10 CASTORIA Lfo.!.s For Infants and Children. I castoM*? K r. ** p? " • Genuine Castona A\egetablpftrparation forAs- A Itttottq M It: IB iUWdyS w » SftriCr ,m B UIc SumiadisaiuißtMcJsof -n fA/ |\|* hi kmmmmmrn Bears the /0» PromotesDitfpatlonJChffrful- Sigll<ltlirßy # ll E a > ' nessandßest.Contalnsneitftr /(\ If Opium.Morphinc norMiatral nt # l\. | Not Narcotic. liuy lis" Pkaptia SrrJ~ Alf \ Jbibam*- \ II > tej; A. JtStft- I &/% ■ Ip- ft Jr ,n i ' JhL T * || _ _ : C Apcrfect Remedy for Ccmsflpi f\| Af» 11 S R ; ition.SourStomach.Dlarrhofa] f ¥ ly is-o<' \Yomis,Com-ulsions.Feverish' I IL/ _ _ isls}- ness and Loss or Sleep. % 1U Lnf flyni musn> t* |VT lUI UIUI laSj fI l , || l*i Thirty Years eIMGASTOBIA Exact Copy of Wrapper. TMB cINT4UB eoM „ NV , mtw Te „ eiTT . N t i j T-awnmanrßMgmifnrrflißri TERRIFIC ARTILLERY FIRE ON FORTRESS [Continued From First Page] were penetrtaed, the Germans being utmost immediately driven out. The German announcement shows the taking in the Verdun battles of nearly 17,000 prisoners, together with 7S guns. 7 01' them modern heavy pieces. SO machine guns and quanti ties of war material. The heaviest infantry fighting of last night seems to have been in the Woevre district, to the south of the fortress, where the Germans attacked : nil captured the tillage of Man heiilles. The French declare that in a i ounterattack they attained the west ern boundary of the village, which they now hold under their fire. The comparative lull that pre vailed for some hours before the re newal of the intense artillery fire re ported to-day. indicates that a new phase of the battle might be develop ing. As a whole, the German at tack, while stille continuing, has ap parently less driving power while the TO STOP BAD COUGH SOOTHE DRY, IRRITATED THROAT, WITH PARMI.VT SYRUP. SAYS THIS OLD-FASHIONED COUGH REMEDY IS BEST We are told that the old-time reme dies are best and invariably contain less harmful yet better medicine than those which aire in use to-day. This being so, undoubtedly the following old-fashioned recipe which Is ouick act ing will be welcomed oy many as there seems to be a regular epidemic of coughs pt the present time. Select from your druggist 1 ounce Parmint • double strength), take this home and add to it a quarter pint of hot waterand 4 ounces of granulated sugar, stir un til dissolved. Take 1 tableepoonful four times a day. No more racking your whole body with a cough. Clog ged nostrils should open, air passages of your head should, clear anil your breathing become easy. Parmint syrup is pleasant to tak>\ easy to prepare and costs little, livery person who has a stubborn l ough, hard cold or catarrh in any form should give this pre scription a trial. There is nothing bet ter. —Advertisement. Don't Go To Bed With Gold Feet Says: "Often Brings on Attacks of Acute Rheumatism An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, and people who are subject to attacks of rheumatism should never go to bed with cold feet. A whole lot is being said about tak ing salts and effervescing tablets for rheumatism and sciatica, but those who suffer sharp twinges and painful swollen joints need something power ful to overcome their piteous suffer ing. Any broad-minded druggist will tell you that one-half teaspoonful of Kheuma taken once a day is driving more rheumatism out of afflicted peo ple than all the salts on earth. Right in this neighborhood H. C. Kennedy and all druggists sell large quantities of it. and it's the surest and most in expensive remedy about 50 cents a bottle. EDUCATIONAL School of Commerce Troup Building 15 So. Market Sq, Day and Night School 22d Year Commercial and Stenographic Courses Bell Phono lUKi-J Harrisburg Business College Day and Night Bookkeeping, Shorthand. Civil Service Tlilrtleth Year 32® Market SU Harrisburg, l'a. The OFFICE TRAINING SCHOOL Kaufman Bldg 4 & Market So. Training That Secures Salary Increasing Positions In the Office Call or &>>nd to-day for Interesting rooklet. "Tb*> Art of n*<tln« Alunir In «l»e World." Bell phone 694-R. " Flro Accident J. HARRY STROUP Insurance 1617 N. SECOND STREET Automobile Surety Bonds TUESDAY EVENING, pressure is being shifted front point; to point. Hunting Weak Spots The possibility is indicated by military observers that the Crown Prinoe's armies are gathering their forces for a new concentrated attack at some selected point, and that the thrusts now being made here and there are for the purpose of picking out the weakest spot in the extended line. The Germans, it is noted, need time to emplace their heavy guns and possibly even now may have brought them up behind their advanced in fantry lines closer to the fortress for <. oncentration on its permanent de-; fensive works. Deliver Vigorous Attack Meanwhile the French are not idle and are delivering vigorous counter strokes. When attacked, their lines in the stronger positions they now oc cupy are holding firmer. Estimates of the number of Germans engaged in the great battle are con-j siderably larger than 300,000 men be lieved to have been engaged In the' initial operations. Some authorities• now deilare that there are as many , as 7T.0.000 troops engaged In the fighting on the German side, strong reinforcements having been sent to the scene. Russians Closing In The Russians are energetically con tinuing their campaign against the Turks in Armenia. Reports from Petrograd to-day declare that the | Turkish forces are hastily evacuating Trebizond on the Black Sea and | other nearby towns in the coast in the Caucasus region. Recent dispatches declare that the Russians arc closing in on Trebizond both from the east along the coast and from the direction of Erzerum, the captured Turkish stronghold. Casualties of the British forces in the various sections of lighting are as published during February, 739 offi cers and 17,847 men. This was some what smaller than during January, when the published losses amounted to 1,079 officers and 19.624 men. Italy llcady For War Sinking of the French auxiliary cruiser La Provence in the Mediter ranean is announced in Paris. The number of survivors is estimated at ! 870. Constantinople reports the repulse lof a surprise attack bv the BriUsh -gainst the Turkish position at Fela hiex, Mesopotamia, where General I Aylmer's army is trying to reach Kut ■ El-Amara to relieve the beleaguered garrison. ' The Italian Government has requisi tioned nearly all the German steam ers Interned in Italian ports, accord ing to a London announcement, tak ing possession of thirty-four of the total of thirty-seven. This announce ment follows unofficial advices re cently that the Italian Government was still undecided whether it would yield to the popular demand for a war with Germany. Maid Pushes Aged Verdun Woman Eight Miles in Snow on Wheelbarrow to Safety By Associated Press Paris. Feb. 29.—Reports from Ver dun say that twenty-one persons of the civilian population have been killed by shells which fell in the city. A small remnant of the population were still reluctant to leave, but were : urged by the authorities to go, and they crowded on open freight cars used for the handling of artillery, and, j exposed to the snow and the cold, j they departed for a safer region. One I aged woman had refused to go, stating ! that she was resigned to die. but her | maid, who herself was 62 years old, Cocoanut Oil Makes a Splendid Shampoo If you want to keep your hair in good condition, be careful what you wash it with. Most soaps and prepared shampoos j contain too much alkali. This dries j the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and jis very harmful. Just plain mulsified' J cocoanutoil( which lspure and entirely greaseless), is much better than the most expensive soap or anything else 1 you can use for sham pooing, as this j can't possibly injure the hair. ! Simply moisten your hair with water and rub it in. One or two tea spoonfuls will make an abundance of rich, creamy lather, and cleanses the hair and scalp thoroughly. The lather I rinses out easily and removes every j particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and ex cessive oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves it fine and silky, bright, fluffy and easy to manage. I You can get mulsified cocoanut oil jat most any drug store. It is very cheap, and a few ounces is enough to j last everyone in the family for months. I —Advertisement, CITY POLICE TO STUDY ACCIDENT PREVENTION TOO Mayor Meals Decides Patrol men Need Safety First Instruction TECH BOYS .TO ATTEND 1 Resuscitation Methods Will Be of Special Importance to Bluecoats Harrlsburg's policemen are to lie instructed in the principles of "safety first" by the State Department of and Industry. Mayor Ezra S. Meals has decided J •that the police force shall witness the safety first moving pictures to be ex hibited by the Department in co operation vrith Harrisburg manufac- I turers. The first of the series of entertain ments is to be given to-night in the | Technical High school auditorium when the employes of the Moorhead Knitting Company and the Blougli Manufacturing Company will be the guests of the evening. The serleß will continue at intervals during the next j two weeks. To-morrow afternoon a j special performance will be given at I 2 o'clock when the night patrolmen of the police force, the Tech High School students and night workers of Harrisburg newspaper will attend. Mayor Meals will distribute tickets | of admission among the day patrol- ! men in order that they may attend evening exhibitions of the safety films during the coming week. Films show ing the proper methods of resuscita- i tion of drowned persons or persons! overcome by smoke and gases or from I electric shocks will be of special value to the policemen. Fire preven tion tilms, the ftlms of the first aid meet of the Bethlehem Steel Com pany's safety corps and the films showing accidents from unguarded machines in industrial plants will be, of exceptional value to the High School students who will later follow industrial work. Those attending the movies will be given pamphlets telling them of the slaughter of human life as a result of carelessness. Since January 1, 290 persons have been killed and more than 38.000 have been injured in the industries of Pennsylvania. pleaded with her and finally placed ] her in a wheelbarrow and wheeled her eight miles through snow and mud to a place of safety. Verdun Fighter Says Germans Advanced Blindly Like Big Flock of Sheep By Associated Press Paris. Feb. 29. —A combatant who was in one of the most advanced trenches early in the battle of Verdun i and who has returned to Paris j wounded gives his experiences as fol- I lows: "At dawn we received orders to ; leave the trench and to retire to a strong position in the Vattx woods in front of Douaumont. Bending low. j we retired the four or five'kilometers through the snow without much loss. ' Once In the new trenches, we could not hear one another speak, so great : was the noise of the cannonading, and when we looked through the periscopes iwe could only see heavy clouds of i smoke shutting out the sky with jets |of fire flashing through the snow ' flakes. There were about a dozen of ! us in the trench and we felt the sup j pressed emotion so much that at last ' we all burst out singing, and vet none of us could hear a word spoken, even , by himself. | "Then we saw the Germans coming I on. They were in such masses that : they looked like a flock of sheep, j When our guns began to speak, white I empty spaces showed among the gray lof the advancing masses, but these I were soon filled up by fresh patches of gray. As they neared our barbed wire i our machine guns opened tire and we , had to cover our ears with anything : that came handy the noise was so tre j mendou.s. I felt no fear, but 1 had no ! feelings or thoughts, only a sort of ! buzzing and vertigo. When night I came on and the flares lighted tip the field the Germans seemed to be quite | close, but it was an optical illusion. I They advanced very bravely, waving i their rifles or leaping as they passed j over the heaps of dead. I was knocked ; over by a shell and had my arm ! broken, and as the trench was com ! pletely destroyed I crawled away and : fortunately met an armored autorno ! bile which took me to Verdun." Entice Germans Into Woods, Then Fire Mine; Trees and Bodies Mixed By Associated Press Paris, Feb. 28. "Do you know about the trick we played on the Ger mans in Caures wood?" was the ques tion with which a French soldier who had been in the Verdun fighting intro duced to-day his account of an lnci- I dent at the front. » "Well, to the north of Verdun," he continued, "a little beyond Beaumont, ' lies Caures wood. It was a point to ! which the Germans devoted special at | tention and therefore everything was I done to give them as good a reception j as possible. "While our infantry on the fringe | of the wood held off the enemy a lieu ; tenant of engineers and his men made I their final preparations in the wood, ; which had been carefully mined be ' forehand. When all was ready the infantry fell back, and the Germans, convinced that our men were bolting, i tore after them in the woods, yelling exultantly. "When the last Frenchman was j safely out of the woods on the other side someone posted near Beaumont pressed a button. There was a heavy | boom, and trees mingled with bodies : shot into the air. Virtually every man ! of the enemy in the wood had been j killed." Bombardment North of Verdun Is Continuing With Greater Intensity By Associated Press Paris, Feb. 29.—The bombardment to the north of Verdun is continuing with greater intensity. East of the Meuse last night there was a resump tion of violent local attacks. Near the village of Douaumont the fighting came to a hand-to-hand encounter and the Germans were repulsed by French troops. After intense artillery fire German forces captured the village of Mau heulles. but a counterattack brought the French to the western boundary of this location. They now hold Man heulles under their fire. In Lorrain the Germans succeeded iln occupy ins small sections of French HARRISBURG CfisS&i TELEGRAPH COMMISSION TO DRAW ONLY FARE Actual Price of Ticket Alone i May He Charged by County Authorities JLJ L 111 just the actual trav- j elingexpenses.with out such incidentals allowed Dauphin «* Co 111 in l s s 1 o ri crs when that body is X '" away on business incident to county I affairs, according to a ruling handed , down yesterday by Phil. S. Moyer, the county solicitor. The commissioners heretofore had been accustomed to charging mileage in their car fare, meals, lodging, etc.,' 1 but when the new administration took | hold of county affairs the solicitor was asked to give on opinion on the ques tion of just what the governing board could and could not charge for. The ! views of the attorney were expressed •in connection with the many trips to j nearby towns the commissioners have 1 been making in sitting to hear assess ment appeals. To \ct On Bridge Test.—Definite ac tion relative to the testing out of the ! new Nineteenth street bridge across I the Philadelphia and Reading tracks | will likely be determined by the County Commissioners to-morrow. The j ' Ferro-Concrete Company has firmly declined to test tlio bridge with trolley j cars on the ground that it is not re- | I quired by its contract to do so. City Commissioners Absent. City j I Commissioner William H. Lynch, su- i t perintendent 01 streets and public im provements. and City Engineer M. B. Cowden left last evening for Pitts- | j burgh to represent Harrisburg at the j ! good roads congress. Frank Bosch. | president of tlie Motor Club of llur- j f risburg, completed the local delega- I 1 tion. The party will return to-mor- | ' row. City Commissioner W. L. Gorgus, 1 superintendent of finance, went to 1 ; Philadelphia to-day to attenil the 1 fnneral of George W. Kendrick, Jr., a past worshipful master of the Penn- j ! sylvania Grand Lodge of Masons. MISSIONARY TO SPEAK I Christopher Knapp. n returned mis sionary from Spanish Honduras, will talk to-niglit and to-morrow night on his two years' work at that place, at t Gospel Hall, Cameron street near Cal- I ] der. i I trenches, but they were shortly driven ! out from these positions. Germans Claim 16,575 Unwounded Prisoners in Fighting Around Verdun Bv ;Issociated Press Berlin. Fob. 29, via London. Pro- 1 ; gress for the Germans in their drive towards Verdun in the Woevre dis trict was announced by the war office to-day. The German troops have past ed Dieppe, Abacourt and Blanzee, and also have taken Manhuellas and Cham j lon. The war office also announced that a small armored works northwest of Douaumont has been stormed by the I Germans. The official announcement | gives the total number of unwounded prisoners taken as 16,575. There have been captured also 7S cannon and 86 machine guns. Big German Flotilla Is Laying New Mines By Associated Press Copenhagen. Feb. 29.—The Afton j hlad reports that a large German flo | tilia is engaged in laying mines south of Falsterbo. but outside of Swedish ! territory, and that it is under the pro j teetion of twenty German patrol ships. Today Is Bicycle Day AH Over the Country "February 29 lias been set apart all over the country by bicycle manufac turers, jobbers and dealers as bicycle day," says Ray Heagy, of Heagy Bros., and "right here in Harrisburg we ex pect it to be a big day, with results that will be felt all the year. "The statement that close to half a million bicycles were made and sold In 1915 may be a surprise to some people. Yet it is absolutely true. The bicycle industry is neither dead nor even sleeping, and the slogan of the trade now is 'A Million Bicycles, in 191f>\ "Careful investigation shows that even in the so-called 'boom bicycle days' not more than three-quarters of a million bicycles were sold. That was some fifteen years ago. The increase of population and many other factors make the bicycle market much larger to-day than then. Bicycles cost less, and are better to-day than ever, for riding for pleasure. The services they perform, economically and well, in business are more numerous than ever. The great American boy is as great a bicycle enthusiast as he ever was—and the bicycle helps to make boys strong, sturdy, manly and often helps them make money and cultivate habits of thrift and business instincts. "Moreover, women and girls are riding bicycles in larger numbers than in years before. Society women at the * fashionable winter resorts have their bicycle clubs and outings and enjoy the sport immensely. ! "Bicycle racing has taken a new 1 lease of life, too. At the six-day meet ; in Chicago recently the audience fre quently neared the 10,000 mark —and ■ everything point to the fact that the bicycle is here to stay—and that the American people realize it, and buy | and use the bicycle In great numbers. "All over the United States during I the week of February 29 there will be I special window displays and other at : tractions and the million bicycle year will be given a lining start." 1 To Remove Roughness, Chaps, Freckles, Lines If your skin is chapped, rough or harsli. dab a liberal amount of mercol lzed wax on the face and allow it to remain over night. When you wash oft the wax in the morning, fine, flaky, al most invisible particles of cuticle come | with it. Repeating this daily, the en ! tire outer film skin is soon absorbed, ! but so gradually, there's not the slight est hurt or inconvenience. Even the , ugliest complexion yields to this treat ment. The underlying skin which forms the new complexion Is so fresh and youthful looking you'll marvel at the transformation. It's the onlv re liable way to actually discard an aged, faded, freckled, blotchy or weather ] beaten complexion. One ounce of mer > colized wax, procurable at any drug store, is sufficient in most cases. If wind and cold make you squint and frown, you're bound to cultivate wrinkle's and crow's feet. To ovet come these, bathe the face in a solution made by dissolving an ounce of pow dered saxollte in a half pint .witch hu«l —Advert I mmartf. NEWS OF STEELTON BOYS TO BUILD HOMES FOR BIRDS; Professor J. L. Folker to In-, struct Scholars to Con serve Bird-Life Professor J. 1,. Folker. head of the | manual training; in the Steelton public | schools, has notified Secretary of Agri- f culture Charles E. Patton that he will j shortly inaugurate in the grammar j schools here a course in bird house | construction. Secretary Pauoti a short time ago ; urged the tiaehers of the public i schools of the State to take up the question of competitive bird house! contests in the schools as a means of! conservation of the native birds and a I help to the agricultural interests fori their pest destruction. There has been a general response throughout the State, but Professor Folker has in stituted a plan that promises to make j the local schools stand out prominent in the movement throughout the State. Professor Folker says that be will make the construction of bird houses I part of the regular manual training course for grammar school boys and will have them set out the boxes and keep a record of their tenants. Theioi promises to he a friendly rivalry among the Steelton boys in the construction i i of the bird houses and in reporting on j i the first nestings in the houses of the' ; respective birds for which the houses i were intended. Workmen Repairing Old Lochiel Blast Furnace; May Be Blown in Soon | Workmen to-day began to repair | the machinery at the old Lochiel blast j furnace. South Harrisburg, owned by , i the Pennsylvania Steel Company and j idle since 1911. While there is 110 immediate pros- , | pect of blowing in this old stack, 1 which is of only tifty tons capacity, oflicials to-day said, the furnace is lie- i ing overhauled so that it may be blown in should the additional pig . iron capacity be needed. Tlie five stacks at Stcciton are now being op erated at capacity and the work on I I No. 3 furnace, which is being remod | eled to increase its capacity, is being! j pushed. tiIVKS BIRTHDAY PARTY ! In honor ol' his seventeenth birth- I day. Russell Johnson entertained a number of his friends at his home. -74 Myers street. Saturday evening. Among those present were Miss Laura 1 Sides, Jliss Myrtle Beck, Miss Daisy > Prestly, C. Knsininger, C. Bell, S. 80-1 1 gar. L. Shelley. K. Yingst. M. Taylor, j L. Heist. 10. Heist. Herbert Sides, C. A. ' Hand, M. Salinger. J. Sease. T. Mul cloon. William Keim. A. Beck. C. Prestly, M. McCommon, B. Xangle, A. Wolf. F. Roberts, W. Freeburn, P. Freeburn, 11. Swartley, 11. Johnson, Russell Johnson, Miss Venus Zimnier j man. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Johnson. WIIiLIAM STEPHENSON William Stephenson, an old resident of Enliaut, died at his home last even ing from pneumonia. Tie is survived ;by his wife, Sara; sons. Harry and William, and daughter, Mrs. Harry Thumma. who is now seriously ill at the Harrisburg Hospital. Kuneral services will be held Friday afternoon at I.SO o'clock in the United Brethren Church at Oberlin, the Rev. ' Mr. Kcefer otlleiatlng. Burial will be j made at Oberlin. IHIGHSPIRE 1 L. H. Leffler, Heaviest Man in Highspire, Dies ! Levi H. Lefller. aged 54, who weighed ; nearly 300 pounds, died at his home, in I Highspire, yesterday following a three weeks' illness with Bright's disease and 'dropsy. He was a great fisherman. Mr. Leffler is survived by his wife, one son. Morris, and three daughters, i Katharine, Mabel and Carrie. Funeral services will be held Thursday after ! noon, at 2 o'clock, in the Church of | God. The Rev. B. li. C. Baer. pastor. I will officiate and burial will be made in the Highspire Cemetery. TO ( KI.KUIIATK AMMVHIISAIIV I The Christian Endeavor Society, of i the Highspire Church of God, is pre- I paring to celebrate the twenty-second 'anniversary of the society. A program is being arranged which will include several good speakers, one of which will be the organizer of the society in Highspire. ARE MEDICINES LIQUORS? A certain class of prejudiced and jealous doctors call patent medicines only alcoholic beverages. They will tell you that such and such a medi cine contains as much alcohol as a glass of beer or a certain quantity of whiskey: but they do not mention that the beer or whiskey is swal lowed at one draught, while only a small quantity of the medicine is 1 taken at .one dose. At the same time . they will use alcohol quite as freely (and many in four or five times as great proportions in their own pre scriptions. Such standard remedies as Lydia jE. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound ! use barely enough alcohol to pre serve the root and herb extractives, too little to have injurious effects; and the medicine can be had, if de sired, in a non-alcoholic form.—Ad vertisement. ' Gei\e r&A Ivi Harlranft | M c'i§ar IhaJ is aJwa/Q up ij I to your ex- i pectahons-—' , I Frve j FEBRUARY 29, 1916. Steelton Snapshots Builds House—Dr. W. J. Middle ton has obtained a permit to build n 2 % -story frame dwelling in North Second street. Measuring Social.—Clnss 6 of Grace | I'nited Evangelical Sunday School, will i hold a measuring social at the home of William 11. Xckes, 515 Lincoln street. Small Fire.—Tile West Side Hose Company responded to a still alarm ] yesterday to extinguish a tire in a I chimney at the home of John G\Don- j nell. North Second street. WILL PROSF.CI'TE PIIK'HASKIiS Charged with stealing wheat from j box oars on the siding of the Hotter Flour Mill in the West Side, three, small boys were arraigned before i Squire Frank Htees last evening and lined. The arrests were made by Penn- ; sylvanla Railroad officers, who de clared that should these petty thefts continue the people who buy the grain | from the boys will be prosecuted. I'Ylll S LYTER DIES Cyrus Lyter, aged 61. North Third I street, died at the Harrisburg Hospital early this morning from a compli cation of diseases. Funeral arrange ments are incomplete. 18 BARS GO DRY AT 12 TONIGHT [Continued From First I'age.] bus are among the most widely-known i hostelries in the city. In addition to these old licensed places, applications for new privileges at the Lennox, Market street, applied for by Samuel Fishman, and for U4 5 North Seventh street, applied for by Benjamin A. Striplin, proprietor of the Lero.v are still pending. Tales of the Aldinc Most of to-day's session of license I court was taken up with the tale of the Aldinc. The stories that were re- 1 lated of the Aldine's wineroom and' grillrooms were similar to the tales' that have been heard for the last few weeks in the Dauphin county courts. Clyde Lynch, a Lebanon Valley col-1 lego student, and an investigator for the American Civic Reform Union,' probably caused the biggest sensation j when he related his experience last 1 September with a fellow investigator, in the wineroom of the Aldinc. A waiter he said had piloted himself and j companion to a table where a "Mrs. j J Clark" and "Mary Webber" were sit- i ting. Then the I.iglits Will Sblno Lynch said he ghided the conversa-i tion 'round to the question of whether | j or not Harrisburg "was a slow town." | " 'Well,' said Mrs. Clark," explained j I Lynch, " 'just now Hutchison has the I j lid down pretty tight but we expect j 1 Meals to be in before long and then the lights will shine again!' " The women "made a date" with his ! companion and himself. Lynch point- I ed out. and before the evening grew | very old the quartet left for one ol' the I | South Third street houses which j j figured conspicuously in the testimony 1 I of the Savoy. Tickled His I'alnt An incident of the Aldine grill as related by Lynch caused a slight titter in the courtroom. Lynch said lie placed his hand on the table where i upon Mrs. Clark had remarked as to i its whiteness and smoothness and : evident lack of contact with hard 'work. And as his hand lay palm up-l word on the table Mis. Clark, Lynch I said, covered it with her hand and playfully tickled his palm with her finger. In all the hearings E. H. Dodge the investigator has contended that he never drank any intoxicants and on cross-examination to-day the Aldine applicant tried to discredit the witness I by bringing several men to swear t hat they had seen Dodge drink a standard brand of whisky. Among these was j a bartender at the Aldine and a for mer bartender at the Savoy. Not a Dauphin Practice The statement during the morning by the Kev. Mrs Klaer that he had frequently seen a woman with a court record in the Aldine wineroom, led to | an inquiry by the court. The minister said he was surprised ! at the appearance of the woman be cause he understood she had been convicted in court and that her sen- I tence was commuted on "condition that she leave the community." ; President Judge Kunkel emphatically j called attention to the fact that this was not the practice of the Dauphin county courts. "We want that understood by all within hearing of our voice," said he EYE SERVICE As We See It! We give service under the most , liberal construction of the term. Belsinger service means the spirit of fair dealing, with our patron's comfort ever in mind. A pair of ' our glasses never fulfills ' their task until they render entire satis faction to the wearer. This is the theory and practice that has pleased thousands of peo ple now wearing glasses made by us. Let us serve you ? Then you will know the real meaning of high grade eye service. 205 LOCUST STREET Opp. Orpheum Optometrists Opticians E)-M Examined (No Drops* Agent for Kryptok Invisible bifocal* and Shtir-tvas. Our price* are governed entirely by the kind of lenses needed and the qual» Ity of frame wanted. For Pile Sufferers K r the JV W >■ I»in oa a lis ' il,w Offcrrd ttfipw to Provr \| "" f° r Tou. fi'V' 8 or protruding piles, hemorrhoids and all rectal troubles, in the privacy of your own home. 50c a box at all druggists. A single box often cures. sample for (rial with booklet ■nailed free in plain wrapper, if you send us coupon below. FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY, 628 Pyramid Bldg., Mart-boll, Mich. ! Kindly send me a Free sample of Pyramid PileTrcatmcnt, in plain wrapper, Najho Street City State "That is not our practice. It is a wrong principle and we never practtco it Those who violate the law in this county and are brought to trial and convicted, are punslied here. They are not sent into some other community to commit like crimes. We are as much interested in the observance of the law in other communities as we are of the observance of the law in our own county." Germans Gather Huge Stores of Arms For Eastern Advance in the Spring By Associatra Prass I Petrograd, Feb. 29.—Announcement | was made to-day that tremendous ae | tlvity has been observed over the whole length of the German front in the East. There are various indications that Spring will see another great effort by the Germans on the Russian front, i Enormous quantities of incendiary i explosive bombs have been collected by ihe Germans. Another feature of thesw j preparations is the bringing up of ap- I paratus for aerial warfare on an in- I creasing scale. Aerodromes are being j enlarged and great numbers of aero- I planes forwarded from Germany. TIZ"—A JOY TO SORE, TIRED FEET l Use "Tiz" for aching, burning, puffed-up feet and corns or callouses. & , _ U „. T ,, Wfr ever T time for any foot trouble." j Good-bye, sore feet, burning feet, swollen feet, tender feet, tired feet. Good-bye, corns, callouses, bunions ' and raw spots. No more shoe tight ness, no more limping with pain or drawing up your face in agony. "Tiz" is magical, acts right off. "Tiz" draws j out all the poisonous exudations which I puff up the feet, I'se "Tiz" and wear 1 smaller shoes. Use "Tiz" and forget I your foot misery. Ah! how comfort able your feet feel. Get a 25-cent box of "Tiz" now at i any druggist or department store. , Don't suffer. Have good feet, glad ' feet, feet that never swell, never hurt, I never get tired. A year's foot com \ fort guaranteed or money refunded.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers