WHAT HAPPENS TO THE FOOD YOU EAT? Does It Ferment, Causing Belching, Sourness, Biliousness, Nausea, Heartburn? Famous Stomach Prescription Quickly Ends Indigestion and All Such Miseries. A strong stomach Is the source of health, strength, vigor and physical perfection. And It follows, that a weak, disar ranged, overworked stomach; one that lets the food lie and ferment within its walls, causing heartburn, sick headache, sour food upheavals, bil iousness, belching of gas and other untold miseries of indigestion, is a menace to your well being. For In stead of giving nourishment to the system it passes a toxic poison into the blood, which is first indicated by that all-gone feeling, dullness, dizzi ness, loss of sleep, bad dreams, etc., and the sufferer is started on the road to a general breakdown or nervous prostration. But, don't despair If you happen to be the unfortunate possessor of one of these poison factories. Just go to H. C. Kennedy or your nearest druggist right away and get that great stomach prescription—Mi-o-na. Mi-o-na is guaranteed to relieve a distressed, sour or gassy stomach and banish all stomach misery, or money t>ack. it doesn't matter how long you have suffered, this offer-holds good. Anyone who has dyspepsia, whose food does not digest well, and who has | Hot Water Each Morning | Puts Roses in Your Cheeks ? ' i- **" ° *§l Jgßlum % in ' |9| 'W'V' : '; To look one's best nnd feel one's best is to enjoy an inside bath each morning to flush from the system the previous day's waste, sour fermen tations and poisonous toxins before it ,is absorbed into the blood. Just as coal, when it burns, leaves behind a certain amount of incombustible ma terial in the form of ashes, so the food and drink taken each day leave in the alimentary organs a certain amount of indigestible material, which, if not eliminated, form toxins and poisons which are then sucked into the blood through the very ducts which are in tended to suck in only nourishment to sustain the body. If you want to see the glow of healthy bloom In your cheeks, to see your skin get clearer and clearer, you are told to drink every morning upon arising n glass of hot water with a tenspoonful of limestone phosphate in it. which is a harmless means of wash ing the waste material and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, thus cleansing, sweetening and purify ing the entire alimentary tract, before There are smokers who must have King Oscar 5c Cigars They 've smoked them for near a quarter of a century and they look to them for satisfaction with the same assurance that the veteran en gineer looks for a clear track when he sees the white light ahead. KING OSCARS clear the track for a quality smoke. Regularly Good For 24 Years 1 mi mi FIRE INSURANCE DATTERNS, model., bandraua. j| Kough, Brightbill 1 stairs, and all kinds of wood !! and Kline „ J ? bbln,r !! 307 KI'NKRI, BI.DQ. Hamburg Pattern and Model || ; Both Phones Works ! BEST LIFE INSURANCE 28 " 34 Nor,h street j! ; OBTAINABLE Bell Phone 3U71-J. I ! : Groceries— pooL room— ~ ~ jj 2 VJ NEW STORE, NEW STOCK JL I have bought the pool room '! NEW PRICES .. * nd Cigar store at the corner of 1 > i Market and Fourteenth streets '' ( > Moat Sanitary Store In City. ' where I wtil be glad to see my '! ;! GIVE US A TBI AI, friends D. O. HURSH W. STUART FOX !' »«34 N. Sixth Street JB » 3 MARKET STREET || MUSIC QIGNS, Show Cards and H the Importance of having O Advertising Novelties ' ! their Pianos tuned and re*u- OP EVERY DESCRIPTION !' lated by those who know. Garner S j gn and Advertisi j| WM. F. TROUP & SON Company PIAWOS—PLAYER-PIANO 9 ISO MARKET STREET ! > 90S N. Third St.. City. Bell l'ho.e 72» !| Try Telegraph Want Ads Try Telegraph Want Ads THURSDAY EVENING, HARRTSBURG TELEGRAPH JANUARY 27, 1916. to take thought of what he can eat, and when, can leave 50 cents deposit at H. C. Kennedy's or any drug store and take home a box of Ml-o-na and if this remedy does not do all it is ad vertised to do, he can withdraw his money. This is the strongest proof that can be offered as to the merit of the medicine. Mi-o-na is not simply a food diges ter; it is a medicine that puts all of the digestive organs into normal con dition and gives ruddy, glowing, vig orous health. A change for the better will be seen after the first few doses of Mi-o-na and its continued us« should soon give the power to eat most anything at any time and not suffer distress afterward. Don't suffer a day longer with stom ach misery. Get a box of Mi-o-na and commence its use immediately. It's inexpensive if it helps you and your money back if it fails. What fairer proposition could be made? Sold by H. C. Kennedy and leading druggists everywhere on this liberal plan. Use Booth's Pilis— (Mi-o-na laxa tive) for Consipatlon. A gentle little pill that never fails to regulate the bowels. Only 25c.—Advertisement. putting more food into the stomach. Girls and women with sallow skins, liver spots, pimples or pallid com plexion. also those who wake up with a coated tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, others who are bothered with headaches, bilious spells, acid stomach or constipation should begin this phos phated hot water drinking and are assured of very pronounced results in one or two weeks. A quarter pound of limestone phos phate costs very little' at the drug store but is sufficient to demonstrate that just as soap and hot water cleanses, purifies and freshens the skin on the outside, so hot water and lime stone phosphate act on the inside or gans. AVe must always consider that internal sanitation is\vastly more Im portant than outside cleanliness, be cause the skin poms do not absorb im purities into the blood, while the bowel pores do. Women who desire to enhance the beauty of their complexion should just try this for a week and notice results. — Adv. IjQur Library Table*! EW MiNUTSia wiT H Books u MAGAxiNESi^^StCSj What Could Germany l)o for Ire land? By James K. McGuire. (Pub lished by the Wolf Tone Co., New York.) i This book is a sequel to "The King, ! the Kaiser and Irish Freedom," by the same author, which appeared last win-, ter, nine editions, and selling abroad i in several languages. The author be ■ lieves a Gaelic Benaissance will only . come through the economic lessons which Ireland must learn from Ger many and says: "If the industrial and economic system of Germany has ' brought industrial freedom and pros perity to all her states, the young men of Ireland can afford to borrow it and • profit by her example. And her friends i in other lands can afford to inquire i into the causes which have made Ire : land the weakest country on the conti nent and to embrace with courage and fearlessness the spirit and principles and the practical aid of a civilized state, the foremost in modern history.'" Anthracite. By Scott Xearlnjr, dean 'of the College of Arts and Sciences, I I'nlversity of Toledo. (Published by I the John C. Winston Co., Philadel phia.) Dr. N earing in this book uses the • private ownership of the anthracite coal fields to show the way in which consumers and workers may expect to I fare at the hands of other monopolies of natural resources. He says that the I price of coal is not based on the cost of production, but on the monopolistic princhlo of charging "all the traffic will bcur"; he says that the miners re ceive scarcely living wages, while on the other hand the mine owners pocket enormous profits; and draws the con clusion that no one can have an in terest in the continuance of the pri vate ownership of natural resources except the private owners themselves —with the consumers footing the bill. The book is an incisive, stimulating analysis of a vital problem, one that is of particular interest to Pennsylva nians at this time, when there is so much publicity being given to the dis cussion of the whys and wherefores of the.anthracite coal industry. The Gregg Publishing Company, New York city, has just issued a very attractive and well assembled little brochure containing sketches of some of the men and women who began life as stenographers and have since at tained national and international prominence. Included among them are the names of President Wilson, George B. Cortelyou, John Hay, Charles Dickens, James Oppenheim, Elm Tree Believed to Be 300 Years Old Cut Down Special to the Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., J,an. 27.—A big elm tree, believed to be 300 years old, at Price's Churrh of the Brethren, near Waynesboro, has been cut down. It measured 5 feet and 3 inches in diam eter at the stump, was about 75 feet high, and will make ten cords of wood. It was the last of several trees in front of the old church built in 1790 and dismantled 30 years ago, when the new church edifice was erected. There are several traditions concerning the old elm. One is that the first Price inhabitant of that section, after whom the church is named, was married un uer the tree. GIXSEXG KILLS CHILI) Special to the Telegraph .Marietta, Jan. 2 7.—Joseph Harnley, aged three years, living near Manheim, yesterday drank the contents of a bot tle of srinseng. which was used for cow's medicine. The child evidently thought It was a bottle of milk. Afte'r suffering for two hours the child died despite efforts to save his life. Don't Suffer From Piles Send For Tito Trial Treatment Nomatter how long or how bad —goto lour druggist today and get a SO cent box of Pyramid Pile Treatment. It P" _ "Jm The Pyramid Smile From a Single Trial. will give relief, and a single box often cures. A trial package mailed free in pluio wrapper If you send us coupon below. FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY, 638 Pyramid Bldg., Marshall, Mich. Kindly send me a Free sample of Pyramid Pile Treatment, la plain wrapper. Name ~,, j Street j Jcity State | RHEUMATIC CRIPPLES NOW REJOICE Xo Matter If Yon Are Crippled, Can't line Arms, I. ens or Hand*. If Kkeumn Doesn't Help You Nothing To I'ay If you want relief in two days, swift, certain, gratifying relief, take one-half teasponful of Hheuma once a day. If you want to dissolve every par ticle of uric acid poison in your bodv and drive it out through the natural channels so that you will be forever free from rheumatism, get a 50-cent bottle of Rlieuma from H. C. Kennedy or any druggist to-day. Rheumatism is a powerful disease, strongly entrenched in joints and muscles, and any modern physician will tell you that the days of wishy-washy treatments are over and In order to conquer rheumatism and sciatica a powerful enemy must be sent against it. Rheuma is the enemy of Rheumatism —an enemy that conquers It every time Judge John Barhorst. of Ft. Loramie. Ohio, knows it. lie was walking with crutches: to-day he is well. It has caus ed hundreds of others to rejoice. it should do as much for you; it seldom fails. If it does you can have your money returned by your druggists Advertisement. , NUXATED IRON °f delicate, nervtuis, MM f■Y I f 1111 rundown people 200 | I MM Per cent, in ten days ■ till MXt ,n many Instances. ■ vUJJM 1100 article soon" to^ap- Ask your doctoV'or druggist about it. Cioii Keller. G A Oorsas always carry it In stock. ' 'a; ■ Irvln Cobb, and they are but a selected - few. Taken all in all. it is a striking 1 exposition of the value of a practical knowledge of shorthand in the carving , of a career. Its essential importance j as a business asset to an ambitious young man or woman is realized by a i brief glance at the testimonials of the - big men t'o whom its lesson has proven >' invaluable. POT-POCBRI i THE IjIMIT OB' DEVOTION s Dear Heart, I'll dance with you all night, i Prom eight to —any hour you please, 1 But this I swear with all my might, a I will not go to Dancing Teas! 9 - To trip with you is pure delight. You float like milkweed on the 1 breeze. ' j But though 1 love to trot, all right, 1 i I will not go to Dancing Teas! 1 Pale, slender youths whose brains are i | slight . j Can trot all afternoon with ease, f But I don't class with them —not quite. 1 will not go to Dancing Teas! s At night-time, when the lights are 5 bright, i I'll one-step till I strain my knees; > | By day, I've too much work in sight, j I will not go to Dancing Teas! 5 —Berton Bra ley, in Harper's Magazine f for February. : WHERE'S THE OLD-FASHIONED WINTER? i Harrison Rhodes, author of "In Va t cation America," says that he has at ■ last given up belief in "the old-fash ■ ioned winter." It was at one time his - rule, he says, not to start for his win ' ter vacation in Florida until he had s seen the skating in Central Park. He . had to give this up. he declares, for he r ran the risk during mild winters of i never going South until "some blizzard ■ of late March or early April froze the » lakes." « A FEW THINGS THAT ENGLAND HAS DONE FOR US Granted us our independence. Outdistanced us in the race fot ' democracy. i laughed at some of our jokes, i Conferred citizenship upon others, i Appreciated Walt Whitman. Relieved us of Henry James. I Furnished the only noteworthy ex i ample of respect for the Monroe Doc . trine. Fought hard for the worthv ideals for which we whimper. —' life. . OUTDOOR SLEEP J VERY ESSENTIAL tilt Has Passed the State of Be ing a Fad and Is a Matter of Health Now Open-air sleeping, not necessarily in ! a tent, but on a sleeping porch or with all the windows nailed up and not down. Is the best thing for the man or woman or child who Is in doors all day. It enables them to get fresh air while resting. Dr. Samuel G. Dixon, State Commis sioner of Health, gives these ideas on \ the subject: That which is looked upon as a fad • to-day becomes the necessity of to morrow. This Is largely the case with outdoor sleeping. With the beginning of the active campaign against tuberculosis but a few years or so ago, outdoor sleeping was recommended for those suffering from tuberculosis and others whose general physical condition seemed to •I warrant it. These pioneers were looked upon by their friends and neighbors with in terest and they openly exuressed belief that if they survived this exposure, which was doubtful, they would soon I tire of the experiment anyhow. As a I matter of fact there are a hundred open-air sleepers to-day where there was one a decade ago and it is no longer limited to those who ure in ill health. All who have tried open-air sleeping are enthusiastic about it and they con stitute an ever-growing group. A sleeping porch is coming to be looked upon as an essential part of the home. Whole families have taken to sleeping in. the open anrl have been so beneficial by it that they would never consider anything else. hTe proper garb to insure warmth The proper garb to insure warmth despite the temperature is essential With a warm room for dressing acces sible there is no reason why this in vigorating and stimulating custom should not continue to grow in popu larity. Many men and women who of neces sity must spend their working hours indoors can obtain during their rest at night, at. least a portion of the out door air that Nature intended us all to have. Sleeping porches can be constructed on the most modest home at a com paratively small cost and in the ma jority of instances they can be guar anteed to save their cost in doctor bills. The change from sleeping in closed warm rooms to outdoor sleep ing must be brought about gradually giving Nature time to meet the new conditions. The very old or very young demand more protection than the adult in the prime of life. Series of Union Services Started by Newport Churches Special to the Telegraph Newport, Pa., Jan. 27.—A series of union evangelistic services was begun in the Methodist Episcopal Church last evening at which the sermon was preached by the Rev. U. O. H. Kersch ner, pastor of the Reformed Church of the Incarnation. The services will be continued indefinitely and the pas tors of the following churches: Metho dist, Lutheran, Reformed, Presbyter ian, United Evangelican, Church of God, which have joined in the move ment, will take turns in preaching. A large choir composed of members of the several choirs will lead the music. VETERAN STIIX MISSING < Special to the Telegraph Marietta, Jan. 27.—T0-day it is one month since the sudden disappearance of Benjamin F. Rhoads, of Marietta. He was last seen crossing the Pennsyl vania Railroad company's tracks going toward the river, and it is believed that he was drowned or met with foul play. When he disappeared he had several hundred dollars with him He is a veteran of the Civil War, and has a brother in this place and a sis ter in Philadelphia. He was about 73 years old. VETERAN FIREMEN TO MEET The annual meeting of the Veteran Volunteer Firemen's Association will be held to-morrow night at the Wash ington firehouse. Plans will be dis cussed for a permanent home. A num-' ber of new members will be admitted ! md officers elected. Norfolk and Western Railway) Pullman Sleeping Car t ;'Vr# rr " To 11 •11 j P E N N.* Jacksonville, rla. ° H 1 ° \ >. COLUMBUS j Winston-Salem, Charleston S / wE s T /*/ and Savannah J!iV v ' R s ' N ')■ / KENT UC K Y f / \ ./ LYNCHBURG Lv. Hagerstown ... N. &W. Ry 1.07 A.M. " Shenandoah Jet. " .... 1.57 A.M. gmsT^ V" y \r " Riverton " .... 2.57 A.M. / ' IwiNSTON-SALEM " Luray " .... 3.48 A.M. sILEXINGTOW " Elkton » .... 4.37 A.M NORTH Y>le AROL »N A » » c ON A N* • VBALBEMARLE Basic 5.27 A.M. f " Buena Vista ... " .... 6.45 A.M. F _\WADESBORO " Natural Bridge . " 7.15 A.M. V SOUTH *\ \ L " Buchanan » .... 7.45 A.M. \ c ARO u. N a^^S^ " Roanoke " .... 9.00 A.M. \ COLUMBIA-- " Rocky Mount .. " .... 10.02 A.M. \ " Martinsville ... " 11.14 A.M. JfjjT .' Ar. Winston-Salem . " .... 1.10 P.M. GEORGIA fj&v/r < Lv. Winston-Salem, W. S. S. Ry 1.25 P.M. O J&MNNAH " Whitney " 3.05 P.M. —i M7/ * Ar. Wadesboro " 4.40 P.M. * Lv. Wadesboro A. C. Line .... 4.45 P.M. * Ar. Florence " 7.15 P.M. " a " Charleston " .... 11.20 P.M. J®J^>!s^ ONV "- LE " Savannah " .... 2.15 A.M. [ \fW^ uau6TlNe " Jacksonville.... " .... 7.15 A.M. °| VxV \ *> \ I J \&AYTONA ========== : V\ / /SANFMOU auLF Msr M - For further information, reser- eT.PETERSBi^Gv^^^j' >?• \ vations, &c., call on or address t %y4 A 0" agents of the Railway Company. wex /c o J5 j*" W. B. Bevill W. C. Saunders Kev , Passenger Traffic Mgr. Gen. Passenger Agent ROANOKE, VA. DODGING THE LIGHTNING By Frederic J. Haskin [Continued I'rom Editorial Page.] honor of being the most tempting mark in sight. The danger of the open plain is strikingly shown in the annual deaths of scores of sheepherders, who the thunderbolts hurl to an unrecorded doom on the treeless mesas of the West. As the only speck for mil«s around that rises ever so slightly above the general flatness, they pre sent the natural point for the straining electrical connection between earth and cloud to .break through. These men have one maxim for use in thun derstorms that is interesting even though the scientists have apparently never deduced it In their investiga tions. Their principle is: When seek ing safety, go slow. To race your horse across the plain toward the shel tering timber is to invite destruction. Contrary to current belief, the saf est place out of doors to seek during a thunderstorm is the thick timber. There are so many possible points for the bolt to strike, that the chance of its selecting any particular one of them is correspondingly small. Select some unassuming little tree in the midst of a dense growth, with taller trees close, but not too close, and you are secure as you can get without a house to shelter you. You should remember that a wire fence is always a danger spot, in timber or out. The Hash may strike the fence at a point a quarter of a mile away and run along the wire un til it finds some convenient path for joining the earth. Cattle standing by a fence have been killed by a bolt that struck a hundred yards away, in the West, a dozen poles of a rural tele phone line have been split to splinters by the same bolt, which skipped along the wire from pole to pole. • It is worth noting that the danger from lightning is almost entirely a rural danger. Jn compensation for the haz ards rl«lng from taxicabs and trolleys, city dwellers are largely exempt from death from the clouds. There Is often much useless anxiety felt by the timid when lightning be gins to play. Not all sorts of lightning are dangerous. The heat-lightning that flickers in the summer sny is only a reflection of some far-away storm. The flashes that run along the horizon accompanied by thunder that mutters 11 and rumbles instead of crashing may be admired in perfect security. The rare winter thunderstorm accompanied by snow is usually harmless. But when the clouds bank up sullenly black against the course of the wind, the light fades to a luminous gloom, a tense stillness comes over the atmos phere, and great silver swords of fire begin to dart up and down the heavens, then the gods are at play and it Is time for the innocent bystander to step sideways. Game Protector to Talk to Alricks Men Tomorrow ! Dr. Joseph Kalbfus, chief State jgame protector, will be the speaker at I to-morrow night's meeting of the Al | ricks Association in St. Andrew's Par |ish House, Ninteenth and Market j streets. Dr. Kalbfus will talk on "Pennsylvania in the Lead" and tell how game conservation and propaga tion in this State compares with West ern States which are commonly con sidered as having game in greater abundance. He made personal obser vations last year during his trip west. McKinloy Day falling on Saturdav, some observance of this will be taken by to-morrow night's meeting.