OF INTEREST TO THE WOMEN j "THEIR MARRIED LIFE" II Copyright by International Neira Service (Copyright, 1916, International Newa Service.) "Warren, if you haven't anything else to do, would you go down town with me to get some new shoes?" said Helen on Saturday afternoon. "Thought you had Just bought a pair?" "I had. dear, but I can't wear them." "Whafs the matter with them?" "I don't know, I thought they ntted me when I bought them, but they don't; they are too short and wide." "Where did you buy them?" "At that little place around the corner." "Of course, I thought so," said Warren In his 'I-told-you-so,' man ner. "You can't get fitted with feet like yours In a small place like that. I have told you often enough not to buy shoes In a hurry. If a woman's feet look well she looks ' well dressed all over." "I know dear, but you pay so much for your shoes." "I know I do, but I don't buy a j pair and then get them home and not wear them. Just think it over." "Well, will you go down with me to get some?" "Sure, I will. Get your things on." Helen got into her suit and put on the shoes that she had bought recently. They were good - looking shoes, In fact Helen had paid a 1 good price for them, but they did not fit, and Helen was very > par ticular about her feet. "I saw a good - looking pair at Crofts & Ordway's," she confided to Warren in the subway. "There you go again," snorted Warren. "Why don't you go to a regular place for shoes. A place where they do nothing else but : make them?" "Where, for instance, dear?" "At Mason's, for Instance." "Aren't they expensive?" Warren Is Particular "Well you needn't worry about that as long as I am going with you. We'll see if you can't get fitted and look well and be satis fied for once." Helen said nothing more. She knew that Warron would have his own way no matter what she said. She also was of the opinion that he knew no more about shoes than she did. But just because she had made an unfortunate purchase she had no statements to uphold her arguments. She knew that at Crofts & Ordway's she had always bought shoes that satisfied her, but of course if Warren wanted to 1 try somewhere else she certainly | might as well be agreeable about It. The day was perfect, warm and Springlike. Helen was looking well, and because she was conscious of this fact she quite naturally ex pected Warren to notice it. Several men glanced at her twice and al though Warren said nothing she! kaew that he was not quite uncon scious of It. They went into Mason Brothers, a place Helen had always thought Jpl|oums shrinking? fife-A JjTJj Danger ahead! - ffitajjgb !'k ,rWf Go now to a mirror and examine your / w iff mouth? Do your gums look "rinsed out," shrunken? sec a jagged appearance A ' If so, see your dentist He will tell you \ that you have pyorrhea, and that to save your four Sentist twUe vtartf. teeth you will have to fight this dread disease v » Snrtco uiy - at once. From pyorrhea come by far the Hut Stnrtca d»tt m»rt. It cleanses greater part of all tooth troubles, the teeth delightfully. It gives them Unless treated and checked, it will a whiteness distinctive of Senreco result not only in the shrinking and alone. Its flavor is entirely pleasing, malformation of your gums and of and it leaves in the mouth a won the bony structure into which your derful sense of coolness and whole teeth are set, but in the loss of the someness. teeth themselves. Start the Senreco treatment gsj 1 a .£ r , , , before pyorrhea grips you for j A specific for pyorrhea has been gOO<L j„ folder with CSf i discovered recently by dental sci- every tube. A two-ounce tube b ence, and is now offered for daily for 25c is sufficient for 6 weeks' 1 1 c _ t .l n . daily treatment. Get Senreco If .MM treatment in Senreco Tooth Paste. 0 f y our druggist today; or send xf / I Senreco combats the germ of the 4c in stamps or coin for sample T-r-* I disease. Its regular use insures your The k ] teeth against the attack or further 503 Union Central Building, **~J progress of pyorrhea. Cincinnati, Ohio. 11 D. B . oj? drop 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. WEDNESDAY EVENING. HAJURISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 16, 1916. ! most exclusive, and Warren asked for shoes. An obsequious man came forward and led them to seats, and Helen said Immediately: "Something In high shoes." "Wouldn't you rather get low shoes this time of the year?" said Warren. "I would advise you to get high shoes. We are having reductions now, and you can get good bar gains.' suggested the salesman. "All right," said Warren submis sively, and then turned to Helen as the man went In search of shoes. "Didn't I tell you that this was some place?" Helen could not help smiling. Bhe hadn't noticed any difference from the way she was treated when she went anywhere else, but then War ren was sure that this place was the best In the city, and she was willing to be convinced. "Here Is something reduced to $5, one of our regular sll models," said the man. coming back with a really good - looking pair of shoes, patent leather with gray suede tops. "But I don't like button shoes," said Helen. "Have you th e laced shoes in the same style?" Helen Gets a Rebuke "I think we have. I'll get a pair," and again Warren and Helen were left alone. "Don't you need slippers for eve ning? I thought I heard you say something about It a few days ago." "I did .dear, but I can get them somewhere else, where things are not so expensive." "There you are again. I tell you that Is false economy. We'll get them right here to-d!ay, and any thing else you need. It will cer tainly give me plenty of satisfac tion to see you well shod. I don't mind the money, so don't worry." Helen liked the shoes the man brought and Warren asked for eve ning slippers. By the time they left, Helen was the possessor of three pairs of shoes. The shoes that she had seen first, a pair of green evening slippers, and a pair of tan tramping shoes. "How about stockings?" said the man following them to the door. "Do you need stockings?" ques tioned Warren. "No, Warren, I really don't." "Women always need stockings. How about a pair for each pair of ' shoes?" "That's extravagant, dear, besides I never wear silk stockings for tramping." "Might as well have a pair of tan stockings, anyway." "Yes, three pairs for three-fifty," , said the salesman. "Otherwise one | twenty a pair." "There's your bargain," announced j Warren, and Helen said nothing more. Surely she was not the loser by this afternoon of unprecedented extravagance. But if she had ever taken It upon herself to buy three pairs of expensive shoes with stock ings to match in one afternoon, ! Warren would have called her crazy. It made a difference who thought of it first; that was all. (Another incident In this very hu man sericH will appear here soon). BELTED COAT FOR A YOUNG GIRL Fur Cloths Arc Adaptable to This Design as Well as Lighter Weights By MAY~MANTON 8825 (Wtth Basting Line and Added Seam Allowance) Girl's Coat, 10 to 14 years. This is a season of really wonderful cloaking materials. The wool velours illustrated is marvellously beautiful, there are all sorts of similar effects and there are a great many novelties that show stripes of contrasting materials in self color, while the fur cloths are exceptionally attractive. This coat is a very simple one to make, yet it gives the newest and smartest lines. It hangs loose and free, requiring no fitting in consequence. The patch pockets are both convenient and smart. For the school coat, corduroy would be good or frieze or Scotch cheviot or any similar sturdy material of the 6ort and for the more dressy coat, the wool velours are desirable and any one of the handsomer cloakings already mentioned. Since the pattern is the improved one, with basting line and seams, the coat can be cut and made easily and quickly, with tssurance of success. For the 12 year size will be needed 4 ?ds. of material 36 in. wide, yds. 44 ,r 54- The pattern No. 8825 is cut in sizes rom 10 to j a years. It will be mailed to iny address by the Fashion Department 4 this paper, on receipt of ten cent*. OUR DAILY RECEIPT Kumquat < undies Kumquats. Two cupfuls confectioners' sugar. Chopped nut-meats. Pinch cream of tartar. One-half cupful water. Yellow coloring. Cut a small slice from the top of the kumquats, scoop out all the instdes and place the kumquats in small papor cases. Put the sugar into a saucepan, add the strained kumquat juice, cream of tartar and water. Stir till the sugar is dissolved, then boil till it forms a soft ball when tried in cold water; add a few drops of yellow coloring, pour a slab and knead till smooth. P.et'.irn »i> the pan and stir till melted, then pour into the prepared kumquats. Sp tinkle with the nut-meats which have been finely chopped. Carlisle Trust Company Buys Historic Residence Special to the Telegraph Carlisle, Pa., Feb. 16. —Purchase by the Carlisle Trust Company, the town's youngest banking institution, of the residence of the late J. Herman Hos ier, In West High street, forecasts the erection of a modern new bank build ing here. The trust company just completed arrangements for the pur chase, the sum involved being $12,500. ACCEPTS LANCASTER CAMj Special to the Telegraph Marietta, Pa., Feb. 16. —The Rev. Clifford S. Roberts has accepted a call to become pastor of the St. Stephen's Lutheran Church at Lancaster. He will be graduated In May from the Lutheran Seminary at Gettysburg. AlMeCoreand DoWondeis for lMraM Shin The Soap to cleanse, purify and beautify, the Ointment to soothe and heal. Sample Each Free by Mall With 32-p. Skin Book on request. Ad druu post-card Dept. 20U, Btstin." Sold throughout the world. MILITARISM IN SCHOOLS OPPOSED Dr. Mullowney, Peace Advo cate, Discusses Pros and Cons of Teaching Boys to Shoot The Telegraph the other day printed a letter which showed the writer strongly nnd enthusiastically In favor of "teaching the boy In the school to shoot." Here is the opinion of the presi dent of the Harrisburg Arbitration and Peace Society, Dr. John J. Mullowney, whose views are emphatically opposed to military training In the schools. Further discussion through these col umns Is Invited. The letter In full follows: Paxtang. Pa- Honorable E. J. Stack pole. Editor of the Telegraph, Harrisburg, Pa. My Dear Friend: I am greatly pleased that the Tele graph has opened Its columns to the parents of Harrisburg for a dlscus- Mon of the subject of Military Train ing In the public schools. It is a sub ject of vital Importance and should be considered most carefully by educa tors and parents. My training and experience has been such that I would naturally be in favor of anything that was to promote the health and physical well-being of the young people of the nation. My life work has been in the Held of Preven tive Medicine and Sanitation, several years have been spent as a teacher of young men, both In public schools and in a medical college. I would, there fore, bo prejudiced, if prejudiced at all, in favor of a system of education which would put great stress on the making of strong and healthy bodies. But my opinion Is that while military train ing or military drill does give a cer tain degree of bodily exercise it does not give that all-roundness of muscu lar development which is necessary to produoe that perfect symmetry of body which we so much desire for the youth of the land. No man in this country has had larger experience in examin ing young men, and no man could be less prejudiced against military train ing because of moral or religious scrupples than Dudley A. Sargent, M. D., director of the Hemenway gym nasium, Harvard University, Cam bridge, Mass., and yet this is what he wrote for the Boston Medical and Surgical Journal: "My principal ob jection to military drill as a physical exercise Is that It does not to any ex tent meet the physiological demands of the body. * • • • It does not Increase the respiration and quicken the circu lation to a .sufficient extent to secure the constitutional benefits that should accrue from exercise. * ♦ • * I dislike to take from the drill one of the strong est attributes that has commended It to parents and teachers, but unless I have been misled in my observations there is nothing In the drill itself that tends to make one erect or graceful. On the other hand, I am prepared to maintain that it tends to make him stiff and angular In his movements, as well as to droop and round his should ers. "After taking the most favorable view possible of military drill as a physical exorcise, we are led to con clude that Its constrained positions, and closely localized movements do not af ford the essential requisites for devel oping the muscles, and improving the respiration and circulation, and there by Improving the general health con uition of the system. We must further conclude that In case of malformation, local weakness or constitutional de bility, the drill tends by Its strain upon the nerves and prolonged tension on the muscles to increase the defects rather than relieve them. "Finally, if the ultimate object of the r.l was *° P re P a re young men for the life and duties of a soldier, we should be forced to conclude that the drill Itself would still be defective as a means of developing the chief requisite for men in that profession. "This defect, we are pleased to state, is recognized by the great military na tions of Europe, and measures are taken to give all recruits from three to twelve months' gymnastic training to develop them as men before they are expected to conform to the require ments of the soldier." If military training or drill in the schools are as beneficial as some of the "Preparedness" orators would have us believe, is it not strange that more of the great private schools and acade mies of this country, schools which are as old as the country Itself, and which are free from popular clamor and po litical Intrigue, have not introduced military drill into their curriculums? Xl}? Phillips Exeter Academy and The Phillips Andover Academv, two of the oldest preparatory schools In the land, and. by the way, two of tho schools whose athletic contests are of nat onal fame, have never introduced military drill. I am in hearty sympathv with Su perintendent Downes, of Harrisburg when he advocates physical training for the boys (and why not the girls too) of our High Schools, but does not advocate military drill. 1 would like to urge upon the parents of this land Just a word of caution from the Father of His Country- Overgrown military establishments are under any form of government, Inauspicious to Ilbertv, and are to be regarded as particularly hostile to re puhl can liberty."—George Washington, In his farewell address. ™L hol<l , th , at , the e<*°rt to introduce military training or drill Into our pub lic schools is an insidious and cunning ly devised plan to foist upon this coun try those overgrown military estab lishments which to-day have made Europe a seething, bleeding mass of hatred and destruction. I am, Respectfully yours, ,/ OHN J* MULLOWNEY, M. D.. (President of Harrisburg Arbitration ana Peace Society.) Miss Fairfax Answers Queries HO\T IIE FORWARD DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: A certain young man comes to mv house every evening, and takes me to places of amusement occasionally. Ho never tells me that he likes me. and «A n iJ ,e, ™ ll l gr *1 thlnk ,* great deal of him. This has been going on for al year - Shall 1 ta " him that I 1 ke him very much, as I think he be lieves I do not care about him? I do not approve of a girl's making advances to a young man. If he cares for you there is no reason why he should not Indicate It definitely. And since you make him welcome to your home each evening It Is absurd to sup pose that he believes you do not care for him. „» NOT rnorrcn DEAR MRS FAIRFAX: For the past two years I have met a certain young man on the train going to and from business. Coming home the other night he spoke to me and said that he had often hoped that he might he Introduced by someone, hut. not get ting this opportunity, he took the lib erty of addressing me without an In troduction. He asked me If he might call and T hesitated. Kindly advise me if It would he nil right for me to keep up the acquaintance. R. R. D No, It Is not proper for you to con tinue this acquaintance. It Is not even safe. All you know Is that you like his looks. Of his character and reputa tion you have no knowledge. MAKE OIVK EFFORT DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I have been going about with a young men for the past six months. I have not heard from him for two weeks. Should T write? C. H. T. There is no reason whv you should not make an effort to discover what causes your friend's silence. He may be ill. In which case your frlendlv In terest is on!- fitting. He mav. on the other hand, mean to break off the nfTalr nnd In that case It Is just as well for you to know at once and not waste emotion on him. • ONI/V BOARDED TIKRE Robert Rlake, aged 18. who was picked up almost starved by the Bal timore police and .said that he came from this city, only boarded here a few weeks, nccordlng to the police, who investigated the case. •H* AH Credit Checks |i" i i Issued By the Quality Piano Co. 32 W. King St., Lancaster, Pa., can now be redeemed at the warerooms of the Winter Piano Co. 23 N. 4th St, Harrisburg, Pa. These vouchers are perfectly good and those holding them are very fortunate as they can now receive benefit from them without the trouble of making the long journey to Lancaster. Arrangements have been completed whereby full value together with all other inducements can be obtained right here in our Harrisburg warerooms. If you hold one of these vouchers bring it here at once and get it redeemed. New pianos from $lB7 up. . STORE OPEN INIGHTS WINTER PIANO CO. 23 N. 4th St. Harrisburg, Pa. Where Does the Money Go? By Dorothy Dlx In every household, save possibly that of millionaires, the one eternal conundrum that is never answered is, "Where does the money go?" On a Monday you had in your purse a hundred dollars —fifty dollars — twenty dollars ten dollars —as the case may be, and on Saturday night you are the possessor of a lone and solitary jitney. You haveji't bought any furniture, or clothes, or given a party, or gone on a spree, or been robbed, or done anything that would account for the expenditure. You've got nothing to show for your good money. Yet it is gone, and the ques tion is, how did it go? Answering the question for women, I can say truthfully that most of the money that slips between women's fin- i gers goes for foolishness, just silly lit tle indulgences and fallalls that they j really don't care for, nor want, and j i that they waste money on, because they j have never really sensed the fact that < twenty nickels make a dollar, and that ten dollars make an X spot. For, cur iously enough, a woman will hesitate about spending a good round dollar on an article, and then blithely blow in i twenty nickels on nothing. When a man contemplates matri mony, he figures out the cost of a wife in terms of French millinery and fine frocks. That's where he misses his guess. It isn't the money that a woman spends on good clothes that plays hob with the family finances. It's the money she wastes on foolishness. Tfie Beauty Shop Take the beauty shop, for instance, i A woman drops in to have her hair shampooed. There is fifty cents gone to start with. The girl who is brush ing her hair heaves a sigh of startled apprehension, and says, "Your scalp is getting tight, and if you do not wish to get bald and gray, you should begin scalp treatments at once." Bing! An other fifty cents, or seventy-five, if a little electric roller is passed a few times over the Easy Mark's head. Then comes a wave—seventy-five more, and a face massage, another sev enty-five, a manicure at fifty, and a treatment from the chiropodist at a dol lar-fifty. Fifty cents is as little as one can distribute in tips, and before she knows it the woman has spent five dol lars and twenty-five cents, totally un necessary, for she could have done her own beautifying at home herself had she had sufficient energy and thrift. Of course, it's a luxury to have all these things done for you, but it ex plains where lots of the money that women handle goes. The street cars get a lot more of the lost nickels, for the average woman considers it a crime to walk where she can ride, and takps the car even when she is going only a few blocks. That Is why street cars can pay dividends on seas of watered stock. There is no earthly reason why the average woman who has to go shopping shouldn't eat before she leaves home. But she doesn't. She stays herself from time to time on sundaes and ice cream, and hot chocolate—always at ten or fifteen cents per stay, even when she doesn't treat a friend —and this just works up to the matter of lunch, and afternoon tea at a smart hotel, where some other dollar or two flits mysteriously from her handbag. Many Other Ways Foolish little treats for the children, silly toys that break within the hour, and stray nickels and dimes to buy everything that every other child on the block has account for much more than vanishes, leaving no trace behind. So do the movies; so cheap that the whole family can afford to go every night. Only ten cents apiece, but when there are five in the family it amounts to fifty cents a night, or three dollars a week. The main way that women's money goes, however, is for jlmcracks. Good furniture and good clothes are an in vestment. They last. They give good service, and they are worth their price, but there is scarcely a house in the land that has not in it hundreds and BBOWN»C , Bronchial m 1 TROCHEYJ New 10c Trial Size Box Give quick and contin ■ ued relief from irritating coughs, hoarseness and 'jl tickling in the throat. JM Contain no opiates. Reg - —, jV. >■ ular sizes 25c, SO c and sl. At all druggists. ml ' % If V°"rdtalvrcannottup» U * ou ' u ' itl wai ' fln lf upon rectipt q/pricm. JOHN L BROWN * SDK Hr— hundreds of dollars' worth of absolute junk. Furniture that has neither use nor beauty to recommend It, alleged or naments which represent some passing fad, a clutter of things that are only fit to be thrown in the garbage can, and yet that cost a pile of good money. And any woman's bureau drawers would answer the question "Where does the money go?" Bargains that were not bargains, tawdry ornaments that caught the eye for a moment, 1 things that were bought merely be cause they were marked down from a dollar to ninety-eight cents, things that were bought just for the mere lust of buying handkerchiefs, gloves, veils, neckwear —all the trifles that cost so much and perish so soon, just the gew gaws that tempt a woman as whiskey does a drunkard. That's where wom en's money goes. These are the ways that my money goes. Sister woman, how does yours go? Be honest. Write and tell the editor of this page. GERTIIRNF. ATHEBTON, the celebrated American novelist, contributes the next discussion on this question, In which she takes the men to task. DEAD IN IRELAND Word was received here of the death of Mrs. John Keane, at Garden Hill, Limerick county, Ireland. Miss Mora Keane, formerly of this city, left some time ago to care for her mother. CHILD DIES Lawrence Lee Bucke, nine-month-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur id. Bucke, 1241 Klttatlnny street, died at the home of his parents. WOMEN'S • STOMACH TROUBLES The Great Woman'# Medi cine Often Just What I* Needed. We are so used to thinking of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound an a remedy exclusively for female ills that we are apt to overlook the fact that it is one of the best remedies for disorders of the stomach. For stomach trouble of women it is especially adapted, as it works in com plete harmony with the female organ ism, since it contains the extracts of the best tonic roots and herbs. It tones up the digestive system, and increases the appetite and strength. Here is what one woman writes showing what this medicine does: Newfield, N. Y.—"l am so pleased to say I can recommend Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound as an eco nomical and beneficial remedy in most ailments pertaining to women. At least I found it so by only taking two bottles. I had indigestion in a bad form and I am now feeling in the best of health and owe it all to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound."— Mrs. BURR WILLIAMS, R.D.N0.29, New field, N.Y. Many women Buffer from that "all gone feeling," and "feel so faint," while doing their work. Ten chances to one their digestive system is all out of order. A tablespoonful of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound after each meal should completely remedy this condition in a few days. Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect June 27, 1»15. TRAINS leave Harrlsburg— For Winchester and Martlnsburg at 5:03, *7:62 a. m.. *3:40 p. m. For Hagerstown, Chambersburg, Car lisle. Mecnanlcsburg and Intermediate stations at •5:03, »7:62. •11:53 a. m_ •8:40, 5:37, *7:45. *11:00 p. m. Additional trains tor Carlisle and Mechanlcsburg at 9:48 a. m.. 2:16. 3:)1 6:30, 9:36 a. m. For Dlllsburg at 6:03, *7:52 and •11:53 a. m.. 2:16, *3:40, 5:37 and <:>• p. m. •Dally. All other trains dalto except Sunday. H. A RIDDLE. i. H. TONQE. O. P. A. FLORIDA TOUR Personally Conducted From Baltimore, Friday, February 18, 7 P. M„ 8-day trip, Including necessary expenses |6O. Meals and room on steamer, hotels; auto tflpß, etc. Grand opportunity to visit "Land of Sunshine and Flowers." Regular sailings to Savannah and Jacksonville every Tues day and Friday. Send for Itinerary and particulars. MERCHANTS AND MINERS TRANS. CO. W. P. Turner, G. P. A., Baltimore, Md. Consult any ticket ar touring agent. . BETTER THAN CALOMEL Thousands Have Discovered Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets Are a Harmless Substitute Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets—the sub stitute for calomel—are a mild but sure laxative, and their effect on the liver Is almost Instantaneous. They are the re sult of Dr. Edwards' determination not to treat liver and bowel complaints with calomel. His efforts to banish It brought out these little olive-colored tablets. These pleasant little tablets do the good that calomel does, but have no bad after effects. They don't Injure tlio teeth like strong liquids or calo mel. They take hold of the trouble and quickly correct It. Why cure the liver at the expense of the teeth? Calomel sometimes plays havoc with the gulns. So do strong liquids. It Is best not to take calomel, but to let Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets tako Its place. Most headaches, "dullness" and that lazy feeling come from constipation and a disordered liver. Take Dr. Ed wards' Olive Tablets when you feel "loggy" and "heavy." Note how they "clear" clouded brain and how they "perk up" the spirits. At 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. The Olive Tablet Company, Colum bus, Ohio. \ For Tight COlds For Colds that are deep seated, hard to loosen and which have a firm hold on the system, there is no better remedy than our Tar, Tolu and White Pine Its loosening and soothing power is soon noticed. 25<? per bottle Made and guaranteed by FORNEY'S DRUGSTORE 31 N. Second St. V. j EDUCATIONAL School of Commerce Troup Building IS So. Market Sq. Day and Night School 22d Year Commercial and Stenographic Courses Bell Phone 1010-J Harrisburg Business College Day and Night Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Civil Service Thirtieth Year 320 Market St. llarrlsbnrg, Pa. The OFFICE TRAINING SCHOOL Kaufman Bldg. 4 S. Market S*. Training That S«curos Salary Increasing Positions In the Office Call or to-day for Interesting booklet. "The Art of Gettlnir Along la llir World." Bell phone 694-R. WUVWAWAVW^^WWVWWi j: Stock Transfer | ij Ledger j ji The Pennsylvania Stock J i[ Transfer Tax Law (act of June 5 '! 4, 1915) which is now in effect, i .[ requires all Corporations In the £ [i State, no matter how large or J 11 how small they may be, to keep 5 [i a Stock Transfer Ledger. We i ■ [ are prepared to supply these 5 J r Ledgers promptly at a very 4 i 1 nominal price. ij The Telegraph I ij Printing Co. J i Printing—Binding—Designing % ]! Photo Engraving i j! HARRISBURG - PA. S CHAS.H7 MAUK THE UNDERTAKER Slilk aad Krlker Street* Largest establishment Beit facilities. Near to you as your phone. «Ytll go anywhere at your call. Motor service. No funeral too small. .Vone too expen sive. Chapels, rooms, vault, etc., used without charge. 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers