6 True Secret of Keeping Youthful Looking (Th. Beauty Seeker.) *'Th. real Mcret of keening youni-looldnf and beautiful." aay« a well-known hyfienlut, ria to keep th. liver and bowela normally ftrtlr.. Without the*, renuiaites, poiaonoua waat. product, remain in th. ayatem, pollut ing th. blood and lodging in varioaa organa, tiaauea, Jolnta. One become, flabby, ooeae, nerTooa, mentally aluggiah* dull-eyed, wrinkled and aallow of face. "But to get liver and bowel* working aa •hey ought, without producing evil after-effect, fca. been th. problem. Fortunately, there ia ■ prescription of unqueationed merit, vhlch may now be had in convenient tablet form. It. valu. ia due largely to an ingredient de rived from the humble May apple, or ita root, which haa been called 'vegetable calomel' bo- Cauae of it. eifectiveneu—though, of courae, it la not to be claaaed with th. real calomel of mercurial origin. Thar. ia no habit-forming ccnatituent in 'aentanel* tablets—that'a th. nam—and their uaaia not followed by weak sen or exhauation. On th. contrary, theM tiarmles. vegetable tablet, tend to impart ton. and elaaticity to the relaxed intestinal wall. Sentanel tablet*, which may be procured from any druggist—a dim.', worth will do —will prove a revelation to any coaatipated, liver troubl.d peraon." | 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 Madt> ■on Ave., Covington, Ky. ! Start Tomorrow and Keep It Up Every Morning i Qet In the habit of drinking a Slats of hot water before j breakfast. We're not here long:, so let's make our stay agreeable. Let us live well, eat well, digest well, work well, sleep well, and look well, what a glorious condition to attain, and yet, how very easy It Is if one will only adopt the morning inside bath. Folks who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when they arise, split ting headache, stuffy from a cold, foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach, can, instead, feel as fresh as a daisy l>y opening the sluices of the system e.-ich morning and flushing out the whole of the internal poisonoirs stag nant matter. Everyone, whether ailing, sick or well, should, each morning. before breakfast, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate-in it to wash from the stomach, liver and bowels the previous dr.y's indigestible waste, sour bile and poisonous toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. The action of hot water and limestone phosphate on en empty stomach is wonderfully In vigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases, waste and acid ity and gives one a splendid appetite ior breakfast. While you are enjoying S"our braakfast the water and phos rhate la Quietly extracting a large vol ume of water from. t~he blood and get ting ready for a thorough flushing of al! the inside organs. The millions of people who are bothered with constipation, bilious spells, stomach trouble; others who have sallow skins, blood disorders and sickly complexions are urged to get a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from the drug store. This will cost \ery little, but is sufficient to make anyone a pronounced crank on the aubject of inside-bathing before break fast.—Advertisement. KEWOXPriI It's Easy lf You Know Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets The secret of keeping young Is to feel young—to do this you must watch your liver and bowels—there's no need of having a sallow complexion dark rings under your eyes—pimples—a bu llous look in your lace—dull eyes with no sparkle. Tour doctor will tell you ninety per cent, of all sickness comes from inactive bowels and liver. Dr. Edwards, a well-known physician In Ohio, perfected a vegetable com pound mixed with olive oil to act on the liver and bowels, which he gave to his patients for years. Dr. Edwards" Olive Tablets, the sub stitute for calomel, are gentle in their action, yet always effective. They bring about that exuberance of spirit, that natural buoyancy which should be enjoyed by everyone, by ton ing up the liver and clearing the sys tem of impurities. You will know Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets by their olive color. 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. The Olive Tablet Company, Colum bus. Ohio. Pimples Disappear There Is one remedy that seldom fails to clear away all pimples, black heads and skin eruptions and that make* the skin soft, clear and healthy. Any druggist can supply you with cemo, which generally overcomes all ■kin diseases. Acne, eczema, itch, pimples, rashes, black heads In most cases glv. way to zemo. Frequently, minor blemishes disappear overnight Itching usually atops Instantly. Zemo Is safe, clean, easy to use and de fiendable. It costs only 25c; an extra aige bottle, JI.OO. It will not stain. Is not greasy or sticky and is positive ly safe for tender, sensitive skins. Zemo, Cleveland. Instant Relief Fw Xj| \ T \ Aching. Burning IjLVI \a > and Sweaty Peat; {% 7® 1 Co™*. CallouM.; m bJQA I Bunlona, ua. two JIT 1 » Y/ apoonfnla of CjU " j 1 \ X odd. In foot bath, J\ I >\\Vk> Package 25c. at 1 t xysiJ any drug store. JThaßrHu-igBT r < Non-greasy Tollat Cream Keeps the Skin Soft and Velvety in Rough Weather. An Exquisite Toilet Prep aration. 25c. (iOHGAS* DRUG STORES ie If. Third St.. and P. R. H. Statlaa MONDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH 27, 1916. PICK OYSTERS CAREFULLY, TIP Dr. Dixon Warns Against In discriminate Eating of Raw "Culls" Warning against eating oysters In discriminately without being sure of whence they come and that the trade Is being deluged with culls which were not considered as good oysters a few years ago is given by State Commissioner of Health Samuel G. Dixon In his weekly hygiene talk Is sued to-day. Dr. Dixon takes the stand that the oyster trade has grown immensely, but that there are dangers which require regulation. The state ments he made are the result of care | ful observation and some investiga i tlons with reports on actual condi tions. The commissioner's statements sum up what has been found during the present oyster season. In the course of his letter the com missioner says; The oyster has become so high In price that on the basis of food values it cannot be listed as of economic im portance. Through its geographical range at home and abroad this bivalve has be come fraught with danger from the sewage polluted waters which now reach many of the oyster beds from our large municipalities. The thickly populated communities are mostly along the streams owing to the fact • that man has always settled near waterways and in the early days of our history the industries depended entirely upon water power for their mills. As these centers of population Increased the disposal of waste be came a great problem resulting in the building of conduits to lead it into the pure waters nature had given us. These flowing streams carried the wastes away from the doors of one community only to poison the waters for those living down stream and at the same time polluting the waters covering our oyster and clam beds as well as driving away from our streams valuable fish. ! The raw oyster to-day Is to be look ed upon with suspicion. Great care should be observed in purchasing them. The seller should be known to be reliable and he should know from what beds he gets his supply. It is hard to explain why the oyster furnishes a fashionable dish when it has become the custom to supply the culls, which a few years ago would have been thrown into their beds as being unfit for the market. The food value of four or five of these culls is almost nil and the taste so insipid that they are flavored with strong condiments that entirely destroy what little natural flavor the culls had; therefore, it can hardly be said that these culls thrown out from the cook able oysters from various beds, are palatable. They are, however, danger ous as they can and do someties carry the germs of typhoid fever. Why, therefore, eat raw culls con taining little or no nourishment with little or no taste and yet not infre quently carrying germs of disease Yesterday Was Birthday Anniversary of— fr _ JBBB Jjk FRED B. CARNES Grocer. 1601 Hunter street. He Is one of Harrisburg's youngest businessmen and enjoys p. large acquaintance. He Is. a native of this cltv, and an en thusiastic booster of his home town. New Pathfinder Car in Unique Demonstration One of the most remarkable auto mobile demonstrations ever seen In this city was witnessed Saturday In Market Square when the new i Pathfinder a twelve-cylinder car and a beauty, too. was driven twice around the square on high gear at a speed which registered from one to two and-one-half miles per hour. The machine was not exactly driven, for Frank W. Kulins, of Indianapolis, who represents the Pathfinder's engineer ing department, started the motor and then walked alongside of the car, oc casionally touching the steering wheel to properly direct th e car's movements. Pathfinder representatives claim that there is no other car on the market which will run on high gear at such a slow speed and they do not fear that the demonstration which they pre now using will be copied by other automobile manufacturers. In the car while the test was being made were seven men. Including two newspaper representatives and it is ability. Pathfinder, indeed, is a re their duty to vouch for the car's markable car and the small amount of gasoline used in getting power from the twelve cylinder engine is one of the big features claimed for it. The machine is fully equipped in every de tail. even to an electric cigar lighter and the sixth and seventh seats, in visible when not In use, appear to be about the last word in automobile equipment. ISSUE *10.700 BONDS Harrisburg lias turned over to Stucker Brothers' Construction Com pany SIO,OOO In bonds in pavment for the paving of Chestnut Street Hillside Road and Twenty-first street, and S7OO In bonds to the same contractor for grading Seventeenth street. CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears - Signature of SILVER ANNIVERSARY / 'nti' - » lie a new cigar that was designed to set a new standard in value at 5 cents. Months of careful thought were put into the matter before the ambitions of the makers were realized. First of all, it was to be a better smoke —a smoke that would be crammed just as full of real quality as was possible at the price. *1 So a filler of only the choicest domestic and Havana tobaccos, and a Sumatra wrapper, were decided upon. Next followed weeks of blending until a combination was perfected that had just the right aroma, without any "kick" to it. «l Then arose this question —Why not a LONGER, as well as a BETTER smoke. The Londres Grande shape seemed to best carry out this thought—and as there were no five cent cigars of that shape on the market at the time its choice also meant individuality—so it was decided upon. And when this bigger, better five cent cigar was perfected they christened it KING OSCAR <1 That was twenty-five years ago. ( For a quarter century King Oscar cigars have been made with the same careful thought as the first handful back in 1891— <1 For a quarter century the same regular quality has been maintained <1 For a quarter century King Oscar has been gaining new friends every day— and holding them— <l For a quarter century its popularity has swept beyond the boundaries of Harris burg, until today King Oscars are demanded and sold in every hamlet in Central Pennsylvania <1 For a quarter century King Oscar has sustained its reputation for quality and quantity, and thousands upon thousands of smokers today, by their regular patronage, proclaim King Oscars among 5c cigars "THE DADDY OF THEM ALL" <1 And to the army of men who have learned to depend upon King Oscar for an enjoyable smoke at the cost of a nickel, we pledge for the future a strict adherence to the same regular quality that has won their favor in the past. JOHN C. HERMAN & COMPANY, Harrisburg, Pa. Famous Dodge Brothers Car Again Wins Fame "Death Valley Dodge," the famous Dodge Brothers motor car that was the vehicle of a trip last year through Death Valley that attracted national attention because of the ntaure of the journey, has won new fame on the coast. Driven by Teddy Tetzlaff, the fam ous racing driver, the car made the night trip over the mountains of Cali fornia from Nordorff, In the Ojal valley, to San Lius Obispo in slightly more than 12 hours. The run was started at 10 o'clock at r.lght after all the wiseacres had predicted that It would be impossible to get through owing to the conditions of the roads which are regarded as exceedingly dangerous even in the day , time. Tetzlaff In discussing the trip said: "It's alright when you have con fidence in your car. There were some bad places on th e road where we wound around the edge of a precipice and there were various spots where you wanted to be sure that both brake* and transmission were depend able. But I had tried out the Dodge Brothers motor car and I had every confidence that It would not be the fault of the oar If we failed." This car has met with remarkable success In this territory, in the hands of C. H. Barner. of the Keystone Motor Car Co. This week was no ex ception to the sales report, as a num ber of deliveries of Dodge Brothers cars were made yesterday. <, ' WROTE "POISON PEN*" IvKTTEKS Special to the Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., March 27.—Laboring under the delusion that he had been ! harmed by prominent men, Henry Weisner, 42 years old, of Shamokin, Eh £l comhia jlioa af both liqnirj sad m paite. They predate c brilliant, B ■ UJtinj thine with-ery little effert. Thete polishet coataia bo add and W will net crack the leather. They preterre tho feather and increate *0 Ihc Fife of roar ikoti, « •• f. DAU.ET x tto.. 2UFFAU, IT. ULIH BLACK-White-TXI: I keepyour I ■■■ SHOES NEAT ML POLISHES went violently Insane and was removed to the Danville State Hospital for the Insane. He wrote numerous "poison pen" letters before he lost his reason. Weisner owned a confectionery store there. \ Open Evenings a /Jff/f On and after today onr showroom will remain v J op«n at night until 10.30 | THE OVERLAND-HARRiSBURG COMPANY ;■ 212 North Second Street j' / • ■ ■ ■ ■ wwwvwwyswwy/Mwui. ! The Telegraph Bindery Will Rebind Your Bible Satisfactorily L .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers