WIFE TOO ILL TO WORK IN BED MOST OF TIME Her Health Restored by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable , Compound. Indianapolis, Indiana. "My health was so poor and my constitution so run ~, idown that I could not work. I was thin, pale and weak, weighed but 109 WtHe P° und9 and waa ' n r- *" e d roost of the i'l < ri-.. 4 * l time. I began tak ' ing Lydia E. Pink- J ■ ham's Vegetable ' 3%-~ " "** Compound and five months later I : ' f J* { weighed 133 pounds. l—ll do all the house work and washing for eleven and I can truthfully say Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound has been a godsend to me for I would have been in my grave today but for it. I would tell all wo men suffering as I waa to try your valu able remedy."—Mrs. WM. GREEN, 332 S. Addison Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. There is hardly a neighborhood in this country, wherein some woman has not found health by using this good old fashioned root and herb remedy. If there is anything about which you ivould like special advice, write to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. fr ~ —^ Eczema Is Conquered ') Greasy salves and ointments should not be applied if good clear skin is wanted. From any druggist for 25c or SI.OO for extra large size, get a bottle of HBO. When applied as directed, it effectively removes eczema. quickly stops itching, and heals skin troubles iilso sores, burns, wounds and chafing. It penetrates, cleanses and soothes. '/.emo is dependable and inexpensive. Try it .as we believe nothing you have ever used is as effective and satisfy ing. Zemo, Cleveland. AMUSEMENTS ' . > To-tlny and to-niorroiT, .lra>r 1.. I nftky present* America'* trading character mar, THEODORE ItOH ERTS, in a nuperh pictiirir.ntloti of Mark Twain'* "PI'DD'XHEAD WIL. SOX." Paramount. Friday only, BESSIE BAItRI SCAI.E In "THE PAINTED 50V1,." A drama of the underworld. Adnilanloni Adulta, 10c; Children, {Sc. I ORPHEUM THURSDAY Jigg" THE CITY SPORTS with IIAHHV and ARTHI'II liOLBIi .MAYER SEE Tlif Beautiful Balloon I horns on the Illuminated ltun « ay. v > * To-day and To-morrow WM. FOY Preaenta The Foufth Estate A Flve-Heol Drama of I.ove mid featuring; CLIFFORD BRI CE and IUTH BLAIK Anothrr Funny Cartoon Comedy, "CHAnI.IK'S WHITE KI.KIMI \\T" ■ / This la the I.ast Day to See Catherine Crawford and her Twelve FASHION Kill I.S in MISS CRAWFORD'S OWN FASHION SHOW $20,000 Worth of GOUIIR. We hare accepted the challenge of BOWMAN & CO. and will hold >ll** Crawford and her modela the entire week. Bowman & Co. will present their own STYLE SHOW Providing; n complete change of wardrobe for Mian Cranford and her modela. Thuraday, Friday and Saturday. Ml** Crawford alio will wear HIO.OOO worth of jewela provided liy IIF.MIY C. CI.ASTER. All other act* on bill changed to morrow. WEDNESDAY EVENING, STATE SOCIETY'S EVENING PARTY Delightful Entertainment Is Given at the Capitol by the New Organization State officials, members of State commissions and boards and deputies ! and officers of branches of the Penn -1 sylvania government entertained their ' wives and members of families last ! evening at the hall of the House of I Representatives. It was the first re ' ception to be given by the new Penn j sylvania State Society, which is a purely social organization, and It was one of the most delightful events of the kind ever given on the "Hill." Everyone was present who was a : member, and Governor Brumbaugh, i who was delighted with the spirit j shown, suggested that the next party ' be a basket picnic, with which propo i sition Secretary of Internal Affairs I Henry Houck enthusiastically agreed. ! The affair last night was an unusual entertainment, for not only did the members and guests hear some excel- , lent addresses, notably those of the Governor and Dr. J. T. Rothrock, the father of Pennsylvania's famous for estry activities, hut George Sutton and members of the San Carlo Opera 1 Company sang with rare effect, i Secretary of the Commonwealth | Woods, president of the society, pre sided and In welcoming the guests out j lined for what the society stood and j gave a hearty greeting to everyone. | Governor Brumbaugh followed in the : j same spirit. CONDITION- EXAMS AT TECH Rc-examinatlons for all students having conditions at the Technical High School will begin April 12, and , will continue for a week or ten days,! 1 until every student who has "cons" has had an opportunity to remove I j them. Under the new unit system,, j this will be the last of the re-exami | nations at Tech. Hereafter pupils who are conditioned will have to re lieve themselves automatically, by bet-> |ter passing work during the succeed ing term, or will have to repeat the subject. A grade will be accepted of 1 63 per cent, for the last time, as In the future a standard of 70 will be ! passing. BRETHREN* PASTOR RESIGNS Special to the Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., March 29. The Rev. J. E. Rowland, for four years pastor of the Church of the Brethren fere, has resigned his pastorate and accepted the ministry of the Church of the Brethren in Bunkerstown, Pa. I Can Save You Money on a Pacific Coast Ticket When you go West you want to go cheaply, and comfortably, and yet you want to see the most Interesting scenic portions. I can tell you about a very cheap rale ticket. I can tell you about our comfortable lourist sleeping cars. And I can tell you about how you can see all the important and Interest ing places on the way without extra cost. The Burlington Route (C. B. & Q. R. R.I pays me to help you plan your I trip and to inform you about the won derful West. It is part of their excel ! lent service to do this. So vou see there will be no charge to ; you if you will call or write and let me give you maps and pictures about the trip, and help make your arrange ments. It will save you a lot of trouble. WM. tI'STIN, General Agent. l'ns senger Ucpt., C. H. A «. It. H. CO., S3« Cliextnut St., Phllmlelphin. r 7 lEOT EOT WAT El ©iraira© W Y©M POBJ'T IFEEL M(§!Enr Says glass of hot water with phosphate before breakfast washes out poisons. If you wake up with a bad taste, bad breath and tongue is coated; if your head is dull or aching; if what you eat j sours and forms gas and acid In stom (ach, or you are bilious, constipated, ; nervous, sallow and can't get feeling j just right, begin inside bathing. Drink ' before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it. This will flush the poisons and toxins from stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels and cleanse, sweeten and purify the entire alimen tary tract. Do your inside bathing im mediately upon arising in the morning j to wash out of the system all the pre- J vious day's poisonous waste, gases and ' sour bile before putting more food into the stomach. To feel like young folks feel; like | you felt before your blood, nerves and , muscles became loaded with body im purities. get from your pharmacist a quarter pound of limestone phosphate, j which is inexpensive and almost taste -1 less, except for a sourish twinge which | is not unpleasant. Just as soap and hot water act on tlie skin, cleansing, sweetening and freshening, so hot water and limestone | phosphate act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. Men and women i who are usually constipated, bilious, j headachy or have any stomach dis order should begin this inside bathing before breakfast. They are assured they will become real cranks on the subject shortly.—Adv. AMUSEMENTS ~ i^Bsna" TCI c) _.c! Tr /r PICTURES MffARC BOOKED THROUGH MM COMPANY OF PHILA .F' MM HCAR.THE $25000 WWHOPZ-JOUES UNIT PIPE ORGAN MMe QUAL OF SO PI ECE ORCHESTRA MM To-dny Only MM "THE VICTORY OF MM \ irti i " W nml W «THE STRANGB CASE f Ol' MARY l»A«E" i:l»lnode Number 10. I To-morrow—"THE S|'- PHE>IK TKMPTATIO.V GRAND THEATER 1 12« lirrr.r Afreet Tonight llolirrl Warwick IN frntarrd In The Fruits of Desire In rivf I'nrta ' tof Amusement, Arl, and Instruction., J THEATRICAL DIRECTORY IORPHEUM —To-night. Boxing Matches; to-morrow, matinee and night, "The Citv Sports" (burlesque). MAJESTIC—"The Fashion Show." Vau deville. Motion Picture Honaea COLONIAL. —"The Fourth Estate." I GRAND—"The Fruits ot Desire." REGENT—"Pudd'nhead Wilson." VICTORIA —"The Victory of Virtue." PI.AYS AND PLAYERS The success which Maclyn Arbuckle j has been making on the screeii and stage. particularly in the production of the comedy "The New Henrietta." which appeared in Harrisburg last f week and created such a favorable impression. Is probably sufficient guarantee against his ever returning to his former profession, that of the law. Twenty-eight years ago young Arbuckle. an embryo lawyer, ran for the office of Justice of the peace down in Howie county. Texas, and was de feated by a butcher, who promised his constituents fat meat and lots of credit, while all Arbuckle could offer was ju»- j ; tice. j Charles Kent, sometimes called "the dean of the screen," tried to die the other clay In a Blue Ribbon feature, as , he has done so many times before, but the position which he assumed, draped gracefully over the back of a chair, i gave him a splitting headache, and now i lie has determined that any time he j must die he wants to know about it well ahead of time, in order that com- j fortable dying quarters might be ar- ; | ranged. ! It has been suggested that a medal be instituted for heroism In the films, i If this ever comes to pass, there will be some tall movies staged, or we don't ' know ourselves. As it is. there are enough hair-raising and death-defying ; escapades without putting a premium j on their increase. An article by Peter Magaro. owner j and manager of the Regent Theater, this city, recently appeared in Para mount Progress, in which he cites the j advantages which his own experience ; lias convinced him accrue from adver- ] using in the newspapers. The article i is broad in its scope and careful in j the conclusion drawn, and facts and figures help to prove the points which j he makes in supporting his conten- ! tions in favor of newspaper advertis | ing. LOCAL THEATERS Nell O'Brien Minstrel* Neil O'Brien, the quaint and clever I delineator of neero types, and one of i the best-known minstrels of the present I period, who began his career as a star four years ago. comes to the Orphenm next Tuesday, matinee and night, with an organization said to equal in merit and entertainment any provided In a decade. This season Mr. O'Brien and his manager. Oscar Hodge, have provided t an entirely new show, enlarged the company, assembled all new and dis tinguished members and promise a com plete. new and elaborate scenic investi ture. The Pennsylvania State College Com bined Musical Clubs are the first or ganization from any college for some years that has undertaken to present a performance at the Orpheum Theater. This skilled group of over sixty college men from Pennsylvania's own univer sity come with an established reputa tion, won by the club In open contest, and it is pretty generally reputed to be one of the best of its kind in the college world to-day. The boys will be at the Orpheum on Friday evening. April 7. Clifford Bruce and Ruth Blair. "The Fourth Estate," a modern drama deal ing with the power ••The Fourth of the press, will lC*tnte" l« be presented by Colonial's Feature William Fox as the star feature of the program to-day and to-morrow at the Colonial Theater. The story Is of the misdoings of a political boss and a judge, who. In a prologue, are seen committing a murder. That makes their interests one. There Is a strike and the boss calls on the boss to rail road Nolan, the leader of it. The leader being tipped off that a warrant is out for his arrest, escapes to Canada, where in the course of a couple years he strikes It rich and sells out his inter est for an enormous amount. He re turns. to search for his wife and child and to buy a newspaper to better CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA AND PA GLIA CCI BY SAN CA RLO COM PA N Y For Those Who Do Sot Understand Italian, a Digest of the Libretto of the Opera to Be Witnessed Is Indispensable The San Carlo Grand Opera Com pany will produce "Faust" at the Chestnut Street Auditorium this after noon and will close their two-day en gagement in this city with "Cavalleria Rusticana" and "Pagliacci" this even ing. Following are digests of the librettos of the two operas: "CAVALI.KRIA RUSTICANA" A melodrama in one act, by G. Tar gioni-Tozzetti and G. Menasci, with music by Pietro Mascagni. The cur tain rises on Kaster festivities of the peasants. Turiddu, son of Dame Lucia, keeper of the village inn, having re turned home from service in the army, soon becomes the favorite of all the village maidens, among whom is San tuzza. who is the chosen one. and who is soon betrayed by Turiddu. Pre vious to his joining the army Turiddu had courted the pretty Lola, the vil lage belle, but on his return finds her wedded to Alflo, the carrier. When Turiddu meets Lola they are reconciled, and he neglects Santuzza, while Lola is faithless to her husband. Santuzza. distracted with being aban doned. tells Alfio of the intrigue of the guiltv pair. He challenges Turiddu to mortal combat, who unwillingly ac cepts the defl, and is killed. "PAGLIACCI" A dramatic opera in two acts; libretto and music both by Ruggiero Leoncavallo. The scene is Jaid in Calabria, between 1865 and 1870. THEY REFUSE TO EAT At periods in most childrens' lives they fail to relish their meals and refuse to eat even the delicacies prepared to tempt their appetites. They lack am bition, and growth seems impeded, which causes anxiety and worry. To compel them to eat is a grave mistake, because nutrition is impaired. Healthful exercise in fresh air and sun shine is important, but equally import ant is a spoonful of Scott's Emulsion three times a day to feed the tissues and furnish food-energy to improve tbeir blood, aid nutrition and sharpen their appetites. The highly concentrated medicinal food in Scott's Kmulsion supplies the very elements children need to build up their strength. They relish Scott's —it is free from alcohol Scott & Euwiic. Bloomfield, N. J. 16-54 HAKRISBURG TELEGRAPH! I punish those responsible for his hasty departure. In the meantime the judge Mas attempted the seduction of the wife land has failed. From the time Nolan returns the action is swift and the suspense is marked. One climax fol i lows the other in rapid succession until all ends happily. A Charlie Chaplin cartoon will supply the mirth of the hill. After three days of promenading ! about the Majestic stage In their own Spring finery, which "The Fashion they claimed to bo «;irls" l.enftfhrn the finest available, Their Stny the "Fashion Girls," now appearing so successfully at the Walnut street play, house, have been challenged by How man and Company, to wear some of their most recent importations by way of comparison. In order to give Bow man and Company the best possible ad vantage of exhibiting their creations, "The Fashion Girls" have accepted the '■hallenge. have extended their engage ment at the Majestic Theater for the remainder of the week, and for the last three days decided to don none except the Bowman creations. Mats, gowns, suits, party dresses, evening frocks and 'draperies, exquisite lingerie, boots, slip pers, boudoir finery and everything else that milady wears that has been omit ted. will be included in the displays that the local store will supply these vaudeville models. The gowns or crea tions. whntever the case may be. will therefore differ entirely from what they were during the first half "f the week. Bowman and Company will also ar range the stnge settings to suit their own fancy. They will add fixtures, set ' tings, etc.. and promise an exhibit that will outdo the one that was shown there during the early week. To-mor row an all new supporting bill will appear about "The Fashion Girls" In j their new wardrobe. "Pudd'nhead Wilson," one of Mark Twain's immortal stories, will be pre sented in photodra tlark Twnln matic form by the story Presented .lease 1A Lasky Com nt Urgent pany at the Kegent to-day and to-mor row. witli Theodore Roberts In the title i role. Lawyer Wilson, a young man. comes to a small Missouri town to practice. On his first day in town, angered at a dug snapping at Ills heels, he remarks, ;"I wish I owned half of that dog. It ! I did. I would kill my half." The subtlety of this remark passed over the heads of the townspeople as they couldn't figure out what would become of the other half of the dog. if Wilson killed his half. This remark, his eccen tric speech and his habit of securing thumb-prints from everyone with whom . he came in contact. Induced one of the town wits to call him "Pudd'nhead Wil son." a nickname that remained with him throughout ills life. With his small glass slips, he secures, among others. I the finger prints of Tom Driscoll, age six months, and at the same time, the prints of Chambers, six and one-half months' old baby of Roxy, a mulatto slave owned by the Driscoll family. These babies have the same father and look much alike. Roxy changes the babies and passes oIT iter child as the heir of the Driscolls anil makes the real heir the slave. Twet.ty years later , the false Tom Driscoll returns from col lege. sells his real mother as a alava and in a fit of temper, murders his ; wealthy uncle. Tom. jealous of the in terest the beautiful Rowena Cooper takes in Chambers, tries to fix the crime on him. Investigating the finger-prints I left tipon the dagger that was used in the murder. Wilson traces the marks and at the trial forces Roxy, the slave, to confess that she changed tb- babies in their cradles. In the cast supporting Mr. Roberts l are Thomas Meighan, Florence Pag- I mar, Ernest Joy and others. For the first time In this city "The Victory of Virtue." feat urine- Gerda Holmes and Wilmuth Tenth Episode Merkyl, will appear of the to-day at the Victoria, ••strange Cn*e The story: Penelope of Mary Page" Rrantford is the only daughter of a wealthy father, and was left motherless at an early age. Langdon Grier. the man. is not the | worst man in the world—there are i plenty of Griers. hut, as this particu lar Grier is endowed with good looks and wealth, he possesses a sort of j wicked fascination. 1 Chance, or fate, call it what you will, brings Penelope and Grier together. ! Penelope, impressionable as she is. falls lin love. Delightful drives through the Iranltal city, beautiful flowers sent daily, an evening soent together at the Army and Navy Ball, held Ht the White House, together with all the little at tentions dear to any woman's heart, are among the effective means used by I Grier to increase th« first love fires j ever kindled in Penelope's young heart. Tonio, in clown costume, indulges l inn prologue and the curtain rises. Canio and his troupe of .strolling play ers, or pagliacci, parade through the j village and announce a performance for that evening. Tonio makes love to i Nedda, Canio's wife, who repulses him. I She. however, admits her love to Silvio, j a rich young villager, who begs her |to fly with him. Tonio overhears their conversation and tells Canio. his tnas | ter, who rushes to catch Silvio. Nedda refuses to tell her husband the name ■ of her lover. The play within a play now begins. It proves to be the usual farce and the same stage device is used as was used by Shakespeare in "Hamlet" when the i "melancholy Dane" uses the players ias a means of revealing his uncle's perfidy and his mother's infidelity to ; the king's memory. In "Pagliacci" the actress Columbine repeats in farce I the very words Tonio had heard Nedda ■ say to the real lover earlier in the day. Mad with rage. Canio again demands her lover's name. Nedda tries to save the situation by continuing the play. { and the audience is delighted by such ! realistic acting, until the intensity of Canio's passion begins to terrify them, i Finally, stung by his taunts, Nedda | defies him and is stabbed, Canio hop- I ing that in her death agony she will i reveal the name of her lover. She ! falls, calling upon Silvio, who rushes j from the crowd only to" receive in turn ' the dagger of the outraged husband. CANCEL PHILHARMONIC PATE Gayle Burlingame, the iooal im presario, received advices from the management of the Philharmonic So ciety of New York that the proposed concerts to be held in the Orpheum theater Saturday afternoon and eve ning, April 8, have been indefinitely postponed. Remittances are being mailed to all having made reservations ahd every one having ordered should receive same by the end of the week. As a substitution Mr. Burlingame announces he will present, in con junction with Fred <'. Hand. Madame Ernestine Schumnn-Heink. This date wil! be Tuesday, May 9. EVANGKI.IST TO I.ECTLRE The Rev. J. C. Killian, of Kansas, who for a number of vpars has b<>cn touring the States of Kansas, Okla homa and Indian Territory with hi* wife In the i-hapel car. "Evangelical." will lecture this evening in the Taber nmle l-uptist Church. PERSIAN PRINCE MISSING Paris, March 28.—Prince Bahrain of the reigning family of Persia, who was a passenger on hoard the Sussex is still unaccounted for. IL 1 When I w» 4 ltd or Jw< WgC,_®SH i-rrarsiH Are You Aiding Nature to ESSI S S. S. to my pcren«J, and after using three bottles of W T 1 A. 1 A WHal' n*m*Acwmmm ggsfftss Work to Better Advantage? i"s:" I have used S. S. S. as a HHtl U.S.A.* tonic for the past fifteen ' y- -,j v««n. and I w»m to uk. Unless yon lend a helping hand to Nature she will have an unfor *«'r^ri W wOTd«fu"m€l!iw* tunate end. Why shouldn't Nature keep up its constructive work? ?£|JI fcnd heartily recommend it. When the great strain we put on our systems—wrong eating— Itfflfj PttctSl.OOPwßolllo. wffernVfr^? r 'b'o'od wrong drinking—wrong hours—is considered, the question in- trouble, but aho 10 «nvone stantly clears, and the imposition on Nature is seen. The result— fSf&w .»*>■. p.r|«tt«. »Vu'ii74"»r^down l blood disorders. Perhaps Rheumatism appears: or the weakened «21—'^nnrrn »«■ l< » f wonderful system contracts Catarrh in a violent form; or one of the many ij**y {s *vV.sKr" to everyone t'houl d'k now kinds of skin diseases, such as boils, pimples, rashes, eczema, etc, *njurn^mMu. A P FOSTER. sure iy as one of these conditions arises Nature is telling yon L IBGffljJ 51 IS. Lawrence St. t hat your vital life fluid is needing help. Fortunately you can turn r f AM Montgomery, Ala. to wonderful blood remedy—S. S. S, as hare thousands of i ■ other sufferers, and find Nature's greatest aid ready to give you Kwi health again. S. S. S. accomplishes for you what no other medi cine can, because its ingredients are purely vegetable, extracted from native herbs, roots and barks. It has been known and recommended for over fifty years. S. S. S. goes directly to Writs the blood and assists it in its repair and constructive .. •work. Get S. S. S. at your druggist. __ our Medical The Swift Department for Specific Co. Free Consultation. Atlanta, Georgia FOODS H THEY BUILD OR DESTROY Amazing but Rarely Suspected Truths About the Things You Eat. (Copyright. 1916, by Alfred W. McCann.) The Artificial or Experimental Product Frustration. Interference With the ing Up of the Natural Forces Whi inais to Resist Disease Can Be Br izeil Diet. "All the recent work done in the | biochemical laboratories of the Liver pool School of Tropical Medicine j proves beyond question that in all ce reals, such as wheat, barley, oats and rice, there are series of important substances incorporated in the inner I layer of the husk which are essential to the nutritive value of th grain." These are the words of Dr. Benjamin Moore, chief of the bio-chemical de partment of that institution. "If these elements are eliminated | in the milling- or preparation of the grain, a diet largely composed of ce- | reals or bread thus denatured will not j only fail adequately to nourish the | body but will tend to set up active j disease. "Certain of the diseases of malnu trition among children, notably rick ets, sourvy-riekets, tetany and con vulsions, present symptoms very sim ilar to those we note in our white bread pigeons. So striking is this sim ilarity that hpsyicians who have fol lowed up our work are already treat ing certain of their malnutrition pa tients with a diet of whole wheat bread. "Our nerves as a nation are much less stable than in the days prior to white bread diet. All our work sug gests that the growing tendency of the age to neurasthenia, 'nerves,' etc., is not unlikely due to removing from our diet those very elements of cereal food which nature has hid in the husk of the grain, and which man in his ignorance discards." A special meeting of the British As sociation and the Health Congress of the Royal Institute of Public Health was called at Portsmouth to consider the results of the work done by Hop kins, Eddie, Simpson, and Moore. lit tle has come of this work for the reasons that the discussions usually take the form of ponderous scientific data and the people learn nothing of them. Prior to the Investigations of these British scientists an extensive re search into the same subject had been conducted in France. Armand Gau tier, internationally eminent, had ex plored the entire field of nutrition, in spiring numerous other French scien tists to undertake work of similar na ture. All of them have arrived at one conclusion, which is briefly this. Man has lost the instinct of nourishing himself. The lower animals, when left to themselves, have an innate knowl edge of the proper food, but it is necessary that mankind be instructed in a certain amount of scientific knowl edge in other that a health-sustain ing and disease-resisting diet may be selected. Just one week before the grim day in which France became involved in the conflagration that spread over the nations of Europe in 1914, a little group of French scientists, inspired solely by good will toward man, and with no thought of the calamity which was so shortly to overtake the world, gave to humanity the results of their experimental research into the dan gers of feeding with refined cereals. Their conclusions were published in the Paris Medical, July 25, 1914. Born as they were in the agonies of a regin of destruction and death they possess peculiar significance to the people of the United States, who, a few weeks later, were advised by various uplift committees, seeking to solve the problem of war prices, to turn away from wheat and wheat flour and consume rice, rye, barley, corn, and oats instead. E. Weill and G. Mouriqusnd were Baby Covered With Sores Physician said Perfumed Pow ders Caused It. Healed by J dlfk&S ( /CHXK>»a^jocH>aaoocKHXK>&ixKa ! SILVER. 1 ! ANNIVERSARY I KING OSCAR 1 || 5c CIGAR g | Is 25 years old this month. § Think what this means to i || you, Mr. Smoker, absolute i | reliability. A quarter of a § | century of increasing popu-* | | larity is not accidental. JOHN C. HERMAN & CO. f g Harrisburg, Pa. 9 | "The Daddy of Them All." MEAT INSPECTION VERY EFFICIENT State Has Secured Protection of Meats in Thousands of Stores Lately According to reports made by in spectors the efforts of fhe State I-.lvo Stock Sanitary Board have resulted in about two thousand meat markets throughout the State being equipped in such a manner that the meat and food products cannot be handled or touched and so arranged that the meats will not be exposed to insects, dust and dirt. Recently the agents of the Board began operations in Philadelphia which will mean that 10,000 meat es tablishments in that city nlone must be equipped to comply with the new State Meat Hygiene Law. This is a State-wide movement and means that the long arm of the State will reach every city, town and rural district with the result that every establishment, selling meat, and food products will be equipped in such a manner that the meat food products cannot be bandied or be exposed to dust and files. Pennsylvania meat inspection was first inaugurated in 1907. The good effects of this Jleat Hygiene Law wero soon apparent and broader legislation a was secured last year when the new State Meat Hygiene Law was passed. What the law provides among its most, important features are the following: Fifst, That any agent, of the Slate Livestock Sanitary Board may do meat hygiene work, instead of ten special agents as previously provided. Second, Swine cannot be fed offal or slaughter refuse within two hun dred feet of an establishment. This has been one of the conditions exist ing at a majority of the rural slaugh ter houses over which the Board had little, or no control and it was found impossible to keep an establishment and surroundings in a sanitary condi tion where- hogs were fed offal and , refuse adjacent to the slaughterhouse. Third, It is a misdemeanor to placci on the market meat from hogs which have been fed dead animals or car rion. Fourth. The new law makes It man datory upon the butcher to prevent prospective purchasers and all unau thorized persons from touching of handling meat food products, and to equip his establishment that the meat and meat food products will be pro tected from insects. In addition to the above features, the new Meat Hygiene Law covers such matters as sanitation, sale of dis eased and unwholesome meat, ap pointment of agents, defining their duties, and provides for the adoption ,of rules and regulations to conform ' with the law. acid within the body. Send to Dr. Pierce of the Invalids" Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., for a pamphlet on "Anuric," and send 10 cents for a trial package of "Anuric" Tablets. If you feel that tired, worn-out feeling, backache, neuralgia, or il your sleep is disturbed by too frequent urination, go to your best drug sloia and ask for Doctor Pierce's Anuriu Tablets. Doctor Pierce's reputation is bacU of this medicine and you know thai his "Pleasant Pellets" for the livei and his "Favorite Prescription" for the Ills of women have had a splen did reputation for the past fifty years, —Advertisement. 11