pit Ltafltfi I Are wonderfully free irom pimple*, red- I ness. roughness, and minor blemishes un ■ drr all conditions of exposure. Nothing ■ better for the skin. Samples Free by Mail ■ Cutlcir* Soap and Ointment sold everywhere. H l iberal sample of each mailed free with 32-p. book. ■ Address post-card "Cuticura," Dept. 13G, Boeto*. I'l : ! | General | I I /lartranft making n«.uj I / friend./ con- Uf ytajilly, a.nd h.01d.1110 adl the D ' ! | old out j. A J I 9oU mo/l ■ everywhere. ■ Five- cent/. | j BvAW.W.V.V.SW.VbVW'^AS Stock Transfer :• Ledger ? The Pennsylvania Stock ■! I Transfer Tax Law (act of June J I 4, 1915) which Is now In effect, J ! I requires all corporations In the / ' I State, no matter liow largo or ? j I how small they may be. to keep ! I a Stock Transfer Ledger. We % j I are prepared to supply these f I Ledgers promptly al a very I I nominal price. J I The Telegraph \\ Printing Co. \ Printing—Binding—Designing i Photo Engraving J I HARRISBURG . . p.\. J EUI'CATIOSAL ■School of Commerce Hroup Building 15 So. Market Sq. Day and Night School 2'.!d Year and Stenographic Courses Bell Phone 1946-J ■arrisburg Business College Day and Night Bookkeeping. Shorthand, Civil SerTlce Thirtieth Year K9 Market St. Barrisburg, Pa. The ■ffice training school Haufman Bid?. 4 S. Market SQ ■ Training That Secures ■alary Increasing Positions In the Office ■ Call or s*nd to-day for interesting ■loklct. "TLe Art of Getting Alone !■ He World."' Bell phone 694-R. ■umberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Eftect June 27, 1915. leave Harrisburg:— ■ For Winchester and Martlnsbure a» *7:52 a. in.. *3:40 p. in. ■ For Hagerstown, Chambersburg Car lisle. Mechunlcsburg and Intermediate at *5:03, *7:52. *11:63 a. m_ H:4O. 6:37, *7:45, *11:00 p. m. ■ Additional trains for Carlisle and at 9:48 a. m.. 2:16. 3-ia ■ For Dlllsbui g at 5:03. *7:62 and a. in.. 2:16. *3:40. 6:37 and C:3« H m. ■ 'Daily. All other trains daily excent ■inday H. A. RIDDLE. ■j. H. TONCE. q. p. Lf CHAS. H.MAUK HM THE 1L UNDERTAKER Sixth and Kelker strrcti establishment. Best facilities < ■ear to you as your phone. Will go' ■ ywliere at your call. Motor service K| funeral too small. None too expen-' Chapels, rooms, vault, etc.. used charge. BKAOQVARTERS FOB 1 ISHIRTS ■ Sim.fr & ■Dr. H. Hershey Famsler Hias removed his office from j ■1463 Market street to 1438 MARKET STREET Want Ads SATURDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 5, 1916. Recent Deaths in Central Pennsylvania I .ingles town. Miss Alice Mountz died yesterday at the home of William Clay. Funeral Tuesday morning from Sandy Hollow church. Lewisbcrry. Philip Bai»nes, a Civil War veteran, who has been blind for many years died here yesterday, aged 78. One son, F. G. Barnes, of York, and a daughter. Mrs. Carrie Slotliower, of Harrisburg survive. Social and Personal News of Towns Along West Shore Miss Edith Sadler of Altoona. was j the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Miller at New Cumberland this week. Mrs. W. A. Cookerly entertained the Sunshine Workers' Class of Trinity I United Brethren Church at her home in Reno street. New Cumberland this afternoon. WOMAN FOUND DEAD Special to the Telegraph Hagerstown. Md., Feb. 5. Miss A. Savilla Welty, aged 65 years, was found dead at her home al Fairplay. WII.I. Bl'Y FIRE ENGINE Special to the Telegraph Xewville. Pa.. Feb. 5. Borough council last evening decided to pur chase n La France fire engine at a cost not to exceed $5,800. BARN BURNED Elizabethville. Pa.. Feb. 5. A l large barn on the farm occupied by 1 Mark T. Davis, in Upper Powl's Valley ! was burned to the ground Thursday. OLD FOLKS NEED "CASCARETS" FOR LIVER, BOWELS I Salts, calomel, pills act on bowels ; like pepper acts in nostrils. Enjoy life! Don't stay bilious, sick, headachy and constipated. u - iffil I Most old people must give to the bowels some regular help, else they suffer from constipation. The condi- ! tion is perfectly natural. It is just as natural as it is for old people to 1 walk slowly. For age is never so active as youth. The muscles are less elastic. And the bowels are muscles. So all old people need Cascarets. One might as well refuse to aid weak eyes with glasses as to neglect this gentle aid to weak bowels. The bowels must be kept active. This is im portant at all ages, but never so much i as at sfty. Age is not a time for harsh phy sics. Youth may occasionally whip ! the bowels into activity. But a lash can't be used every day. What the bowels of the old need is a gentle and natural tonic. One that can be constantly used without harm. The only such tonic is Cascarets, and they cost only 10 cents per box at any drug store.—Advertisement. Medicated Smoke Drives Out Catarrh Simply Write a Post Card to Address Below. Dr. Blosser, who has devoted forty years to the treatment of Catarrh. Is the originator of a certain combination of medical herbs, flowers and berries to be smoked In a \ pipe or ready Bm —' 1 prepared cigar- W Cm ~w ' \ ette. The emoke- QrC. jC-' va /-—v- 1 \ vapor reaches VV |/M/( all the alr Pass is. l/trri \ a ß es of the head. ■ nose and throat. 1 As the dis ease is carried Into ' th ft? e ti pa ( sa ? es 1\ breathe, so 'the • antiseptic, heal _ , . , ing vapor of this Remedy is carried with the breath di rectly to the affected parts. This simple, practical method ap plies the medicine where sprays I douches, ointments, etc., cannot pos sibly go. Its effect is soothing and ' healing, and Is entirely harmless, con taining no tobacco or habit forming drugs It is pleasant to use. and not sickening to those who have never smoked. No matter how severe or lonir standing your case may be. we want to i show you what our Remedy will do i To prove the beneficial, pleasant 'ef- I feet. The Blosser Company. 650 Walton St.. Atlanta. (ia„ will mail absolute"? j vertfy°thel 3 r SffiSTl the° Remedy" tor^'" 8 U ««"• ° f smoking and also some of our ' jjJi |ndo the work of a week or a vear. There are no vacations on the "one man poultry plant. All the many necessary steps must be taken every day, or some sort of disease or para site. which is just as bad, will appear, rhere must be dropping boards under the roosts, and these must he cleaned off every day. The roosts must be fre quently washed with a good disinfec n?. nt ~l kerosene is as S° od as anything. Ine deep litter must he stirred up e\er> day and. removed as often as it shows the slightest signs of filth or dampness, and new litter thrown in its place. The litter question is of more than ordinary importance, for It is verv necessary that the hens he kept active, especially in winter when thev are kept in close confinement. The grain should be buried deep in the clean lit ter so that they will have to dig for it and dig deep. The hens will get fat and lazy and will not lay unless thev have to work for their food. In no other way can they be induced to ex ercise. Without this incentive some times they will stand still and freeze rather than move about. Plontv of Sunlight and Air Necessary A good many poultryhouses are e " tlreI >' wrong principles, notwithstanding the enlightenment resulting from the extensive investi gations of recent years. Every poul trynouse should face as nearly south as circumstances will permit, and should never face the west or the H 0 , 1 ?,. Thls is Particularly true in cold climates, of course. The impor tance of sunlight and fresh air can not be overestimated, nor can the danger from drafts, which produce colds and eventually roup, and must be avoided at all cost. It is abso lutely essential that the houses be so situated that they will get the early morning sun In every nook and cor ner, which means they must have large windows and many of them, and these should remain open at all times except in extreme weather. With no openings on the north or west, how ever, houses can be so arranged that windows may be left open even In blustering weather without any drafts reaching the hens. The best way to ventilate a house has been demonstrated to be by the mmmmmmmm hto GET FERTILE EGGS IhtHtn " la ' ays ** Ak Your hens and male blrdi should be in the pink of ihnt condition, then you get healthy, fertile esgs for p'jyj jv / ' vjfs.' 1 hatching. It will pay you to give them a course of jft /; Jf DR. HESS Jtm POULTRY PAN A CE A 1 rtfh* now. Pan-a-«e-a le not * stimulant, but contains Nux I Vomica and Quaatle, the best tonles known to sdenco. It pro- Of ' -f M duces appetite, promotes digestion, makes hens lay. Pan-a-ce-a v / also contains Iron for the blood, internal antiseptics that destroy J disease germ a that may be lurking In the system. It assures a healthy, (r s,n K in ** Paying poultry flock. IS lbs., 2!»c; & lbs., «0c; 25-lb. pall, ■ * 2 ' S t' QnA * ANTttD ' Bo, d by most first-clsss poultry and seed stores. piWjf DR. HESS INSTANT LOUSE KILLER I ■ Rev'd kills lice on poultry. Sprtnkle It in the dust bath every other week and the ■ * M hen * wlll do the re,t * GCAJUKTitr.D. 1 lb. can. »sc; »-lb. can, —c. mm dfp 0 * DR. HESS A CLARK. AshUx>4. Ohio ■■■■■■■■■■ j The Telegraph Bindery j Will Rebind Yeur Bible Satisfactorily j \ j Flexibility NE of our largest city's good stores took occasion to comment upon "Flexibility" in its advertising several days ago. €J How it easily adapted itself to varying conditions, was told in a manner both entertaining, and worthy of repetition by any other good store. ■ \ In storekeeping, however, there is another closely allied factor, by which every person in a good store's organization must be II A Inflexibility <1 It takes hardened nerve and tempered will to foster Certain prin ciples which make for better storekeeping and more efficient service. <1 It requires unswerving loyalty on the part of all store workers to uphold the standard under which their store has grown; stead ily and substantially, through years of what not! •J The written word of the store must be one of sincerity, and it is usually found where the reader is left no cause to doubt. *hich i m»rk x. i intend 10 roof■ coupon and get it or other helpful J ~ Roofing* * li'.m" 1,0u,e books free. ■ : S I{!. , r n ,f a,ow I _ Htiil