CHILDREN HATt PILLS, CALOMEL AND CASTOR OIL Give Fruit Laxative when cross, bilious, feverish or constipated. "California Syrup of Figs" can't harm tender stomach, liver, bowels. I.oolc back at your childhood <lny3. Remember the "dose" mother insisted on—castor oil, calomel, cathartics. How you hated them, how you foutrht against taking them. With our children it's different. Mothers who cling to the old form of physic simply don't realize wliat they do. The children's revolt is well founded. Their tender little "insid " are injured by them. If your child's stomach, liver and bowels need cleansing, give only deli cious "California Syrup of Figs." Its action is positive, but gentle. Millions <>f mothers keep this harmless "fruit laxative" handy; they know chilcir n love to take it; that it never fails to clear, the liver and bowels and sweeten the stomach, and that a teaspoonful given to-day saves a sick child to morrow. Asi; your druggist for a 50-cent bot tle of "California Syrup of Figs," which has full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown ups plainly on each bottle. Beware of counterfeits sold here. See that it is made by "California Fig Syrup Company." Refuse any other kind with contempt.—Advertisement. Try This If You Have Dandruff There is one sure way that never fails to remove dandruff completely and that is to dissolve it. This de stroys it entirely. To do this, just get about four ounces of plain, ordinary liquid arvon: apply it at night when retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the linger tips. By morning, most if not all. of your dandruff will lie none, and three or lour more applications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy everj single sign and trace ol it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will tind, too. that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop in stantly, and your hair will lie Huffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive, and four >unees is all you will need. This simple remedy has never been known to fall. What to Do For Itching Skins Eczema, ringworm and other Itch- i ing, burning skin eruptions are so easily made worse by Improper treat- I ment, that one has to be very careful. There is one method, however, that you ft® need not hesitate to use. even on a baby's ft \\ tender skin—that is, CjjL \ \ «\ the resinol treat- 1 l l ment. Resinol is the \y / I prescription of a \ f / J Baltimore doctor, \ yv put up in the form VX V of resinol ointment and resinol soap. This proved so remarkably success ful, that thousands of other physi cians have prescribed it constantly for over S!0 years. Resinol usually stops etching in- , stantly, healing the eruption quickly, unless due to some serious internal disorder. Resinol ointment and resi- 1 nol soap can be boxight at any drug- i gist's, and are not at all expensive. Write for free sample. Dept. 1-K, Resi nol, Baltimore. —Advertisement FEEL YOUNG! It's Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets For You! beware of the habit of constipation ' It develops from just a few constipated days. unless you take yourself in hand 1 Coax the jaded bowel muscles back i to normal action with L>r. Edwards I olive Tablets, the substitute for calo- ' lnel. Don't force them to unnatural ac- 1 lion with sevtre medicines or bv merely Hushing out the Intestines with nasty : Ki< keniiig cathartics. i Dr. Edwards believes in gentleness persistency and Nature's assistance ' Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets open the I bowels: their action is gentle, yet posl- i tive. There is never any pain or grin- ; lug when Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are used. Just the kind of treatment old persons should have. • Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are a veg- i eiable compound mixed with olive oil ' you will know them by their olive ! color. Take one or two occasionally I and have no trouble with your liver bowels or stomach. 10c ana 25r ner box. All druggists. ' j The Olive Tablet Company, Colum bus., O.—Advertisement. ! A Single Application Banishes Every Hair 1 The Modern Beauty) Here is how any woman ran easily! find quickly remove objectionable,! hairy growths without possible injury !o t!, e skin: Make a paste with some! powdered delatone and water, apply | 0 i hairy surface and after 2 or 3 minutes rub off. wash the skin and the hairs are gone. This is a painless, inex'- pensive method, and, excepting where' the growth is unusually thick, a single > application is enough. Yon should however, be careful to get genuine delatone. / " j! Clears Away Pimples There is one remedy that seldom fails ! to clear away all pimples, black heads and skin eruptions and that makes the skin soft, clear and healthy. Any druggist can supplv vuu with i "mo, w;hich generally overcomes all ! .«klii diseases. Acih\ <?«!zonia. itch pimples, rashes, black heads in most • HSi-a give way to jerao. Frequently minor blemishes disappear overnieht 1 ti'hing usually stops Instantly. Zemo is safe, clean, easy to use and depend able. It costs only •Jsc; an extra lariti l.ottle, SI.OO. It will nol stnin. Is not greasy or sticky and Is positively «»r» for tender, sensitive skins. Zemo, Cleveland. Try Telegraph Want Ads ; WEDNESDAY EVENING, HOME A Novel | by George Agnew Chamberlain i (Copvright by the Century Co.) * Gerry looked at the Barbadian's rather shabby clothes. "Why don't you sell If you don't want to work tin place? It's worth money. 1 know enough to tell you that." The Barbadian rested one hand high on the thick trunk of a wistaria. A slow smile drew the corners of his mouth. "Worth money?" he echoed. "My boy, not every man kills the thing that he loves best. This is my houie. You read those dates written in dust and still you thought my home was dead. But is isn't dead. I haven't killed the thing that I love best. You can get cash, comfort and cool drinks almost anywhere, but I have remem bered that memories travel only beat en paths." Even as Gerry pickrd his way back to the waiting cab he felt Red Hill reaching out for him, drawing him. And during the long, slow diive to the quay he leerned that he had passed the crossroads that had given so long a pause to his troubled soul. The Bar badian had opened his eyes. Doubt left him. There was but one road —the road back—and it was open. He wrote his cable to Allx with a firm baud. The freighter reached quarantine aft • a quiet voyage twelve hours ahead of time and just at sundown. A tug hurried down the bay to toll them their berth was not ready. The freighter was forced to anchor at the mouth of the narrows. Gerry watched the lights spring out from the shadowy shores. They beckoned him to familiar scenes. Staten Island had been to bis boyhood an undiscovered land and the scene of his first wanderings. Buy shore he knew through constant pass ing by. In the sky beyond it. hung Hie glow of the summer city, here and there pierced with the brighter ti.une of some grotesque monstrosity. Up the bay the dark waters forked into two bands that lost themselves is a sea and sky of twinkling lights. H< could just determine the sweeping arch of Brooklyn bridge nnd the presence of more than one new Tower of Babel that broke the ever-changing skyline of his native city and made him feel, by that much, forgotten and nn alien. But from all the myriad lesser lights his eyes turned gratefully to the high held torch of Liberty. Beneath it, the familiar, tilted diadem, the shadowy folds draping the up-standing pose, the strength and steadfastness and the titanic grandeur of the statue, carried their message to him as never before. It became to him what its creator had conceived, an emblem, and the myriad little waves of the bay, rushing to fling themselves at the feet of the goddess became a multitude, eager for attain ment, ready for sacrifice. It was ten o'clock on a morning in early autumn when Gerry finally got free of the freighter and took the ferry for the other side of the river. He hail left all his baggage to be delivered at the house later. The morning wa« clear but sultry. In the city the apathy of summer days had settled down. People glanced at Gerry's heavy tweeds and antiquated hat but they did not smile, for Gerry himself was such a sight as makes men forget clothes. The tan of his lean face, the swing of his big. unpadded shoulders, his clear eyes, carried the thoughts of passers-by away from clothes and city things. They seemed to catch a breath of spicy winds from the worn garments that clung to the stranger's virile body and in his eyes they saw a mirage of far-away places. As G rry reached his own house, be was outwardly calm, even delib erate, but inwardly he was fightin; down n turmoil of emotions. What wa be to find In AlixV Had he anything t. give in exchange'' Had he tod much He climbed the steps slowly. Hi band trembled as he reached out t< raise the heavy bronze knocker. Be fore bis fingers could seize It, the doo; swung softly Inward. Old John bowed before him. For a moment Gerry stood dazed. The naturalness of thai open door, of the old butler, of the coo: shadows in the old familiar hall, at reck straight at his heart with the shrewr. poignancy of simple things. Old John raised a smiling face to greet him but down one wrinkled cheek crawled a surprised tear. Gerry held out his hand. "How d<. you do. Joh;,?" "I am very well today, sir." salt; John. "Mrs. Gerry is in the library She told me to telephone to the club and if you were there to say (he wished to see you." Gerry was puzzled. Why should Ali.\ think he would go to the club? H< handed the butler his old hat and strode to the library door. The doo' was closed. Somebody said, "Come in." The words were so low he hardly heard them. He opened the door, stepped Inside and closed It behind him. , (To Be Continued.) WAR I'OST IX)H AUTHOR Washington, April 12. Meredith Nicholson, of Indianapolis, an author, virtually has been agreed upon bv President Wilson and Secretary Baker for appointment as Assistant Secretarv of War. Mr. Nicholson is a close friend of Mr. Baker and is understood to have the support of Vice-President .Mar shall. CAIIiroKMA WOMAN MAYOR Sawtelle. Cal., April 12. Mrs. Kllen French Aldrich. formerly of Dayton, 0., will tie the first woman mayor of Sawtelle. At yesterday's election she received the largest vote polled by any candidate. Price now SIOSO, Detroit; beginning Midnight April 15, SIO9O Detroit Quality First This 3400 r. p. m. Chalmers Will Last Any Man 5 Years or More. She hasn't a weakness. And the sturdiest part just enough to make a very foxy, silken affair in of her anatomy is her 3400 r. p. m. engine. action. Now there has been a lot of talk about 3400. A.tfJl then, too, in traveling 10 miles an hour I find some of my prospects come'in here a little bit her engine speed is only 500 r. p. m. At 20 she doubtful about 3400. turns up 1000. At 30, 1500. They have been told by my contemporaries that How often do you travel faster than 30? an engine turning up 3400 r. p. m. is doomed to So unless you want to sink the little button to short existence. the floor board and hold her there all day, you're That's absurd. Why, there are at least three cars not using 3400 r. p. m. all the time, in America that do 3100 r. p. m. or better. Ten I hope none of my friends will swallow whole years ago in Europe there were cars that did 4000 any story deriding 3400. ' r * 1 ?* a _ You know you will always find the largest Take the electric fan. It does around 4000. A number of clubs under the best apple tree in the turbine reaches about 4300. orchard. Now, the argument set forth against 3400 is the This car has doubled my sales, v wear and tear on bearings." As Mr. Post says, "There's a reason." How ridiculous! O ne little ride and you will want to pass up Of course, if we had an old-fashioned engine your okl gondola, with heavy iron pistons and arm-and-hammer type Ask me *bout our service inspection coupons, of connecting rods then, to be sure, Id have They aue negotiable with all Chalmers dealers every little to say. # # where. This system is an important consideration But, to the contrary, this is a very modern engine. in buying your car. The pistons are aluminum, which cost a whole lot T • r> T> j <>, -r* k,,* I~+ 1 ™ louring Car or Roadster, slooo Detroit m! but weigh a whole lot less. . Three-Passenger Cabriolet, SI4OO Detroit I hen the connecting rods are much lighter. r N A T> A * ■* A Th * at ! ake * S a Jn ot ° f Weight otr the • bearingS l ' and wUh to mateh^or permits about 500 r. p. m. more engine speed. hood—Cabriolet, Onford maroon or Valentine green fhat isn t a very big increase, 1 know, but it's with hoods to match, or Meteor blue with black hood. DEALERS: Keystone Motor Car Co. r Ideal Automobile Co., Lebanon, Pa. 1019-1025 Market Street York Garage & Service Co., York, Pa. Snyder & Wingert, Chambersburg, Pa. C. T. Romberger, Elizabethville, Pa. A. D. Shatzer, Greencastle, Pa. 7cJ New Eberhart Garage. Geo. 1". Eberhart, Prop., Gettysburg, Pa. " ' '\S M. E. Schlegel, Thompsontown, Pa. • M LOCUSTS COMING IN FORCE IN 1916 Dr. H. A. Surface Gives His Opinion Abot the Seventeen Year Old Pests The seventeen-year-oid locusts are: headed this way again. Dr. H. A. Sur- , face, economic zoologist of the State; Department of Agriculture, has been hearing from farmers and gardeners who have been digging up the pests i and he has been working up their life j history. Some specimens sent to the Capitol from Lehigli and other eastern .coun ties are responsible for the follow-! lng statement by the zoologist: "The locusts, both the 13-year and j Ihe 17-year species, have been care-' fully studied for years and records! have been kept, so that now one can | tell when they may be expected to I appear again. Although the records I iuay show that they are to appear l HXRRISBURG *&&&£ TELEGRAPH I there are instances when even records go wrong. 1 find that Lehigh county | was due to have a visitation of Brood II in 1911. This brood is re ported from the following counties in this State: Berks,- Bucks, Chester, t Dauphin, Delaware, Lancaster. Leb anon, Lehigh, Montgomery, Xorth , amp ton, Philadelphia, Pike, Potter, ! Schuylkill and Wyoming. It is due to appear again in 1928. "Brood 7 in distribution is one of the largest. It appears in nearly all the States north of and including j Tennessee and North Carolina, and west to the Mississippi River. It is ! due to put in an appearance in 1919, in practically all of the counties east of the Allegheny mountains. | "Brood XIV due in 1923 is the next I brood of the 17-year locust which we may expect to have with us and bother our trees. It is reported as : occurring in the following Pennsyl vania counties: Adams. Bedford, I Berks, Blair, Center, Chester. Clear j field, Clinton, Columbia, Cumberland, Franklin. Huntingdon, Lancaster, j Lehigh. Luzern°. Lycoming, Mifflin, Montour. .Northumberland. Potter | Snyder, Schuylkill. Tioga, Union and I York. "If you are a long resident of your vicinity you can easily figure back to I the years when you were visited by ! locusts, and so determine which of J these broods it was from which these ' nymphs came." i Gompers Denies That v Wages Have Not Advanced With Living Expenses By Associated Press Washington, 1). C„ April 12. President Gompers, of the American Federation of Labor, denied to-day before a House committee that living expenses have increased fifteen per cent, in the United States during the last ten years while wages had not advanced proportionately. "In twelve years," he said, "wages, hours of employment and conditions of labor have improved in the United States beyond any other period of any people in the history of the world. The price tr?nd of essentials since 1870 has been downward. We have enlarged what we called essentials of life in the last 30 years so that there is no comparison." KILLS MANUFACTURER AM) SELF Special to the Telegrafl- Conneautvilte, Pa., April 12. P. A. Mcllugh, of Cleveland, owner of a local factory, shot and killed Francis M. Covell, a basket manufacturer here last night, following a quarrel over a Ijease, and then committed suicide. APRIL 12, 1916. ' Would-Be-Husband Does Not Object to Widow With Three Children The Associated Aids Society received a request from a farmer near Millers burg asking the local organization to find a wife for him. The husband to-be has no objections to a few chil dren (not more than three), but the lady must have a supply of clothing and such, as he intends to spend his cash in equipping a farm. AI.I.KN TO LECTURE Benjamin T. Allen, chief engineer of the Harrisburg Foundry and Machine Works, will deliver an Interesting'ad dress this evening to the members of Capitol City Council, No. 2, American Order of Steam Engineers. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. j The Kind You Have Always Bought Harrisburg Scrap Iron Dealer Buys Lebanon Plant j Mii hlovltz&Co., scrap Iron merchants, i Paxton street at Pennsylvania Railroad, this city, have completed negotiation* for tlie purchase of tlie entire plant 01 the Brandewine iron & Metal Co., Leba non. Pa. Simon Michlovitz, president of Michlovitz St Co., represented tlw local concern In the deal, and Max Urosky represented the Lebanon con cern. While the amount Involved In the transaction was not revealed. It t! the largest scrap iron deal made in Lebanon in years. DYNAMITE FOUND AT FIRE Special to the Telegraph Shamokln, Pa., April 12. ln ex tinguishing a fire at Kulpmont yester day firemen found seven sticks o/ dynamite in the attic of a doubli frame house owned by Michael Goldii and occupied by four families, includ ing himself. Nothing has been seer of him since llie fire. It is thought h« deliberately se.t fire to the building through an infernal machine to pro j cure SI,OOO insurance on the strue ' ture. Bear? tha 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers