Reliable Laxative Relieved Child Was Badly Constipated Until Mother Tried Simple Remedy. In spite of every care and atten tion to diet, children are very apt to become constipated, a condition re sponsible for many ills In after life unless promptly relieved. Mrs. C. W. Wilson, .of Shelbyville, Tenn., had trouble with her haby hoy, Woodrow, until she heard of Dr. Cald well's Syrup Pepsin. She writes, "1 - tan safely say Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is the best remedy of its kind on earth. It. acts so gently and yet -:o surely. Little Woodrow was very badly constipated and we could find nothing that gave relief until we triad your Syrup Pepsin, which gave im mediate relief." Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is a compound of simple laxative herbs, free from opiates or narcotic drugs, mild in action, positive in effect and pleasant to the taste. It has been pre scribed by Dr. Caldwell for more than a quarter of a century and can now be had for fifty cents a bottle In any PI T THE CAMP FIRE OCT If the camp site is strewn with leaves cut an evergreen branch, or, with some other makeshift broom or rake, clear all the ground of leaves, pile them in a bare spot, and burn them, lest a spark set the woods afire. In evergreen or cypress forests there is often a thick surf on the ground (dead needles, etc.) that is very in flammable. Always scrape this away before building a fire. In a dry for est carpet, or in a punky log, fire may smoulder unnoticed for several days; then, when a. breeze fans it into flame, it may start a conflagration. One can't he too careful about firo in the woods. Never leave a camp fire or a cooking fire to burn itself out. Drench It with water, or smother it absolutely by stamping earth upon it.—April Outing. TIZ" FOR FEET For Tired Feet, Sore Feet, Tender, Aching, Swollen, Calloused Feet and Painful Corns III 1 // " Can t beat Tiz f ' aching, swollen feet. Don't »tay footsick I" \ Just take your shoes off and then | put those weary, shoe-crinkled, ach ing, burning, corn-pestered, bunion tortured feet of yours in a "Tiz" bath. Your toes will wiggle with joy; they'll look tip at you and nlmost talk and then they'll take another dive in that "Tiz" bath. When your feet feel like lumps of lead —all tired out —Just try "Tiz." It's grand—it's glorious. Your feet will You Must Have Plenty of Iron in Your Blood to Be Strong, Says Doctor \ 11 xnteri Iron Will liu-reuse Strength of DelUute, Nervous, Hun-down People 200 Per Cent. In Ten Unys in Many lnNtmim NEW YORK, N. Y.—Alost people fool ishly seem to think they are going to net renewed health -and strength from some stimulating medicine, secret nos trum or narcotic drug, said Dr. Sauer, a specialist of this city, when, as a mat ter of fact, real and true strength can ..nix come from the food you eat. But people often fail to get the strength nut of their food because they haven - t enough iron in their blood to enable it to change food into living matter. From their weakened, nervous condition they know something is wrong, but they i-an't tell what, so they generally com mence doctoring for stomach, liver or kidney trouble or symptoms of some other ailment caused by the lack of iron in the blood. This thing may go on for years, while the patient suffers untold agony. If you are not strong or well, you owe It to yourself to make the following test: See how long you ran work or how far you can walk without becoming tired. Next take two five-grain tablets of ordinary nuxated lion three times per day after meals lor Iwo weeks. Then test your strengtn again and see for yourself how much vou have gained. I have seen dozens of nervous, run-down people who were niling all the while double and even triple their strength and endurance unci entirely get rid of all symptoms of dyspepsia, liver and other troubles In from ten to fourteen days' time ► imply by taking iron In the proper form, and this after they hail In some Stock Transfer Ledger The Pennsylvania Stock Transfer Tax Law (Act of June ! «, 1816) which Is now In effect requires all corporations In the State, 1 no matter bow large they may be to keep a Stock Transfer Ledger. We are prepared to supply these Ledgers promptly at a very nominal I price. :j I I The Telegraph Printing Co Printing—Binding—Designing—Photo Kngravtng HARKISBt'RG, PA. * FRIDAY EVENING. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH APRIL 7, 1916. WOOD ROW WILSON well-stocked drug store. A trial bot tle of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin can !>e obtained free of charge by writing 1o Dr. W. B. .Caldwell, 454 Washing ton St.. Monticello. Illinois. Discuss Bird Protection at Audubon Meeting Dr. Witmer Stone, president of the Pennsylvania Audubon Society, will give a report on "Bird Protection in Pennsylvania" in the Technical high school auditorium this' evening at 8 o'clock at the annual meeting of the Audubon Society. William 1... Baily, treasurer, will give an illustrated lec ture on "Bird Study With the Camera." The Harrlsburg Natural History So ciety will meet at the same time. SITES AT COLUMBUS Frank C. Sites, postmaster of Harris burg, and treasurer of the National As sociation of Postmasters, left the city to-day for Columbus, Ohio, to attend the annual convention of that gather ing. Saturday he will be a guest of the Ohio Postmastars' Association. dunce with joy; also you will find all pain gone from corns, callouses and bunions. There's nothing like "Tiz." It's the only remedy that draws out all the poisonous exudations which puff up your feet and cause foot torture. Get a 25-cent box of "Tiz" at any drug or department store—don't wait. Ah: how glad your feet get; how com fortable your shoes feel. cases been doctoring for months with out obtaining any benefit. But don't take the old forms of reduced iron, iron acetate or tincture of iron simply to save a few cents. You must take iron 111 a form that can be easily absorbed and assimilated like riuxated iron if you want it to do you any good, otherwise it may prove worse than useless. Atam an athlete or prize tighter has won the day simply because he knew the secret 2i, sre5 re , a , 1 B '! en ßth and endurance and filled his blood with iron before lie went Into the affray, while many an other has gone down to inglorious de feat simply for the lack of iron. NOTE Nuxated Iron recommended above by Dr. Sauer is not a patent medicine nor secret remedy, but one which is well known to druggists ana whose iron constituents is widely pre scribed by eminent physicians every where. Unlike the older inorganic iron products. It is easily assimilated, does not injure the teeth, make them black, nor upset the stomach; on the con trary. It is a most potent remedy, in nearly all forms of indigestion, as well as for nervous, run-down conditions. The Manufacturers have such great confidence In nuxated iron that they of fer to forfeit SIOO.OO to any charitable Institution If they cannot take anv man or woman under 60 who lacks iron and increase their strength 200 per cent, or over in four weeks' time, provided thev have no serious organic trouble. They also offer to refund your money if it docs not at least double your strength and endurance in ten days' time. It is dispensed in this city by Croll Keller, G. A. Gorgas and all other druggists. SOCIAL SERVICE OLD AS CHURCH Three Distinct Forms Stand Out; Healing of Sick, Relief of Poor, Driving Away Sorrow TJio International Sunday School Les son for April 9 Is "Aeneas and Dorcas."—Acts 9:32-43. (By William T. Ellis.) The antiquity of the latest fashions is a chastening theme to contemplate. Our vaunted modernity is sevtarely jolted when we discover that our new ideas are centuries and even millen niums old. Thus, this week's Inter national Sunday School Lesson carries us back to the facing of the fact that the present-day vogue of social serv ice—care for men's bodies and estate, as well as for their spirits—is as old as the Christian Church Itself. Three distinct forms of social min istry are the outstanding points in the interesting old stories of the cure of Aeneas and the raising from the dead of Dorcas. First, we have the healing of the sick by the Apostle Peter. Second, we have the relief of the poor, as represented by the work of Dorcas. Third, we have the driv ing away of sorrow by the resurrec tion of Dorcas. Already we have studied how the Christian Church at the first genera tion had attained a state of social and economical interdependence that was without precedent in history. The most ideal example of communism is that of the early Christians, when no man counted his possessions his own, but devoted them to the broth erhood. The widows and the poor were all cared for out of the common funds. Modern social service has a long way to go before It can catch up to the first crop of Christians. Wherein the Church has departed from the practice of ministering to all phases of human need she has de parted from the example and precept of the Apostolic Church and of the great Head of the Church Himself. A delicate and important point to be observed today, however, is that all the new swelling of the tides of broth eriiness and ministry shall not be mis labeled by merely sociological terms, but should be understood as simple Christianity, the love of Christ ex pressed through the hearts of His Dis ciples. We must not let a Kodless fad steal the livery of the Christian Church. What we have of effective social service today is merely a new expression of simple Christian minis try. What About The Shut-Ins? From the days of Eden until now the problem of pain has vexed the world. Why does God permit suffer ing'.' That is the oldest of the puz zles thai has taxed the human brain. We are not ready to admit that all suf fering is evil, any more than our in tellectual integrity will permit us to ••all it an illuSion. a nonexistent thing. The world owes much to its invalids. Some of the sweetest songs and most life-gtving thoughts have risen from beds of pain. There are graces, in despensible to life in its fullness, which seem to grow only in the hot house of suffering. The metropolitan newspapers recently printed columns about a Brooklyn woman who had been for fifty years a "shut-in", and who had ministered greatly to the world. She glorified God as an Invalid. Aeneas, the paralyzed man of our story, glorified Him by n miraculous recovery. Whether ill or well, whether by enduring or recovering, we are to fulfill life's chief end of glorifying God. The story of Aeneas is one of the short and simple annals of pain. I.uke, the physician, is observant to note that he had, for eight years, been bed-ridden with palsy. What a pic ture the few words present! No per son in the full tide of health and ac tivities can understand what it means to be a helpless invalid, dependent on the ministry of loved ones for every thing. For eight interminable years Aeneas had lain on his pallet, or little mattress, on the floor of a dingy Or iental room. What had been his thoughts during all this time when there was nothing left for him to <lo but think? Into the darkness of the sufferer's lot there had apparentlv penetrated the radience of the Good News. The implication of the story is that Aeneas was a Christian. We should like to know the difference between his life before the Tidings which the scatter ed disciples had carried. Where the New Railway Runs One day there came to the home of Aeneas— wonder who was the wage earner there, to maintain the home? —the great-hearted Simon Peter. This tireless apostle was a peripa tetic preacher. Like Jesus, he "went about doing good," he did not wait for opportunities to come to him. With the conversion of Saul, the young Church had peace for a time, and was spiritually built up. So from Jeru salem as a center the apostles rest lessly and resistlessly carried the word. Lydda. or Lidd, where Aeneas li\ed, is about twenty miles to the northwest of Jerusalem, 011 the road to the,sea port of Jaffa, which is ten miles fur ther west. There was a community of Christians here, as also at Jaffa. Lydda was one of the main highways up and down the Land, and Jesus Himself had passed through it. Its importance in history has been con siderable, but now it takes 011 a. new interest. For today, Lydda Is the junction point of the new railroad which the Germans and Turks have built down the center of Palestine to Beersheba. For twenty years it lias been a sta tion on the familiar railway line run ning Into Jerusalem from Jaffa. Now the rails between Jaffa and Lydda have been torn up and used for the construction of this new military rail way, which runs from Beersheba up to within a few miles of Nazareth, where it connects with the Haifa-Da mascus line. Thus has been built for DANDRUFFY HEADS BECOME HAIRLESS i i If you want plenty of thick, beauti | ful, glossy, silky hair, do by all meuns i get rid of dandruff, for It will starve | your huir and ruin it if you don't. I It doesn't do much good to try to brush or wash it out. The only sure 1 way to get rid of dandruff is to dis j solve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of I ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retiring; use enough to I moisten the scalp and rub it in gent- ly with the finger tips. By morning, most if not all, of your ; dandruff will be gone, and three or | four more applications will complete ly dissolve and entiroly destroy every single sign and trace of it. You will finil, too, that all itching | and digging of the scalp will stop, and your hair will look and feel a hun dred times better. You can get liquid ;irvon at any drug store. It is Inex- I pensive and four ounces is all you ' will need, no matter how much dan j (Iriiff you have. This simple remedy fails. —Advertisement. FOUNDED 1871 JSjoamarfU BELL—I99I—UNITED This Guarantee With Every Kirschbaum Suit With every Kirschbaum suit or overcoat in this store there goes this broad, unequivocal guarantee over the signature of sewn with si/k at all points of M to S* VB satisfactory wear it may returne{ * or a ' r A- B. Kirschbaum Cw * And in a day when the markets are flooded with cotton mixed fabrics and dyes, think what it means to buy your Spring Suit with the broad protection of such a guarantee behind it. sls, S2O and $25 Choose your suit in our daylight men's store by the genial accurate rays of the sun. the first time, a railroad from Jeru salem to Damascus. As the modern military men halt in their journey I at. Lydda, 1 wonder if they give thought at all to the miracle there wrought by Peter upon Aeneas? It was all so simple and unspectac ular that it takes only two sentences in the inspired record to tell it: "Peter said to him, 'Aeneas, Jesus' Christ healeth thee: Arise, and make thy own bed.' And straightway he arose. And all that dwelt at Lydda and Sharon saw him; and they turned ! to tiie Lord." Who dares to attempt to portray J all that this meant to the man who; had been bed-ridden for eight years? Or who can describe what salvation 'means to a human soul? Ten thou sand hymns have attempted it, all inadequately. It will need the "new song" about the throne to express fully, the joy of the redeemed. This , miracle, or "sign" also did its work in winning the neighbors to the Way. . Sending; for the Preacher. A clergyman was calling upon some 1 friends, and apologized for his delay j; in arriving in explaining that he had been called across the city to a hospital death-bed. "Why do people always send for the minister when in trou- ;i ble?" one present asked. To have' made full answer to this question i, would have been to vindicate the I Christian ministry and its function In the world, so my friend merely said, "When death comes, petfple naturally want a minister to comfort them. It t is instinctive." So it was when bereavement over- I took the Christian community at Jaf fa, they did the most natural thing in the world: they sent lor Peter, who; was only ten miles distant at Lydda. : Apparently, they did not expect to I have their dear one restored: they • merely wanted to lean on the comfort |of the presence of the friend of j I Christ. In quite the same spirit, the j ilrst action of the family today, when : j death enters its circle, is to telegraph | for the near relatives. Severance of ties makes those which survive seem i precious. The tender mood of the ; mourners craved for companionship j of tlies whom they loved. Of course, I Peter made haste to answer the call. That is obvious and to be ex- i pected. It is no more worthy of re mark than the msijiner in which min isters today go forth, by day and by 1 night, cheerfully disarranging their own plans, in order to comfort the sick and ' the sorrowing. Very little j Is said about the ministry of the cler gy to the suffering; yet to countless recipients it means more than the preached word. Often when the man of God is sought only for easement j of grief lie has brought life itself. A Successful Woman. Of Mary Lyon schools and of Fran ces Willard homes and of Susan B. | Anthony clubs there are a number, in tribute to the greatness of these wom en. (I never did hear of anything nnmed after Cleopatra or the Queen' of Sheba, unless it was a cosmetic.) Doubtless of all the women who have j lived none has had her name coin- j I inciuusaltd ui'icuer lluin tlml minis tering saint of Jaffa, Dorcas. Thou sands of Dorcas societies have been formed in honor and imitation of her. Let us read all that we know about Dorcas, using the story as told in "The New Testament —In Modern Speech:" "Among the disciples at Jaffa was a woman called Tabitha, or, as the name may be translated, Dorcas. Her life was wholly devoted to - the good and charitable actions which she was constantly doing. But, as It hap pened, just at that time she was taken ill and died. After washing her body they laid it out in a room upstairs. Lud, however, being near Jaffa, the disciples, who had heard that Peter was at Ludd, sent two men to him with an urgent request that he would come across to them without delay. So Peter arose and went with them. On his arrival they took him upstairs, and the widow women all came and stood by his side weeping and show ing him the underclothing and cloaks and garments of all kinds which Dor caa used to make while she was still with them. Peter, however, putting every one out of the room, knelt down and prayed, and then turning to the body, he said, " "Tabitha, rise.' "Dorcas at once opened her eyes and, seeing Peter, sat up." - Here was a woman wlro found suc cess in the largest meaning of that word, in ways open to the humblest woman on earth. Her sort of success which is the best sort, had been achieved by ministry in common ways throughout the ordinary days. "Social WEAK, AILING CHILDREN Made Well and Strong by Simple Remedy Here is another letter that, has just j come to our attention, showing the power of Vinol to build up health and I strength for weak, puny, ailing chil ( dren. W. A. Smith, of Shanesville, Ohio, j says: "My little child was pupy, weak | and ailing, could not rest at night and would not eat. I learned about Vinol ; and tried it. and within a week no ticed an improvement. The child's i appetite improved, it slept well, i strength and health were sOon built ! up. We think Vinol is excellent for weak, puny children." Vinol is a delicious cod liver and ' iron tonic without oil. containing beef pepfone, which creates an appetite, I tones up the digestive organs, enriches the blood and creates strength, chil dren love to take if. We ask all parents of weak, sickly, delicate children in this vicinity to try Vinol with the understanding that we will return your money if it fails to benefli your little ones. George A. Gorgas, Druggist; Ken nedy's Medicine Store. 321 Market street; C. F. Kramer, Third and Broad streets: Kitzmlller's Pharmacy, 1325 Derrv street, Harrisburg. Pa. P. S. —In your own town, wherever I /ou live, there is a Vinol Drug Store. Look lor tbe aijiu.—Advertisement. Service" is only the modern name for it; James called it. "pure religion and undented." Very few girls can achieve "careers" as that word is com monly understood, and those that do so, are usually disappointed. Literally every one, however, may win to the Dorcas standard of success, which is Christian helpfulness. There are more tears shed at the biers of the sweet saints who s£rve them by the graves of some grand opera prima donnas. Peter raised Dorcas from the dead. That miracle advertised the super natural gospel. It told the never old •story that Christianity is a religion of power. In one way or another it brings life to dead spirits, and is fol lowed by a trail of rejoicing and serv ice. TEETH Some fellows never think about their teeth until something begins to prod the nerves in a very unpleasant manner. Do you know that few parts of your body have more to do with your general health than your teeth? We know there is no need warning most of you. but some of you are tak ing chances. Sixty seconds, three times a day, added to a twenty-five OOTWOWKKK SILVER ANNIVERSARY KING OSCAR 5c CIGAR Is 25 years old this month. Think what this means to you, Mr. Smoker, absolute reliability. A quarter of a century of increasing popu-* larity is not accidental. JOHN C. HERMAN & CO Harrisburg, Pa "The Daddy of Them All." cent tooth brush, is pretty cheap in surance against pain, disease—and the kind of teeth you put in a glass of water, while you sleep, for fear oi swallowing them.—The American Boyv BLACKHEADS GO QUICK BY THIS SIMPLE METHOD Blackheads—liig ones or little onea —soft ones or hard ones—on any part of the body, go quick by a simple met nod (bat just dissolves To do this get about two ounces of pow dered neroxin from your druggist—. spriiiKle a little on a hot, wet sponge —rub over the blackheads briskly for a few seconds—and wash off. You'll wonder where the blackheads have gone. The powdered neroxin and tlia hot ~-ater have just dissolved them. Pinching and squeezing blackheads only open the pores of the skin and leave them open and unsightly—and unless tile blackheads are big and soft they will not come out, while the simple application of neroxin and water dis solves them right out, leaving the skin soft and the pores in their natural con dition. You can Ret powdered neroxin at any drug store and if you are trou bled with these unsightly blemishes you should certainly try this simple method.—Advertise ment. 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers