■ A I I Remember Sentanel I I Physic, Liver Toner, I Blood Purifier Sample Free, Sentanel Remedies Co.^| (Incorporated) 506 Union Cent. Bldg., |j - Hot Water for I Sick Headaches i j Telia why everyone should drink hot water with phosphate In it before breakfast. Headache of any kind, is caused by auto-intoxication—which means self poisoning. Liver and bowel poisons < ailed toxins, sucked into the blood, through the lymph ducts, excite the heart which pumps the blood so fast that it congests in the smaller arteries and veins of the head producing vio lent, throbbing pain and distress, call ed headache. You become nervous, despondent, sick, feverish and miser able, your meals sour and almost nau seate you Then you resort to acetan ilide, aspirin or the bromides which temporarily relieve but do not rid the blood of these irritating toxins. A glass of hot water with a teaspoon ful of limestone phosphate in it, drank before breakfast for awhile, will not only wash these poisons from your sys tem and cure you of headache but will cleanse, purify and freshen the entire alimentary canal. Ask your pharmacist for a quarter pound of limestone phosphate. It is inexpensive, harmless as sugar, and almost tasteless, except for a sourish twinge which is not unpleasant. If you aren't feeling your best, if tongue is coated or you wake up with bad taste, foul breath or have colds, indigestion, biliousness, constipation or sour, acid stomach, begin the phos phated hot water cure to rid your system of toxins and poisons. Results are quick and it is claimed that those who continue to flush out the stomach, liver and bowels every morning never have any headache or know a miserable moment. SAGE TEA KEEPS YOUR HAIR DARK When Mixed With Sulphur It Brings Back Its Beautiful Lustre at Once. • Sray hair, however liandsome, de notes advancing age. We all know the advantages of a youthful appearance. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. When it fades, turns gray and looks streaked, lust a few applications of Sage Tea anil Sul phur enhances Its appearance a hun dred-fold. Don't stay gray! Look young! Either prepare the recipe at home or «et from any drug store a 50-cent bot tle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur I'umpound." which is merely the old time recipe improved by the addition of other ingredients. Thousands of folks recommend this ready-to-use preparation, because it darkens the hair beautifully, besides, no one can possibly tell, as It darkens so naturally and evenly. You moisten a sponge or soft brush with it, drawing this thrcvJgh the hair, taking one small strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears: after another application or two, its natural color is restored and it becomes thick, glossy and lustrous, and you appear years younger. Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com pound is a delightful toilet requisite, it Is not intended for the cure, mitiga tion or prevention of disease. PARALYSIS A°, n i^r ß y d DR. CHASE'S Special Blood and Nerve Tablets Write for Proof and Booklet Dr. Ckaae, 2Z4 N. lOth St. Philadelphia. Piloc 5° _8A , N " KO ' B pn ' E remedy * IIt£» Gives in.Unt relief in Jtchin,. Bleed'nif or Protnidinsr I'ilei. He The Dr. nosuko Co_ Philadelphia. Pa. Efficiency INCREASE the profits of your business by aiding yonr skilled help ers to make the best use of their time. TJse the proper blanks, blank nooks, stationery and ad vertising matter. Get the right kind of designing, engraving, printing and binding at the right prices from The Telegraph £ Printing Co. Federal Square I - •"* WEDNESDAY EVENING, JjQur Library TableJL /jillii/NtIATMT BOOKS <• MAOAziNES^^S«HA Home to Him'u Muvver, by Mar garet Preseott Montagu, (E. P. Dut ton & Co., New York), is an essay that once appeared in the Atlantic Monthly, and was in such popular de mand that the author felt constrain ed to put it out in book form. The story can be read in ten minutes and is that of a little girl, the author's 3- year-old goddaughter, who being in satiably fond of stories invariably ended them with the conclusion, 'And him went home to hint's muv ver." "Whether it was a big bear out on a wild hunt or a brave hero in huckram defending himself against an attack by a savage tribe of red men. the conclusion was ever the same, and the subject of the tale anon makes his getaway and returns "to hint's muvver." Thts association with the gentle nature of an innocent baby has a way of clearing the atmo sphere of worries and vexations that is like a brisk walk in the crisp Oc tober weather. Spanish Hn a Week, by Teodoro S. Romero. (Davtd McKay, Phila.) The recognized value of a knowl edge of Spanish has come to be now adays an accented thing and with the vast growth of South American trao and the increasing possibilities In Central America and other countries where the language of Cervantes is predominant, the necessity for at least a working knowledge of Span ish is undeniable. This volume does not pretend to make a finished scholar out of a nincompoop in seven days, but a pretty general knowledge of the way the language is treated may be had by a careful and searching perusal of the little volume. The Stor.v of the Map of Kuropc. by L. P. Benezet. (Scott, Foresman & Co., Chicago.) Historical, geographical, philosophi cal. with a slight suggestion of the prophetical are all terms that may qualify this book on the map of Europe, by Mr. Benezet. Primarily educational, and calculated to Inter est both school child and adult, it has been written in a refreshingly read able way: a history, like Macaulay's, that is more of a story book than a mere recounting of events, but unlike Macaulay's in that Mr. Benezet's un questionably sticks closely to the facts as a basis for his conclusions. The author gives four reasons why wars in the past have been caused, briefly: I—Through the barbaric in stinct to predatory raids: 2—Through the ambitions of kings for territorial enlargement and increased power; 3 Through the desire of the traders of one nation to increase their com merce at the expense of another na tion; 4 —Through the wish of a peo ple to become free from the control of some other country and to be come a nation by itself. The last of the four, thinks he, is the only justifiable reason. The ancient and recent history of each country now at war is concisely condensed into a short review and when one has finished, if the book has been read with care, one has a fairly complete general knowledge of the relations that have existed be tween the European countries and the feelings that Inspired each coun try to be a party to the world war. The remains of a feudal government in Europe and the ignorance and shortsightedness of the common peo ple in many countries are the stumb ling blocks, in the writer's opinion, in the way of a rational and sane peace policy between nations. This war, lie continues, cannot be explained on the grounds of race hatred, because Ger mans. Russians. English, French, and Austrians were wont to mingle in friendly fashion in the busy marts of trade. It is the unthinking obedi ence of the people to the voice of autocratic government which in so many of the countries makes inter national peace so difficult. One of the strongest passages in the entire FOODS THEY BUILD OK DESTROY Amazing but Rarely Suspected Truths Abcut the Things You Eat. (Copyright. 191«. by Alfred W. McCann.) CHAPTER 41 Railroad laborers, prisoners and hospital patients fed on polished rice contract many forms of disease. The same people fed on natural brown rice thrive indefinitely. In feeding the two groups of rail way workers in the Straits Settlements, one of them with polished white Siam rice, of best quality, and the other with unpolished, natural whole rice, every effort was made by interchange of clothing, by personal contact and by living in the same house to convey the disease to the group that ate of the unpolished rice, but not a single case developed. The process was then re versed. The group that partook of the pol ished rice was put upon a diet of un polished rice .ami vice-versa, within another period of approximately sixty days the group partaking of the pol ished rice developed beri-beri, although its members had remained immune while on a diet of the natural, un refined rice. The results of these experiments were further confirmed in Manila by the use of rice polishings in the treat ment of acidosis, the victims of which showed immediate improvement in their condition, and, except where the disease was too far advanced, perma nently recovered when the mineral salts, colloids and vitamines removed from white polished rice were restored to their diet. In view of the evidence upon which the etiology of the disease was es tablished, a recommendation was made to the governor-general of the Philip- QUICK RELIEF FROM CONSTIPATION Get Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets I That is the Joyful cry of thousands since Dr. Rdwards produced Olive Tab lets, the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards, a practicing physician for 17 years and calomel's old-time enemy, discovered the formula for Olive Tablets while treating patients for chronic constipation and torpid livers. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do not contain calomel, but a healing-, sooth ing vegetable laxative. | No griping is the "keynote" of these j little sugar-coated, olive-colored tab- I lets. They cause the bowels and liver to act normally. They never force j them to unnatural action. If you have a "darl< brown mouth" now and then—a bad breath—a dull, tired feeling—sick headache—torpid ■ liver and are constipated, you'll find ?uick, sure and only pleasant results riun one or two little Dr. Edwards' I Olive Tablets at bedtime. Thousands take one or two every night just to keep right. Try them. ! 10c and 2iic per box. All druggists. I The Olive Tablet Company, Colum < bus. O.—Advertisement. ] book is the discussion on war in gen eral, how that It is mere wholesale murder justified merely on the basis of patriotism. The author's proposition for world : peace has much to commend itself to the intelligent mind. It is to have the people of each country vote as to whether there shall be war or not, ! when it seems imminent, with the full ' knowledge that those who vote for war shall he the first to go into battl ; and that those who vote against war will not be compelled to take up arms till all the affirmative voters have gone Ito the front. Practical or not, the ! solution would be effective. Commercial Mortmain, by John It. Dos Passos, (The Bench and Bat- Co., $1.25.) I The poor old trusts 'have come in | for still further discussion in a pub lication by John It. Dos Passos, a member of the New York Bar, who starts his treatise with the flat state i inent that after a trial of twenty-five years the Sherman Anti-Trust Act lias been proven a failure, going on to show the futility of trying to check the trend of national' development by ' legislation. Following this with a ! discussion of the history and growth (of capital and Industry, the author i returns to a complete survey of | trusts, their evils and the laws [against them. | Cuban Cane Sugar, by Robert | Wiles, (Bobbs Merrill, 75c). At a time when every schoolboy knows that in times of peace or war, in times of prosperity or depression, no article of food plays a more im portant part than does sugar, comes I a most interesting book on sugar manufacture, and sugar possibilities | from the standpoint of investment for : American capital, sugar production jas a field for scientific and technical ! development. "Cuban Cane Sugar" Is a i book on a big subject and should en joy a widespread patronage among ! people wTto desire to be well-in , formed. The extraordinary interest In Mr. Charles H. Sherrill's "Modernizing the Monroe Doctrine" is manifested by the announcement from the publishers that within a week after publication they received requests for permission to translate the book Into Japanese, Russian and Spanish. You will get a first-hand Impres sion of what poor old Saloniki has gone through In Richard Harding Davis' article in the April Scribner, : "With the Allies in Saloniki." She has had a hard time, and her history has not been made but "thrust" upon her. Truth: A Civic Virtue. Is the title of a valuable little book by Presi dent Arthur T. Hadley, of Yale, just issued by the Bobbs-Merrill Company. It is an eloquent and idealistic treat ment of the theme that honesty is the best policy. MRS. HOWE'S READING CIRCI.E Fagged reviewers may gain in spiration from the following account of a reading circle, "the Papeterie," of which Julia Ward Howe was a mem ber. The story is given in the biography of Mrs. Howe written by her daughlers, Laura E. Richards ! and Maud Howe Elliott. "What have ; you to tell us of the novel you have been reading?"' the president would demand. Then followed a report, serious or comic, as the character of the volume or the mood of the nieet- I ing suggested. A series of abbreviated criticisms was made and a glossary 'prepared: for example: B.P.—By the pound. M.A.S. —May amuse somebody. P.B.—Pot-boiler. F.W.B.—For waste-basket. U.I. —Uplifting influence. W.D.—Wholly delightful, i U.T. —Utter trash. Pine Islands to forbid the use of pol ished rice in public institutions. In the quarterly report of the Bu reau of Health of the Philippine Islands for the first quarter of 1910 j appeared this statement: "It is hoped by this means not only to eradicate the disease from such ; places, but also that it may serve as an education factor in disseminating knowledge as to the method by which i such disease may be avoided." Following the recommendation of i the investigators, the governor-general j issued an executive order, June 3. 1910, to all health officers and presidents throughout the island forbidding the use of polished white rice in all gov i ernment workshops, prisons, hospitals and other institutions, and directing 1 the officials having control of such in i stitutions to see that (he provisions of this edict were complied with at once. Thus it was determined that pol ished rice was bad food in the Philip pines, even though elsewhere people j could eat it as they wished. I Under date of October 22, 1910, I I received a communication from Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, then chief of the | Rureau of Chemistry, Washington, jD. C. Dr. Wiley, as you know, was ! forced to resign from the government j service as a result of his activities in j pursuing food frauds. It was seen ] that his activities were becoming a I grave menace to many comnteroial in- I stitutions built upon a foundation of | food corruption and fraud. Of that ' we shall learn something later. Dr. Wiley said: "It seems to me jthat in this country we should not I even in a small way permit a con dition of nutrition which would favor i beri-berl or some other disease due to I the debasement of rice from polishing. "Rice is becoming a more general diet in this country and the dealer who llrst begins the campaign for pure, unadulterated rice will promote the cause in a commercial way which will do much toward protecting the health of the people." I had been calling the attention of aii the wholesale grocery houses In New York City to the facts with little actual result, but upon the receipt of Dr. Wiley's communication Francis 11. Leggett & Co., with which whole sale grocery house I was then con nected, decided to restore natural brown rice to the people. It was evi dent to that commercial institution that physiologists were beginning to recognize that organic compounds of phosphorus and other mineral salts are essential to the health and well being of man and any sincere com mercial efforts to keep pace with these scientific discoveries promised to prove a good business policy. Messrs. John C. Juhring, Theodore F. Whltmarsh, and Charles T. Ward of the Leggett company manifested no little Interest In the fact that man, unlike the plant. Is unable to manufac ture his own organic compounds of phosphorus from inorganic phospho r s. The comments of Dr. Alexander Bryce of Birmingham, England, to whicli their attention was called in KARRISBURG TELEGRAPH FOUNDED 1871 JSaarmaitii BELL—I99I—UNITED A Timely Sale of the Season's Favored Styles in Crepe de Chine Blouses The culmination of several weeks' effort Jgk in a barren silk market—and despite the tot V*/ I^s shortage and relative price advances, we /M\ VV offer these stylish blouses at the unusually $2.00 " '^l^^ The silk is more than could ordinarily he expected at this price, and will immediately place them above the standard of value at this price. Six distinct styles are here, in the wanted shades—pink, flesh, white, maise, nile, peach and occasionally deeper shades. —A simple style with a vestee affected by neat hemstitching. —A perfectly plain effect; neat revers joining plain, round —Lace vestee effect and lace forming collar: embroidered collar. f ront —A similar style; plain; two sets cluster buttons; loop fasten ings. -Embroidered designs intermingling with pleats in front. -Combination of silk and wide insets of lace; elaborate, yet Plain back. refined. In addition to these lots, we have included a number of Crepe de Chine Blouses from our regular stock, having been priced somewhat higher —all at the one price, beginning to-morrow $2.00 To-morrow Will Find on Sale Evening Gowns, Wraps, Coats and Dresses f that were furnished ■»/ ky t^l ' s store to \ V ; Miss Catherine Crawford //It j'ii\\ er Fashion Models /'/if / / JK\ a PP * n t^le I Bowman' Majestic Fashion Show . r " notwithstanding the fact ' that all the garments were returned in almost )\ perfect order, for which abundant credit must be /1\ I J . extended to Miss Crawford. u\\ i/i/? 1,963 Yards y Novelty Wash Fabrics O 1 • T* k 1 I na timely sale at Selecting Easter Apparel Now Is 3. Two-Fold Leader Spray and Celeste Voile —a profusion of beautiful colorings in a host of new designs—floral A H V?l T"l f C?P anf * str 'P ec '- Seeded voile with woven voile stripes iiuVdlllagC an( j f] ora j prints. Light and sheer —excellent for EVERY woman will appreciate that a little fore- dresses and blouses. thought of Easter and of selecting Easter apparel 1 ' n . tcd grounds of pink, green, lilac, blue and .• • . <t -i mv r i- • . t maise—also white, now can ehnunate all possibility of disappointment bowman-s—Main Floor. later on. Little more than two weeks remain and while Problem Solved For Elderly Women! no impossible congestion is anticipated, we believe it U . c . , j timely to encourage making selection now. vjrray llair oWItCIICS and April mornings are tine for shopping—the store Transformations is less crowded. . , to perfectlv match the natural hair. And assortments have never been more complete—more radiant with the new; ' 1 s "early always a difficult matter for the women 01 a the novel;, the beautiful. Never more "rtai" »««<® * P erfect n,atch sw,td ' or , , , r , transformation, inviting or abundantly suggestful. . ° JC*L. Not so is this the case here, as our Eventually, you also will come to know Bow- llair Goods Shop lays itself out special man's as the foremost authoritv on Smart Style. Evi- ly to satisfactorily meet the require i r * i• i i i • • "i. i fitJnPSSSL ments of elderly women. Experts will deuce of style leadership is stamped on every gar- MM gladly furnish idvicc in tins regard, , These prices for Thursday, Friday Women's Suits f \ " / j and Saturday. .» - - .... \ )v J / Grav and white switches, $3.45 and 12.70 to 29.00 30.00 to 70.00 \ $2.95. Women's Dresses Women's Coats ■ sl G ft v a,,d white i:> 00 to 45.00 9.98 to 45.00 V ' ' „ \ BOWMAN S—Third Floor. BOWMAN'S—Third Floor. this respect made a profound lmpres- I sion upon them. "It is even probable," declares i Bryce, "that a daily supply of ttie dif- j ferent compounds of organic pliospho- ' rus is necessary in the food, as no j proof exists to show that neucleins. lecithins, or phytins are capable of being substituted one for the other." Jn his experiments Schauman had shown that polished rice, which in duces tropical beri-beri, or even the ship variety of beri-beri arising among' the crews of sailing vessels forced to j live on food deprived of its organic i mineral compounds, will produce poly- | neuritis in fowls. Schauman proved that pearled bar- | ley and white wheat flouy can induce the same disease. He also showed that by demineralizing foodstuffs of any kind through the action of solv ents or by the destruction of their vitamines through high temperature the same disease can be induced. These wholesale grocers, taking into consideration these facts and the fur ther fact that physicians are unable to supplement the mineral deficiency of food with inorganic minerals, rec ognized that beri-beri, or acidosis, was simply an extreme state of min eral starvation and that between per fect health and beri-beri there are a hundred mile-posts, each one repre senting another advance Into the bar ren desert of disease and death. They examined all the evidence in dicating that certain food products, rich in organic compounds of phos ulcuij'LUi ajjul oUI/Bl" 111 ww j al tt nipiils j j (peas, beans, wheat bran and germ, barley polishings, rice polishing*, corn I germ, etc.) when added to the demln j erallzed foodstuffs are capable of pre senting the development of diseases ; and can cure them when present. As a result they determined to make nat ural brown rice a feature of their business. Arrangements were made with Texas millers to supply them with a high grade of natural rice. This rice was packed in one pound cartons. It j was given to me to coin a name for it. I labelled It "Premier Natural Brown ) Rice." j Notwithstanding the reform which | this new rice represented and not withstanding its marked superiority in flavor and nutritional value, the people with their customary indiffer ence ignored the innovation and the reform product was eventually sold as chicken food. It Is now six years since Juhring, Whit marsh, and Ward undertook to demonstrate the necessity of such re form. The fact that they then lost several thousands of dollars in their effort does not in any manner mini mize the trade importance of their progressive conduct Their first experience with food re form, as reflected In natural brown rice, was a failure, but the New York public has been enlightened since that failure, and to-day another and more cheerful story is being told. 1 do not overexpress my convictions, | based on long experience with the ilacu. wlien 1 nay thaX live Leiiin* ol APRIL 5, 1916. I | this story, still but partly told, from ! coast to coast, and from Canada to j Mexico, will, if it is heeded, result i in the birth of a new nation. PLAN'S FOB COMMENCEMENT Hummelstown, Pa., April 5. At ; the monthly meeting of the school i board it was decided to rent the town Most Eminent Medical Authorities Endorse It A New Remedy For Kidney, Bladder and All Uric Acid Troubles. > Dr. Eberle and Dr. Braithwaite as ■ well as Dr. Simon—all distinguished ; Authors—agree that whatever may be 1 the disease, the urine seldom fails in j furnishing us with a clue to the prln ' ,clples upon which it is to be treated, ' and accurate knowledge concerning ' the nature of disease can thus be ob -1 tained. If backache, scalding urine or frequent urination bother or dis " tress you, or if uric acid in the blood * has caused rheumatism, gout or sciati ca or you suspect kidney or bladder " trouble just write Dr. Pierce at the ' Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y.; send : a sample of urine and describe symp t toms. You will receive free medical ■ advice after Dr. Pierce's chemist has examined the urine—this will be care • j fully done without charge, and you •, will be under no obligation. Dr. 1 Vittfie dmijui uuuiy, yjava ol ejtiiwi-1 hall for the class day and commence- • ment exercises this year. Commence ment will be held on Friday evening; May 26. It was also decided to re quest the use of the United brethren Church for the baccalaureate sermon and that the pastor, the Rev. Arthur S. Lehman preach the sermon to the graduates. The senior class contains seven members. mentation has discovered a new rem edy which is 37 times more powerful than iithia in removing uric acid from the system. If you are suffering from backache or the pains of rheu matism, go to your best store and ask for a 60-cent package of "Anuric" put N up by Dr. Pierce. If he does not keep it, you can obtain a large trial pack age by sending 10 cents to Dr. Pierce, or 50 cents in stamps for full treat ment. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip tion for weak women and Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery for the blcod have been favorably known for the pa»t forty years and more. They are standard remedies to-day—as well as Doctor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets for the liver and bowels. You can have a large trial package of any one of these remedies in Tablet form by writ ing Dr. Pierce and enclosing 10c. —« AdvertUjmmU 3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers