Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, January 31, 1916, Page 12, Image 12

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    12
Cuticura Stops
Itching Instantly
Trial Free.
(\ sr \ Just Bathe
with the
\T r Cuticura
Soap,
/ ?N an( *
(*£ x/ J \ apply the
\ Cuticura
I Ointment
For Eczemas, Rashes,
Itchings, irritations, pimples,
dandruff, sore hands and baby
humors, Cuticura Soap and
Ointment are supremely effec
tive. Relief is immediate and
healment, in most cases, is com
plete, speedy and permanent.
Sample Each Free by Mall
With 32-p. Skin Book on request. Ad
dress poif-card ••Cuticura, Dept. 16. Bos
ton." Sold tliroußliout the world.
"n —m
~ SEAMEN PICKED UP
I .overpool, Jan. 31. - The seven
missing seamen from the American
line steamer Philadelphia, were land
ed to-day by a trawler at Milford Ha
ven. Wales. After the Philadelphia's
collision, Saturday, with the British
calling ship, Ben Lee, off the of Wales
the seamen put off in a lifeboat to res
cue the Ben Lee's crew. They became
lost in the darkness and were adrift
all night, being Anally picked up by a
passenger steamship.
HYOJIEI
Jy&s
Catarrh
No rttmucb do«tt Wt breath* lb* pktunt.
hafat jmttWhg >r «f Kyonti. ami tat
' GATAItH, MWHS, CBLITS, CH9P,
SOKE THSOAT, BUggCHim. ETC.
TV cmpktc Hyomti Ob lit. inch*l#n| hint
niMwr inhaler. it lotd under a poriirve functor o<
I oibfcctary malts or voor meney back
LaAig nwnrwherr tndudtaf
I H. C. KENNEDY
_____ ;
True Secret of Keeping
Youthful Looking
(The Beauty Seeker.)
IMi M«r*t of keeping youn*rlooking
• nfl beautiful," nays a well-known hyglenist,
*'i» to keep the liver and bowels normally
active. Without these requisites, poisonous
v/aite producta remain in the system, pollut
ing the blood and lodging in various organs,
tissues, joints. One becomes flabby, obese,
nervous, mentally sluggish, dull-eyed, wrinkled
and sallow of face.
"But to get liver and bowels working as
4hey ought, without producing evil aftcr-effecta
has been the problem. Fortunately, there ia
s prescription of unquestioned merit, which
may now be had in convenient tablet form.
Its value ia due largely to an ingredient de
rived from the humble May apple, or Its root,
which has been called 'vegetable calomel' be
cause of its effectiveness—though, of course, it
la not to be classed with the real calomel of
mercurial origin. There ia no habit-forming
constituent in 'sentanel' tablets—that'a the
name—and their use is not followed by weak
ness or exhaustion. On the contrary, these
harmless vegetable tableta tend to impart tone
and elasticity to the relaxed intestinal wall.
Sentanel tablets, which may be procured from
any druggist—a dime's worth will do—will
prove a revelation to any constipated, liver
troubled person."
1 The Constipation Curse
Constipation - clogged bowels
cause pain and sickness; 95 per
cent of our ills, say the authorities.
Sentanel Laxatives bring quick
relief. All vegetable contain no
calomel. Ten doses for a dime at
any druggists. Physician's sample
free, upon request, if you men
tion this advertisement. The Sen
tanel Remedies Co., Inc., 800 Madi
son Ave., Covington, Ky.
TOWDMNWOMEN
Detroit Woman Tells How To
Regain Strength.
Detroit. Mich.— "l was In such a
run-down condition I had no ambition
to do anything. I had a chronic cough
and cold and nothing seemed to give
me any relief, and I was gradually
getting worse, until a friend advised
me to try Vinol. which I did. After
the first day or two it seemed to put
new life into me, the tired, worn-out
feeling began to disappear, I regained
my appetite and was able to get a
good night's rest. The cough gradually
wore away, and I am now feeling like
myself again, so that X can do all my
housework and go about my duties as
usual. Vinol is certainly a wonderful
medicine.'' Mrs. W. E. Waters, De
troit, Mich.
Vinol restores health and strength
In conditions like this, because in a
natural manner it increases the appe
tite, tones up the digestive organs,
enriches the blood and strengthens
every organ in the body.
We guaranteed that Vinol will do
the same for any run-down person In
Harrisburg or give back their money.
George A. Gorgas, Druggist; Ken
nedy's Medicine Store, 321 Market
street; C. F. Kramer, Third and Broad
streets; Kltzmlller's Pharmacy, 1326
Derry street. Harrisburg, Pa.
P. S.—ln your own town, wherever
you live, there is a Vinol Drug Store.
Look for the sign.—Advertisement.
THE MODERN
NEED
is a remedy for the evil effects of quick
eating, over-eating and strenuous liv
ing. The medicine that meets this
need—that tones the stomach, stimu
lates the liver, regulates the bowels— is
um
Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the World.
Sold everywhere. In boxes, 10c„ 25c. |
MONDAY EVENING, RARRISBITRG TELEGRAPH JANUARY 31, 1916. '
FEARS FELT FOR
U. S. SU
FEARS FELT FOR
U. S. SUBMARINE
[Continued From First Pa*e.]
-said, have thoroughly demonstrated
themselves to be seaworthy and effi
cient. Those on the Atlantic coast
went to Key West from New York
without difficulty last winter for man
euvers and were making the same trip
when the K-6 disappeared Sunday.
The K boats in the Pacific recently
went from San Francisco to Honolulu
under their own power, establishing
a new record for long distance cruis
ing for American submarines.
Equipped With Wireless
The K-5 was equipped with wire
less, having a spending radius of
fifty miles. Navy Department officials
said it was probable that the vessel
had gotten beyond reach of Its wire
less or that the apparatus had been
damaged so that It could not report its
location. It was pointed out that the
vessels sent out In search for the K-5
might easily reach It by wireless if it
were afloat but that the submarine
would be unable to acknowledge any
message beyond a distance of fifty
miles.
Crew of Twenty-six
Enlisted men of the crew of the
K-6 at the last report to the Navy
Department were:
George C. Abbey, cook, enlisted at
Vera Cruz.
Harry L. Albee, runner's mate, New
port, R. I.
William J. Bradley, gunner's mate,
Sheffield, Pa.
Arthur Brown, gunner's mate, Whit
insville, Mass.
Otis O. Callaway, gunner's mate, j
Chicago.
Paul Davission, gunner's mate,'
Princeton. Ind.
PARIS IS VICTIM
OF ANOTHER RAID
[Continued From First Pag*.]
Saturday night's raid, officially given
as 24 killed and 27 injured.
While Isolated encounters and much
artillery and mining activity is re
ported, comparative quiet seems to
have nettled down again upon the
western fighting front where the Ger
mans recently have reported notable
successes.
Aside from along the Franco-Bel
giai lines, the military areas in which
chief activity is being displayed at
present are the Balkans and on the
Caucasus front where the Turks and
Russians are clashing near rzerum.
Athens reiterates reports received
through diplomatic channels that the
Russians are clashing near Erzerum.
having inflicted a fresh defeat on the
Turks.
In Albania the advance of the Aus-!
trians continues, but according to re
ports to-day from German sources
there is likely to be increased opposi
tion to them in the near future. Italy,
it is declared, has decided to continue
her Albanian campaign, and has
landed another infantry division with j
heavy artillery at Avlona with a view)
to an effective defense of Southern j
Albania as a measure of political I
necessity.
Russians Inflict Fresh
Defeat on Turk Forces'
Paris, Jan. 31.—News has been re
ceived in diplomatic circles at Athens,
the Balkan agency's correspondent
there telegraphs, that the Russians
have Inflicted a fresh defeat on the
Turks in the Caucasus. The corre
spondent reiterates the report that the
Russians have surrounded Erzerum.
The Turkish authorities and the bank
ers with the bank funds he says, left
the city at the last moment, barely es
caping capture by Cossacks. Russian
artillery has begun to bombard the
forts of the city.
The correspondent adds that the
Turks are hastily fortifying the towns
of Angora and Slvas, capitals of the
Vilayets of those names, situated re
spectively 215 and 425 miles east of
Constantinople.
Five French Aeroplanes
Engage Zeppelin, but
Fail to Bring It Down
By Associated Press
Paris, Jan. 31.—Five French aero
planes engaged the Zeppelin which
on Saturday night last dropped
bombs on Paris killing and wounding
over two score of persons, according
to an authoritative statement just is
sued. The first to attack the German
raider was a machine piloted by a
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Holland Droge, electrician, Flush
ing, L. I.
John M. Emery, machinist's mate,
Poughkeepsie, N. Y
William Gottlieb, electrician. New
York city.
Frank Jackson, machinist's mate,
Johnstown, Pa.
John W. Kathke, machinist's mate,
enlisted at New York.
Joseph Marsh, gunner's mate, Or
ange, N. J. ,
Ernest F. Mathews, machinist's
mate, Geneva, N. Y.
Louis E. Mioducki, machinist's
mate, Buffalo, N. Y.
Michael F. Naezek, gunner's mate
Milwaukee.
William J. O'Brien, machinist's
mate, Binghamton. N. Y.
Frank W. Rashch, machinist's mate
Brooklyn. N. Y.
Andrew Bourne, gunner's mate,
Newport, It. I.
Thomas C. Richards, chief gunner's
mate, Newport, R. I.
John H. Schilling, electrician, De
troit.
William F. Shaye, oiler, Green Bay
Wis.
Homer B. Smith, gunner's mate,
Pittsburgh.
Luther B. Treadway, machinist's
mate, Bloominggrove, Texas.
Joseph D. Walsh, oiler, Newburgh,
N. Y.
Clarence Wilson, electrician. More
land, Ga.
Harry C. Woodward, New London
Conn.
The Navy Department has no way
of knowing which of these men or
how many were aboard the K-5 when
she became detached from the flotilla.
Most of them undoubtedly were
aboard the mother ship Tallahassee.
Only small crews remain In submersi
bles when they are cruising at sea be
tween stations.
sergeant who was occupied in patrol
ing the upper air. lie pursued with
savage energy, the statement says, but
soon exhausted all his supply of cart
ridges and was obliged to abandon the
pursuit. One of two machines, which
were armed with cannon had, how
ever, by this time managed to climb
up high enough and open an intense
fire on the Zeppelin which probably
was hit but not badly damaged.
The Zeppelin was next picked up bv
f sublieutenant, as it flew over the
suburbs westward. He went up to
within 50 to 100 yards of the airship
and stuck to his quarry with grim de
termination. Sometimes flying above,
sometimes below and sometimes on a
level in order to escape the fire from
the Zeppelin's machine guns. For
fifty-three minutes the chase con
tinued, the machine guns being freelv
used on both sides, until finally the
aeroplane's engine broke down and
the sublieutenant was obliged to de
scend.
AMERICA FiRST
PLEA OF WILSON
week's tour of the Middle West. He
told of difficult es encountered In
maintaining ths peace and upholding
the honir of ti~«* United States at the
same time.
Two things, the President said, were
told him by almost everyone who
came to the White House. One was
that the people were counting on him
to keep them out of war; and in the
next breath, he continued, he was told
that the people counted equally upon
him to maintain the honor of the
United States.
"Have you reflected that a time
might come when 1 could not do
both?" he asked. "Have you made
yourselves ready to stand behind your
government for the maintenance of the
honor of your country?
"I do not believe that the fire is go
ing to begin, but I would be surer of
it If we were ready for the fire."
The President criticised both advo
cates of peace at any price and the
advocates of a large standing army.
The latter, he declare, are "counselors
the source of whose counsel Is pas
sion"; the former he likened to a man
"so in love with peace that he cannot
imagine any kind of danger; I almost
envy him the trance he is in."
Thousands heard the President's
views on national defense at the two
meetings in Pittsburgh and other
thousands crowded Gray's Armory
here in the evening, where he brought
his day to a close with the last of the
three addresses.
RESIGNS AS ASSESSOR
Because his duties as truant officer
will not permit him to devote enough
of his time to the duties of county as
sessor for the First ward, George W.
Kennedy, a former school director, to
day tendered his resignation to the
county commissioners.
RED CROSS ROMANCE ENDS IN TRAGEDY
MISS STEFAN IE HAMPL DR. JOHN KARA
Dr. John Kara, of Chicago, joined the Red Cross for work in Serbia, and
he sailed in the same party that took Stefanie Hampi from New York as a nurse.
On the boat over they became engaged, but were parted when they reached the
war zone. They wrote home they would wed when they finished their war
work. But the doctor early became a victim of Serbian tvphus, which carried
oft' hundreds of thousands. Miss llampl went on with her work to forget, .lust
the other day she boarded the Italian steamship Brindlsl from Albania. It
was blown up when it struck a mine. Her body was recovered and was
buried In Albania.
Deaths and Funerals
ASSISTANT CHIEF OF STATE
RAILWAY BUREAU DIES
Monroe H. Kehler, assistant chief
of the State Bureau of Railways, died
at his home, 1424 State street, last
night, after a brief illness. Mr. Kehler
was a former resident of Shenandoah,
where he was engaged in mercantile
business. He was chairman of the
Republican county committee of
Schuylkill for two years. In 1907 he
became connected with the Depart
ment of Internal Affairs and last
year was made assistant superintend
ent of the bureau of railways.
Mr. Kehler, before he came to this
city, was superintendent of the Shenan
doah water works.
Mr. Kehler was in his fifty-eighth
year and died suddenly, lie Is sur
vived by his wife, one daughter, Mrs.
Frederick H. Ilause, of Pottsville;
two brothers, O. S. and J. H. Kehler,
of Allentown. and three sisters, Mrs.
Thomas Glenwriglit, of Minersville;
Mrs. S. W. Yost, of Shenandoah, and
Mrs. B. F. Williams, of Sunbury.
Funeral services will be held to
morrow evening at the home at 7.30
o'clock, the Rev. A. E. llangen, pastor
of Park Street United Evangelical
Church, officiating. The body will be
taken Wednesday morning at 10.30
o'clock to Pottsville, where further
services will be held in the Chapel of
Resurrection at the Charles Baber
Cemetery, where burial will be made.
The pallbearers for the services In the
city will include a number of Mr.
Kehler's associates In the Department
of Internal Affairs.
MRS. BENJAMIN \V. WAIT/
Mrs. Emma Mabel Waltz, aged 28,
wife of Benjamin W. Waltz, died last
evening at her home, 2125 Boas street,
after a lingering illness. She is sur
vived by her husband, her parents, Mr.
ind Mrs. D. R. McNeal, two brothers
and one sister. Funeral services will
be held at the home Wednesday after
noon at 2 o'clock. Burial will be pri
vate in the East Harrisburg Cemetery.
REAR ADMIRAL BARKER DEAD
Washington, D. C., Jan. 31.-—Jtear
Admiral S. Barker, retired, who served
from 1862 to 1905 and had a notable
naval career, died at his home here
of pneumonia. He had been ill almost
a month. Burial will be in the Arling
ton National Cemetery to-morrow.
MRS. MAY KEEL
Mrs. May Keel, aged 38, wife of
Albert Keel, died yesterday at the Uni
versity of Pennsylvania Hospital,
Philadelphia. The body was brought
to this city last night, by Hoover &
Son, undertakers. Funeral services
will be held at the home, 35 Brick
Church road, nola, Wednesday morn
ing at 11 o'clock. She is survived by
her husband, one son, Ahram, and two
daughters, Frances and Eileen Keel.
CHARLGS M. Olt 'l l I
Funeral services for Charles M. Orth,
former .Select Councilman and an elec
trotyper In this city for many years,
will be held to-morrow afternoon, at 2
o'clock, at the home, 20G Harris street.
The Rev. J. Bradley Markward. pwstor
of Bethlehem Lutheran Church, will of
ficiate. Burial will be made at the Har
risburg Cemetery,
ELK MEMORIAL SERVICE
FOR \V. \V. WAi.LOWER
Complete Elks' memorial services
were held this morning at the funeral
of William W. Wallower at his home.
304 Chestnut street. The services were
In charge of the officers of Harrisburg
Lodge, No. 12, Benevolent and Pro
tective Order of Elks. The Rev. Dr.
Ellis N. Kremer, pastor of Reformed
Siileni Church, officiated.
Burial was made at Middletown,
special cars being provided. Memorial
services were also conducted at the
grave. Members of the lodge met at
9.30 o'clock al the Elks' homo, 21 ti
North Second street, and proceeded in
a body to the Wallower home. Pall
bearers were William K. Meyers, past
exalted ruler, Harrisburg lodge; John
L. L. Kuhn, J. Rowe Fletcher, M. But
terwortli. J. C. Kirk. G. H. Cobaugh,
W. H. Kiester, J. W. Swartz, William
Pavord and J. C, Soutter. .
Wireless Messages Tell
of Two Ships Sinking
New York, Jan. 3>. The White
Star freight stoainship Bovic report
ed on her arrival here to-day from
Manchester that she had picked wire
less messages indicating that two
steamships have been recently lost at
sea heretofore unreported.
One was the Apolnchee, a British
tanker in the government service; the
other was an unknown steamer whose
crew was rescued by the steamer
Finland.
SAY SPARKS SET
FIRE TO HOUSE
Sue Northern Central Railroad
Asking Damages For
Ruined Dwelling
Trespass actions
JJy )c 111 1 have begun against
" 1e rso, '" iei ' n Cen
z ' 111 nl e r man,
fffj BBBBBMi 1 1. Zimmerman, and
a $ HnlrHfigSfr William Goldsberry
ißyijlliiinlii nl to recover npproxi
-1 1 l* l mately SSOO dam
ages resulting from
the burning of the house and contents
on the "Narrows'' just below Clark's
rerry. Mrs. Zimmerman owned the !
house; Goldsberry was the tenant. j
One bleak day in March. 1913, the!
roor of the house suddenly began blaz
ing Just about the time a southbound
train rassed on the Northern Central
near by Sparks from the engine, it is
believed, set fire to the shingles. Care
lessness Is charged against the rail
road coinpany. The lionse was worth
about SSOO and the furniture and other
contents were damaged to the extent
of approximately S3OO.
Sfroli. Auditor. —Attorney Charles C.
Stroh has been appointed by the Dau
phin County Court to distribute the
balance of $3,739.34 in the hands of
i? „ orr » receiver for Bowman,
Mel I & Co.
Visiting; Norristown Almshouse.
President. Fernando Loudermtlch and
Clerk W. J. Bayles, of the Dauphin
County Poor Board, visited the Mont
gomery county almshouse at Norris
town to-day. The directorate is in
specting the system under which it is
conducted with a view to applving cer
tain Improvements to Dauphin's insti
tution.
Divorce Started. —Divorce proceed
ings were begun this morning by At
torney O. G. WicUersliam for Mrs.
Lillie sell I Id k rout against her husband.
,I' rits Sclilldkrout. Steelton, on the
grounds of desertion. They lived to
gether less than a year. A jury trial
was asked to-day in the divorce case
of Charles vs. Sarah Simms.
Hear Third Ward Appeals.— Tax as
sessment an peas from the Third ward
were considered to-day hv the Countv
Commissioners. The Second waril
hearings were also scheduled for to
day. but the time was changed to Feb
ruary 14. when the Eleventh ward ap
pellants will be heard.
S'nle February 16. —February If> at
2 o clock has been fixed bv the Dau
phin County Court for the sale of 2036
Fifth street. The sale was permitted
by the orphans' court unon application
of Colonel Frederick M. Ott. executor
for the estate of Mrs. Annie Enders.
In the Registrar's Office. —The wills
of Annie Mathews, formerly of Steel
ton. and J. Frederick llaas. this city,
were probated to-da.v and letters tes
tamentary were granted to Charles F.
Mathews and Harry Haas, respect
ively. Letters on the estate of John
Net row were issued to-dav to C. Har
vey Fortney. of Dauphin.
Harry Lauder Will Be
Rotary Glub Guest at
Luncheon Next Week
The Harrisburg Rotary Club will
have as its guest at a luncheon to be
held in the Senate Hotel Wednesday,
February 9. Harry Lauder, the noted
Scotch singer. Lauder is a member
of the Rotary Club of Edinborough,
Scotland, and will appear at the
Orpheum on the evening of the
luncheon day. A block of specially
reserved seats will be set aside for
Rotarians. D. D. Hammelbaugh will
be chairman or the luncheon. There
wil! be no Monday luncheon next
week.
Arthur L. Hall, of the Hall-Tnee
Company, was the chairman at the
luncheon to-day and he had as liis
guest Headmaster Arthur E. Brown,
of the Harrisburg Academy, who
spoke on the rapid growth of that
ins'titution In the past several years
and of what it is doing for its 'stu
dents. The student roll has increased
from two in the Fall of 1908 to lt>4
at the present, Including boys from
England, France, China, Japan, South
America and other lands beyond the
s^us.
The Rotary club will be the guest
of Mr. Hall at Ills otiees in the
Patriot building to-morrow evening
when a vice-president of the com
pany manufacturing the Tuec Sta
tionary Vacuum Cleaner will deliver
an address.
HPfIT ( BIN TO
DAUJIMf MR
It Is Harmless, No Dye, But
Darkens Your Gray Hair
So Evenly No One Can
Tell.
Whenever your hair falls out or takes
on that dull, lifeless, faded, streaked
or gray appearance, simply shampoo
hair and scalp a few times with Q-Ban
Hair Color Restorer. All your gray
hair then turns a beautiful dark shade,
and entire head of hair becomes evenly
dark, wavy, soft, fluffy .abundant, thick
and charming:—just as hair appeared
when you were 16 or IS years old.
Q-Ban is a ready-to-use delightful hair
color restorer, perfectly harmless, but
applied 2 or 3 times a week, besides
darkening gray hair, makes scalp
healthy and clean. Stops dandruff and
falling hair and promotes its growth.
Give it a trial. Sold on a money-back
guarantee. Only EOc for a big 7-oz. bot
tle at George A. Gorgas, 16 North Third
street, Harrlsburg, Pa. Out-of-town
folks supplies by mail.
MILLION STOMACH
SUFFERERS EAT
BIG MEALS NOW
No fear of indigestion, gas,
soufness, heartburn or
acidity.
"Pape's Diapepsin" is quickest,
surest stomach regulator
known.
Every year regularly more than a
million stomach sufferers in the United
States, England and Canada take
Pape's Diapepsin and realize not only
immediate but lasting relief.
This harmless preparation will di
gest anything you eat and overcome a
sour, gassy or out-of-order stomach
five minutes afterwards.
If your meals don't fit comfortably,
or what you eat lays like a lump of
lead in your stomach, or if you have
heartburn, that is a sign of indiges
tion.
Get from your pharmacist a 50-cent
case of Pape's Pia pepsin and eat a
!fe\v of these candy-like tablets just as
soon as you can. There will be no
sour risings, no belching of undigest
ed food mixed with acid, no stomach
Kas or heartburn, no fullness or heavy
feeling in the stomach, no nausea,
debilitating headaches, dizziness or in
testinal griping. This will all go. and
besides, there will be no sour food
left over in the stomach to poison your
breath with nauseous odors.
Tape's Diapcpsin promptly regulates
out-of-order stomachs, because it neu
tralizes the acids in the stomach and
digests your food just the same as if
your stomach wasn't there.
Helief in five minutes from all stom
ach misery is waiting for you at any
drug store.
These large 50-cent cases contain
more than sufficient, to thoroughly
overcome any case of dyspepsia, in
digestion or any other stomach dis
order. —Advertisement.
Nomination of Brandeis
Before Senate Committee
Washington, Jan. 31.—The nomina
tion of I..ouis D. Brandeis of Boston
for the Supreme Court bench was
referred for investigation by the
Senate Judiciary committee to-day to
a sub-committee consisting of Sena
tors Chilton, Walsh, Fletcher, Demo
crats and Cummins and Clark, Re
publicans.
MANY KINES OF RHEU
MATISM, ONE SURE
MODE OF TREATMENT
Whether your trouble is Sciatica,
luimbago or the dreaded Articular
Rheumatism, the answer is the same.
You must treat it through the blood.
Tlitft is the only way to rid the system
of uric acid, purify the blood and revi
talize the nerves. If the blood is freed
from Impurities, Rheumatism must go.
This in short. Is the knowledge gained
by the laboratories of the S. S. S. Co.
These tests have been made for fifty
years. They know what Rheumatism is.
They know that S. S. S., the remarkable
blood tonic, which they originated, will
relieve you of Rheumatism. The re
covery of thousands of sufferers by the
use of 8. S. S. is proof that you can be
relieved. S. S. S. is a blood tonic —a
purifier that restores the blood, and
makes it pure as it was before it be
came poisoned with impurities. S. S.
S. gives it strength to drive out these
Impurities—and with them the Rheu
matism. Get S. S. S. at your druggist s.
If you need special advice, write Swift
t-peciflc Co., Atlanta, Ga.
Merchant* and Miners Tran«. Co.
FLORIDA TRIPS
"BY SEA
BALTIMORE TO
One Way Round Trip
S2O JACKSONVILLE s3s
1,500 MILES—7-DAY TRIP.
$15.00 SAVANNAH 826.20
Including meals and stateroom berth.
Through tickets to all points. Fine
steamers. Best service. Staterooms de
luxe. Batha. Wireless telegraph. Au
tomobiles carried. Steamer Tuesday
and Friday, 7 P. M. Send for booklet.
W. P. TURN Kit G. P. A.. Balto., Md.
TELEGRAPH
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WILL SE.LL
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