and relief comes Instantly.
"St. Jacobs Oil" is a harmless rheu
matism and backache liniment which
never disappoints.
Limber up! Quit complaining! Get
a small trial bottle of old, honest
Doctor Says Nuxated Iron Will
Increase Strength of Delicate
People 200% Ten Days
In many Instances—Prnou have «uf
fered untold agony inr year* diiotorlng
for nervous ivraku«ki, stomach, liver
nr kidney iliNfiine or Nomr other nil
mrnt nlirn their real trouble w«» lack
jf Iron In the blood.— Huw to tell.
New York. N. Y.—ln a recent dis
course Dr. K. sailer. Specialist, of this
jitv said: If you were to make an
a. tual blood test on all people who are
,1! \<m would probably be greatly as
tonished at the exceedingly large num
ber who lack iron and who are ill for no
other reason than the lack of iron. The
moment iron is supplied all their mul
'itude of dangerous symptoms disap
pear. Without iron the blood at once
.oses the power to change food into
iving tissue and therefore nothing you.
•at does you any good: you don't get
the strength out of It. Your food
merely passes through your system like
lorn through a mill with the rollers so
ivide apart that the mill can't grind.
,\s a result of this continuous blood
nnd nerve starvation, people become
generally weakened, nervous and all
■un down and frequently develop all
sorts of conditions. One is too thin;
another is burdened with unhealthy
'at some are so weak they can hardly
.valk; some think they have dyspep
<la. kidney or liver trouble; some can't
tleep at night. others are sleepy and
ired all day: some fussy and irritable;
iome skinny and bloodless, but all lack
plivslcal power and endurance. In such
N.ses. it is worse than foolishness to
?ke stimulating medicines or narcotic
Jrugs, which only whip up your fag-
Slng vital powers for the moment,
maybe at the expense of your life later
nn. No matter what any one tells you,
f you are not strong and well you
»we it to yourself to make the follow-
ng test. See how long you can work
■sr how far you can walk without be
aming tired. Next take two Ave
WHAT ARE w making
€f 4»' %'«| OF YOUSELF?
Every man is the tjst of his own for
/ tune and as Caasiu* as, "Our Fate, dear
Brutus, lies not in ot stars, but in our
-'i / j y'\ selves." If he wouldniy realise this in
BBr '. ;> . time and commence i save while he is
\lj* Jr young a man would t-m habits of econ-
S* II omy that would lead |m on to fortune.
Your first step towais this end Is to
I st Natioml Bank
H 224 MARK.T ST.
FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JANUARY 21, 191'6
place. At one -ide is mounted a gaso
line engine which provides the propel
ling power and also imparts to the
template a reciprocating motion which
expedites its work. At the rear the
contrivance is designed to serve as a
smoothing tool. Only two persons are
required in operating it. One rides the
machine, watching the template plank
and also filling in low places, while
the other follows up the work, mend
ing small defects in the surface of the
concrete.
"St. Jacobs Oil" at any drug store,
and In just a moment you'll be free
from rheuriatic pain, soreness, stiff
ness and svelling. Don't suffer! Re
lief awaits you. "St. Jacobs Oil" has
cured milli<ns of rheumatism suffer
ers in the las: half century, and is
just as go<d for sciatica, neuralgia,
lumbago, bi.ck.iche, sprains.—Adver-
tisement.
grain tabletsof ordinary nuxated iron
three times pr day after meals for two
weeks. Thentest your strength again
and see for .-ourself how much you
have gained. I have seen dozens of
nervous run iwn people who were ail
ing all the tile double, and even triple
their strengtl and endurance and en
tirely get rid f their symptoms of dys
pepsia. liver ad other troubles In from
ten to fourtet days' time simply by
taking iron I the proper form, and
this, after the had in some cases been
doctoring for onths without obtaining
any benefit. ou can talk as you
please about il the wonders wrought
by new remeo»s. but when you come
down to hard facts there Is nothing
like good old on to put color in vour
cheeks and gtd sound, healthy flesh
on your bones. It is also a great nerve
i and stomach s'engthener and the best
blood builder the world. The only
trouble was tht the old forms of In
organic iron llj tincture of iron. Iron
acetate, etc., iften ruined people's
! teeth, upset ttir stomachs and were
1 not assimllatedand for these reasons
they frequentlj did more harm than
good. But wit the discovery of the
newer forms o organic iron all this
has been overc-ne. Nuxated Iron for
example. Is pleiant to take, does not
Injure the teethuid is almost immedi
-1 ately beneficial.
NOTE The lanufacturers of Nux
ated Iron have uch unbounded confi
dence In its poticy that they author
ize the announiment that they will
forfeit 1100.00 t(any Charitable Insti
tution if they clnot take any mar or
woman under sijy who lacks Iron and
! increase their Sength 200 per cent,
or over In four /eeks' time, provided
they have no sCous organic trouble.
Also they will fund your money In
| any case In whli Nuxated Iron does
not at least dotle your strength in
con days' time. ' is dispensed in this
| city by Croll Idler, G. A. Gorgas.
I and all other drigists.—Adv.
Our Library Xabies
City Planning, by Charles Mulfortl
Robinson. (Published by G. P. Put
nam's Sons, $2.50). City planning, with
Its numerous ramifications, has been
the subject for many books and arti
cles of late, all dealing with the value
and importance of city planning In its
varied forms and adaptations, and em
phasizing the attention that is being
given to this most Indispensable fea
ture of the city's growth and develop
ment.
Among these many publications
there is one that stands out pre-emi
nently, one that is written with special
reference to the planning of streets
and lots, and has not only value for
the operator, but is of interest and
importance to the whole community. It |
is by Charles Mulford Robinson, splen-1
didly arranged and dealing with the J
subject in a clear-cut, all-inclusive!
manner, an authority on the subject,
being a practical and not a theoreti- |
cal discussion. Much of the inater- :
ial appeared originally in a volume j
entitled "The Width and Arrangement,
of Streets." but this book has been so ]
revised, amplified and rearranged that
the reader will not know it for the j
same book, and will learn much that
never appeared In the original.
Somewhat less than a hundred il
luatrattons visualize for the reader
conditions as they ought to be and as
they are fast being made in cities all j
over the country. The growth of city j
planning has been phenomenal and has j
become such a necessary science that
the City that docs not have its plan
ning commission is rare indeed. The
material for this book has been glean
ed from various authentic sources, in
cluding the personal experience of the |
author during thirty years of that sort I
of work; systematic study of the prob
lem in various colleges and universi- j
ties: a special trip to London, Kng- j
land, where an international town plan
ning conference was held and a helpful
criticism made of the general thesis
of the volume which has since been
made complete; and finally, the solen
oid and inspiring progress in beautv.
reasonableness, and titness in city
building which is everywhere taking
place.
BENEDICT ARNOLD—DRVGGIST I
It was in the city of New Haven, on
a cold day of April, 1775, that a man |
of some thirty-five years stood behind I
a counter, an apron on his manly |
chest, mixing medicine, pasting labels i
011 phials, and putting poisons in their
places.
Look well at this man as he stands
engaged in his occupation. Did you
ever see a bolder brow a deeper,
darker, or more intensely brilliant eye
—a more resolute lip or more deter
mined chin? Mark the massive out
line of that face from the ear to the
chin; a world of iron will is written in
that firm outline.
The hair, unclogged with the pow
der in fashion at this time, falls back
from his forehead in harsh masses; Its
dark hue imparting a strong relief to
the bold and warrior-like face.
While this man stands at his coun
ter busy with pestle and mortar—
hark! There is a murmur along the
streets of New Haven; a crowd dark
ens under those aged elms; the mur
mur deepens: the druggist became
conscious of four deep-muttered
words:
"Battle Lexington British
Beaten!"—" Heart Classics of Amer
ican History," George Lippard, in Na
tional Magazine for January.
ARE YOU?
An editorial in the February Wo
man's Home Pom nan! on quotes the
late William James, the psychologist,
as saying:
" 'Most men are old foggies at twen
ty-five.' At that age they have ac
quired a few hard and fast opinions,
a working knowledge of some job suf
ficient to support them, and a routine
of existence which neither varies nor
expands until they die."
JOHN BI LL AND LIFE
Life—which Is never neutral on any
subject—is speaking up for its friends
among the nations of Europe. Its Vive |
La France Number received a warm !
welcome. Tills week it Issues a spe
cial number dedicated to John Bull—
an enthusiastic pictorial and textual
tribute to this solid gentleman.
200 Guests at Reception of
MechanicsburgWoman's Club
Special to the Telegraph
Mechanicsburg, Pa.. Jan. 21. —A de
lightful affair was the reception given
by the Woman's Club last evening at j
the Businessmen's League House, and (
the means of bringing people togeth
er socially such as no other event in!
Mechanicsburg. Just the right touch!
of color, was the array of beautiful j
evening gowns worn by the women, i
against a background of Southern;
smilax, which gracefully twinerl over j
the walls and around windows and i
doorways. Blended with the green !
were the white primroses, and tiny i
green Incandescent lights twinkled j
among it all, carrying out a color !
scheme of green and white. Mrs. R. i
Wilson Hurst had charge of the dec-!
orations. In the receiving line were:
Miss Caroline S. Saxton, president of,
the club; R. H. Thomas. Jr., newly
elected president of the Businessmen's;
League: Miss Katharine S. Wheelock, i
vice-president of the club; Mrs. Mur-j
ray L. Dick, recording secretary; Miss!
Gertrude Eppley, corresponding sec- j
retary; E. A. Burnett, retiring presi-j
dent "of the Businessmen's League;!
Miss Ida G. Kast, a director of the!
club. Miss Lile George and Miss,
Grace E. Witmer ushered the guests.
a feature of the evening was the music
with Miss Clara B. Cromleigh, pianist, j
and Lloyd Dunkle, of Harrisburg, vio
linist.
Mrs. R. A. DeFrehn presided In the i
dining room, assisted by Miss M. Lulu ;
Coover and Miss Clara G. Titzel. The!
favors were boutonnieres of pink sweet
peas. Many out-of-town people were
present. About 200 guests enjoyed the!
hospitality of the Woman's Club.
TOWN* ATTRACTS MOTORISTS j
IX NOVEL MANNER!
Laconner, a little town in Washing- j
ton, is situated some distance from one'
of the State highways used by many j
motor tourists. It boasts, however, a i
lone hill which commands the best view
obtainable of Skagit Valley, one of the;
rich farming districts of that section.:
In order to draw the passing tourists i
from their beaten patch and attract
them to Laconner for the advantage of:
local business, the community has con-|
structed a winding road to the summit!
of the hill and there built an observa-1
tion stand. To aiivertise the lookout I
point, the words "Auto View" have!
been painted in letters 8 ft. high on i
the wall of a water reservoir at the!
hill's crest. This sign is sufficiently |
large to be seen for a long distance, j
A view of the hill and stand appears in I
the Popular Mechanics Magazine.
W. FOSTER PALMER RECOVERING
Marysville, Pa., Jan. 21. —W. Foster
Palmer, of this place, who was struck
by an automobile at York on Monday
evening, is better. Palmer's injuries I
were a broken left arm, a sprained I
back, bruises and possible Internal in
juries. Although Palmer is resting it
[is impossible to bring him home.
"Thou Shalt Not Steal"
When a man or a set of men join with other men to raise on their fellow-kind the price of merchandise
they control or have for sale, they form a trust and they are thieves and scoundrels. This does not have to
be done by them controlling or owning every factory or store in a particular line of business or industry, but
is done sometimes by a so-called gentlemen's agreement.
This has occurred in other cities in the drug business, when all retail druggists had bound themselves
on their word of honor to raise the price of everything sold in a drug store, and to refuse to sell it at a
lower price, no matter how much suffering they brought on the unfortunate human beings that lived in that
city who were forced to deal with them because they could not do otherwise.
We hope the above may never happen in Harrisburg. And as long as Kennedy's Cat-Rate Store is in
business nothing of this kind will happen, as we would do everything in our power to crush it. And when
we appeal to you to help us with your moral and financial aid it is to keep such things from occurring and the
prices down. We do this with the staunch belief that the people of Harrisburg are appreciative, and will help
us to fight the battle for low prices and keep them within the reach of every one.
We have been fighting this battle for years, and as Mr. Lawson said, "Every reformer * * * *
* * has been crucified," and we kindly ask you, "Mr. General Public," will you walk out of your way to
patronize us so we can continue this fight, or will you deliberately allow us to be crucified by those who are
trying to do it?
Remember it is too late to give us the preference after we have been nailed to the c r oss, and you are
burdened with a 25 to 50 per cent, increase on your patent medicines.
Start today. Help us to continue this fight and keep prices down. DO IT NOWi
"KENHEDY'S" "KENNEDY'S"
The Only Store WhoHaveCaused
Between You
High Prices to Advertise
Patent Medicines
Saturday Only
Hood's Sarsaparilla ... 59* Carmen's Powder 340
Scott's Emulsion 030 Pebeco Tooth Paste * ~ 1
Angier's Emulsion 690 and 360 Woodbury's Facial Cream * . 1
Russell Emulsion 730 Squibb's Talcum Powder 140
Wampole's Exract Cod Liver Oil 580 Frostilla **
Gude's Peptomangan 730 Azurea Talcum Powder 17 J
. „ , ft(iA Azurea Face Powder 4L "
Fellow's Syr. Hypophosphites 0,0 and 98* Roger & Rice powder ~.240
Lydia Pinkham's Compound <>3o Mennen's Talcum
Canthrox 290 Amolin Powder 150
Eckman's Alterative • 590 Palmolive Shampoo
Resinol Ointment 750 and 38* Pyorrhocide Tooth Powder 750
Atwood's Bitters Hokara Skin Food I<*
Cuticura Ointment 38c Jergen's Violet Glycerine Soap 00
Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur 290 and 590 Othine 650
Castoria ' 210 Pond's Vanishing Cream 140
Baume Analgesique 370 Woodbury Face Powder I<o
Lydia Pinkham's Pills 170 j eS s Talcum 140
Carter's Liver Pills 120 Lablache Face Powder 330
Doan's Kidney Pills 3:5 c Woodbury's Soap 100
DeWitt's Pills ... 340 Cuticura Soap 180
Beecham's Pills 150 and 7* Rosaline 140
Diapepsin 290 Sanitol Tooth Paste 150
Lydia Pinham's Wash 170 Java Rice Powder 280
Sargol 570 Munyon's Witch Hazel Soap 00
Hall's Catarrh Cure 45* Milk Weed Cream 340
Phenol Sodique 8C and 25* Stillman's Freckle Cream 270
Musterole 290 Kalpheno Tooth Paste 150
Father John's Medicines 63* Sanitol Tooth Powder 150
Cater's K. &B. Tea 150 Johnson's Baby Powder 150
Nulfey Tablets 290 Babcock's Corylopsis Talcum 110
Lapactic Pills (S. & D.) 270 Calox Tooth Powder 100
Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets 340 and 070 Arnica Tooth Soap 140
Jad's Salts 430 Hay's Hair Health 570
Bell's Papayan's 450 Danderine 590
Tiz 14* Herpicide 290
Peruna 030 Hind's Cold Cream 150
Sugar of Milk (Merk's) 210 Oriental Cream sl.lO
Pluto Water, quart 23* Djer Kiss Face Powder . 410
Mayr's Stomach Remedy 070 Mary Garden Talcum Powder 410
Swamp Root 030 William's Talcum Powder 120
Mentholatum 13* Pinaud's Lilac Water 480
Palmer's Skin Success 150 Roger & Gallet's Talcum 140
Husband's Magnesia 280 Pompeian Massage Cream 270
Philip's Milk of Magnesia ; 370 Mum 170
S. S. S 030 and $1.09 Lavoris 290
Syrup of Figs 290 Vernas Lotion 290
Omego Oil 290 Dagget & Ramsdell Cold Cream 34*
Sloan's Liniment 29* Rubifoam 150
Tonsiline 290 Zhongiva 340
Limestone Phosphate 210 Hind's Honey and Almond Cream 310
Cut-Rate Medicine Store, 321 Market St.
7