I HHI A ■ * [ Angier's \ \ Emulsion ) RING LEADERS FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY \JT/ . Patent /T\ Notice Toilet /" n llf oinSr ) Medicines ( phlogistine I I I ( L un g j I Articles J j Carter's j I I ointment J V J These special sales are V H ,®|l er J V K & B Tea / V y 50c «9? notintendedfordealers, V^lx 7 50c Daggett and Ramsdell Cold Cre ?Sv V 14 * J 75c Tad's Kidney Salts 420 l-ViprpfntA nrp cVia II nrn- 50c El Rado Hair Remover 290 25c Tonsiiine 140 . tnereiore we snan pro 25c Woodbury . s Facial Cream 15^ 50c Williams' Pink Pills .'{oo \ teCt OUr CUStOllierS 111 / 25c Roger and Gallet Rice Powder, 230 . 50c Cal. Syrup of Figs 290 / \ _ _ , i • i _ / 50c Hinds' Honey and Almond Cream, f / $i <;n \ sls ° Fellows ' Syrup 930 / \ any Way we tniHK nee- / Merck's \ / $1.50 \ / \ 50c Sulfo-Sage Hair Color 340 I Larrthrax 1 accarv I 1 25c Freeman's Face Powder 170 / T?»llr>w's \ I Oriental 1 SI.OO Bromo Seltzer 570 1 Shampoo I Coodljr. j Milk Sugar I Dorin's Rouge Brunette 190 [ t_t <-» I I Cream I 25c Holmes' Frostilla 150 \ oc J I ln I SIOO Azurea Face Powder 710 1 riypo- I \ \ J SI.OO Nux-ated Iron Tablets (570 y . 50c 4711 Face Powder 230 \ 50c Doan's Kidney Pills 330 ~ ~j 'm ___ ___ l-fc/\n 25c Crown Rice Powder 170 50c Pape's Diapepsin 290 (3 XXX €3 XXX 13 \3lr Derma Viva Powder 296 50c Dioxogen 290 50c Charles' Face Powder 170 SI.OO Enos Salts 590 We are nevet undersold. u^'cura Soap 180 / 75c Hall's Catarrh Cure 450 f nc . „ , , 25c Aubrey Sisters' Goods f / SI.OO \ 50c DeWitt's Kidney Pills 2.>0 / \ We meet all advertised pi ices. / SIOO \ 75c Mary Garden Talcum Powder, HH<j- / SQ C \ / r\ n n i sl-00 Steam's Wine Cod L. Oil 590 / S. S. S. \ No phone orders filled. / n • i \ 15c Sanitol Face Cream t4<- / \ I j? n ' £? ' I slo ° Pierce 's Medicines 590 [ Swift's J No mail orders filled. » nintmont I 25c J ess Talcum Powder 14? [ Solvax J 3 For Eczema / 75c Nujol 1 Snecific I \ Ointment I is c Mennen's Talcum Powder 11 f I nA I \ Vl/-* / R uss i an Mineral Oil 340 \ J S oo<^s delivered. \ J 25c Sanitol Tooth Liquid 140 \ J \ ' / SI.OO Sargol 500 \ > / # y 25c Satin Skin Cream 150 y X. SI.OO Hood's Sarsaparilla 590 V At These Prices P a^m Olive Shampoo 290 x. Olive Oil 18C, 380, 750 25c Sanitol Tooth Paste 140 f SI.OO \ f SI.OO \ / 75c \ / 75c \ / 50c \ / 50c \ f SI.OO \ f \ / Wampole's \ / Peruna \ / \ [ \ I Foley's \ I K ulfey \ I T • * \ f Eckm a ns V I (<od Liver Oil | ( Tonic 1 ( Jads Salts 1 ( Bell-ans I [ Honey & TaH I Tablets \ I Listerine j Alterative \ H 1 Remember the Placel^|Z?lVTT\Jl^rr^V/ r ' G. 321 1 I and Number^— i I—#4—J * ' 1 RECKLESS DARING OF FLYING FORCE STRIKES TERROR Siberians Don't Seem to Know What Danger Is; Stop Germans Headquarters of the Russian Army of the Center, Feb. 17=. —(Correspond- ence of the Associated Press.) —The following story of the Twenty-first Flying Column of the First Siberian Corps was related by Andrew Kal paschnikoff, former secretary of the f Hot Water Each Morning | Puts Roses in Your Cheeks | To look one's best and feel one's best i« to enjoy an inside bath each Jirorning 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 'nnd 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 jour skin get clearer and clearer, you are told to drink every morning upon » rising a glass of hot water with a tcaspoonful of limestone phosphate in 11. which is a harmless means of wash i ing the waste material and toxins from ,11M 1 stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. I tliur. cleansing, sweetening and purify ing the entire alimentary tract, before THURSDAY EVENING, Russian embassy at Washington. Kal paschnikoft offered his service to his country at the outbreak of the war and was assigned to service with the Red Cross. He became identified with the 21st Flying Column and soon was placed in command of that body. "The reckless daring of the First Siberian Corps," said Kalpaschnikoff, 1 1 "is well known throghout Russia. ,The flying column attached to such a lighting organization has no easy task. In the first days of the war several columns, attracted by the brilliant achievements "of that corps in the de fense of Warsaw, strove for the honor of working with it. and especially with the famous first division; -but they found the work too hard, or the con ditions too dangerous, and after brief periods abandoned the task. "The Twenty-first Flying Column which had been with the corps since the end of November, 1914, has proven its worth. It was organized at the expense of a rich patroness. Countess Tolstoy, already famed for ' the work she has done in the founding •« 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 poand of limestone phos phate costs very little at the drug! store but is sufficient to demonstrate j 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. We must always consider that internal sanitation is vastly more im portant than outside cleanliness, be cause the skin pores 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. i iof hospitals and feeding points for the sick and wounded. Early in Oc- j tobef it did its first work with one of the European corps sent to the relief of Lovitch. At a critical mo ment, when the enemy had broken through the Russian lines in two places, the column, took up its task on its own initiative. The comman der, at that time Bashkiroff, dis- i patched two sections to a neighboring village in charge of Terotlnin, son of the Emperor's physician, and myself. "A diplomat and a student neither of whom had even been in war before, could not judge the danger and we rode boldly into the village, half of which had already been occupied by the Germans. The latter opened fire j on our sanitary carriages with rapid fire guns. Part of the carriages were destroyed. We recalled our men and started back as fast as we could. The Germans shelled the road over which we rode to our headquarters, but found that the road from Lovitch had been cut. With the wounded we had picked up we had to make a retreat of thirty-five miles in one night, most of the way under the shell fire of the Germans, to Skiernivit«e. There we found that the town had been ordered exacuated by the Russian troops and we were practically the only ones left there. A hot fight was in prog j ress outside the city. At t last mo- I ment a Russian success on one of the flanks saved the city and enabled the Russians to repulse the Germans. Be ing the only Red Cross unit on the grounds, as the result of a mere chance, we and fed, in two days, 3,017 wounded. Repulse Entire Attack "We were ordered then to move on with the corps of the famous General Mishenko, known as the Cossack Raider of the Japanese war. We took up our work in his advance lines just at the time' the Germans made their second dash on Warsaw. Our corps j stood firm for nine days, repulsing at tack after attack. This nine days ; among the Caucasian heroes was the ; most trying and dangerous,, but at the time the most instructive, of our ; experiences. In one night seven hun dred wounded were found and cared 1 for, the greater part in the trenches j under heavy artillery fire. Several j 1 sanitars w ; ere wounded. "When new corps came to the res- j cue the Caucasians were ordered to' make a rapid move back to join fresh troops and begin an advance to gether. The move was executed so suddenly and rapidly that the military side had no time to take out the j wounded lying In several villages near ! by. The last section of the column volunteered to creep into the village i and rescue the wounded who other- i wise were threatened with being j burned, fire having broken out in sev- j era I places. Through the blackness ; of the night, lit only by the bursting j shells, we made our way into the vil lage and .removed eighty men from the danger zone. The staff considered them lost and upon learning of their rescue General Mishenko called out j the heroeg of that night, thanked, them for their work and made them the , subject of a flattering order to his ! regiment. Immediately after that the commander of the column fell ill and I was left in command. Aid Wounded, Too Among troops whose gallantry | stopped the Germans a second time from coming to Warsaw were those lof the First Siberian Corps. "For the first time having seen the magnetic Siberian officers," said Kal paschnikoff. "I decided to offer the services of the column to that bril liant corps. I went to the commander of the corps. General Pleshkoff, who accepted my services. I was fas cinated by him, and my impression of him, gained that day, as a man be loved by his soldiers, big-hearted and i fatherly, has never changed." i During the long tenure of the line | HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH ;of the Bsura river before Warsaw, | when the shelling at times was so in tense that it seemed to him that no human being could live in the trenches, Kalpaschnikoff and his col umn took out and caj-ed for several thousands of wounded, victims not only of shelling but of German gases. Continuing his narration, Comman der KalpaschnikolT said: "About this time the Prassnitz op j eration came to a crisis. A blow was necessary to stop the deevlopment of the German plan directed on Vilna. The Siberian corps was summoned to start on a few hours' notice and pro ceed by forced marches 137 kilometers to Prassnitz over fearful roads and in wretched weather. Two days was allowed to cover the distance. The world knows of that brilliant dash and what was its result. The military hospital, in this rapid march, had been left behind. The Twenty-first Flying Column followed and was the first to enter after the city had been taken by the First and Third Siberian regi ments. The sights we saw cannot be adequately described. More than 2,700 wounded Germans without having had any care %vhatever, were lying or crawling about the streets, hiding in basements and outbuildings, evidently hoping that the Germans would make a counter-attack and re-enter the city, i The ditches were full of dead and wounded as were the open spaces about the city and the outlying vil lages. Many of our own men were r ir YOU HAD | J,Mr* NECK A 8 LONG AS THIS FELLOW |VS AND HAD \J SORE THROAI if] | DOWN M TONS I LINE IMm. WOUID Q U < CKLY relieve it. J A 25c. and 50c. Hospital Size, SS» " 4U DRUGGIST*- Are You Weak, Nervous Exhausted ? Don't feci like working, everything go ing wrong? Digestion poor, blood Im poverished, cannot sleep? Dr. Emerick's Body Builder a Reconstructive Tonic, Is prescribed by the famous Dr. FMEKICK for these conditions. Valuable after a severe ■lckjiess. Price SI.OO, prepared by the Dr. M. L. limerick Co., Rldgway. Pa. Sold In Harrisburg at Gorgas' Drug Store. DO YOU KNOW YOUR HUSBAND always requests his barber to uae CLOVERINE TALCUM on hia face after shaving? All barbers use this Talc, because they have found itthe best and THKY KNOW what Rood Tale. Is. Why not keep a box In ynurown home? \ Special Price to Ileslt n LATEST 25CMM CRAZE B. B. Automatic Pistol I Shoots 20 Shots 1.. H. HARTMANN « SOX .'•10 Market Street. Pklla., !»■. : N 7 scattered among the German I wounded. We found the work almost j beyond our capacity, far from a rail- ! road and with the troops always mov ing on. We formed concentration j j camps at various points and put stu- I dents in -charge of them. In these ; camps we collected 3,360 wounded." j To accomplish the rescue Kal j paschnikoff and the student had to crawl more than a mile along a ditch, ! but in plain view and in constant range | of the German trenches, but, in the ' words of Kalpaschnikoff, "the Ger i man soldiers shot rather badly."- After the Germans left Heinoff the ; population was destitute and facing j starvation. The Flying Column in the succeeding days fed there 22,698 per sons besides stamping out an epi demic of typhus fever which for a. BEWARE There Has Been No Arrangement Made Whereby the Winter Piano Company Has the Privilege of Taking Our * Purchase Checks CF P A. G. Stauffer . JLj LA 315 Broad Street Where, You Can Buy a Piano By Using the Quality Piano Company's Purchase Checks and Buy a Piano Cheaper Than the Winter Piano Co. Can Buy Them From the Factory ALL PREMIUMS GIVEN BY US WILL BE GIVEN BY A. G. STAUFFER AT HIS PLACE OF BUSINESS AND OUR FULL LINE OF PIANOS ARE ON DIS PLAY AT HIS PLACE. SEE HIM AND BE WISE TO JHE VERACITY OF THE WINTER PIANO CO. Quality Piano Co. of Lancaster, Pa. l lll— FEBRUARY 17, 1916. | time threatened to assume large pro | portions. MRS. McCIil'KE Bl'RIKI) Special to the Telegraph [ Dillsburg, Pa., Feb. 17. —Funeral , services for Mrs. William McClure, i ftiother of Postmaster J. Robert Mc | Clure, who died at her home in Car- I rol township on Monday, were held to-day, conducted by the Rev. S. A. Crabill of the Dillsburg United Breth ren charge. WOMAN'S SHOULDER BROKEN Special to the Telegraph I New Bloomtield, Pa., Feb. 17. —Mrs. : Philip S. Dunbar fell on the icy pave ment on Tuesday evening and frac tured her right shoulder. Preachers Are Busy Raising Hospital Fund Three big mass meetings in a cam paign to raise SSOO will be held within the next few w'eeks by the Interde nominational Ministers' Conference of- Harrisburg and vicinity, the money to be given to the Harrisburg hospital. The first one wili be held in the Bethel A. M. E. Church to-morrow evening. Speakers will be John Fqx Weiss, the Rev. E. Luther Cunning ham, and the Rev. B. M. Ward. The Rev. W. A. Ray will preside. The sec- J ond meeting will be held Friday even i ing, February 25, in the First Baptist I church, Steelton, and the last one in j the Harris A. M. E. Zion church, I March 2. 9
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