< The Premier -]3 -built like a Violin fl|l|| ~ We know of but one way to prove the unques- i 1 tioned superiority of the Premier over all other Talk ing Machines —that is, to play it for you! The tone-chamber, like that of the violin, is of all wood construction. That's because wood gives that q mellow, true-to-life tone —something a metal tone chamber cannot do. The greatest test is in the reproduction of the tenor voice, and the PREMIER is the only machine to accurately reproduce this difficult voice, true to life. ' n Hear the PREMlEß—compare it with any other W I I machine, regardless of price. Ask for a tenor solo— J i J tj then you'll more clearly understand why all-wood con- I U struction is used in the tone-chamber of the PRE- I MIER. U Note These Premier Features: <]J Silent winding •J Motor is silent-running <1 Equipped with a Guaranteed Motor CJ Equipped with tone-modifier lnln OfFlcei Powter A Cowdcn Also Steelton, Pa. »■ ■ I[ p aster] I 1 p 16-DAY ■EXCURSION Atlantic City Cape May, Wildwood Ocean City, Sea Inle City, and Other KcNurtN Saturday, April 22 $4.50 From Harrisburg 25 cents additional to Atlantic City via Delaware River Bridge Route. For details as to time of trains or stop-over privl- I leges see Flyers, consult Agents. crSimitar Excursions July 8. 22; August 5, 19, and Septem- Pennsylvania R. R. BMinHWHHnHrai Dr. G. H. Eppley Will not remove office from 1945 N. Sixth St. HAHRIBKURG, PA. i i FRIDAY EVENING, BARRIF3URG TELEGRAPH APRIL 14, 1916. Flags and Bibles For New Market Schools New Cumberland, Pa., April 14. I Members of the Independent Order of I Americans will present flags and Bibles to tho public schools of New Cum berland and New Market this even ing. The lodgemen will meet at their hall at 7 o'clock and will be accom panied by the New Cumberland Band and the Riverside Guards. The schools wlil sing America, accompanied by the band. Dr. Robert Stahle, of Harris burg, will present the bags and Bibles. School Board President, H. W. But- Just Try This When Hairy Growths Appear ' (Modes of To-day) A smooth, hairless skin always fol- | lows the use of a paste made by mix- ! j ing some water with plain powdered } ' delatone. This paste is applied to the I hairy surface 2 or 3 minutes, then ! rubbed off and the skin washed, when | every trace of hair will have vanished, i No pain or discomfort attends the use i |OL the delatone paste, but caution | should be exercised to be sure that I you get real delatone. • WWVUVAWWWVVmTm • J $ HOW TO GET RID OF I* CATARRH 5 :■ i ■ If you have catarrh, catarrhal J■, ■ deafness, or head noises go to [ • t your druggist and get 1 ox. of f >, Parmint rdouble strength), take ? j this home add to it % pint of hot ? ■, water and 1 oz. of granulated ? ! •, sugar. Take 1 tablespoonful 1 / ; k times a day. / '• This will often bring quick ? | • relief from the distressing head 5 ' , a noises. Clogged nostrils should 5 ! ! j open, breathing become easy and % i j the mucous stop dropping into \ J the throat. J, 1* It is easy to make, tastes pleas- 5 •' ant and costs little. Every one ,« 1 1' who has catarrh should give this I / treatment a trial. You will prob- > !i" ably ilnd it is just what you need, p Have Color in Your Cheeks Be Better Looking—Take Olive Tablets If your skin is yellow—complexion pallid—tongue coated—appetite poor— ! you have a bad taste in your mouth—a | lazy, no-good feeling—you should take ' Olive Tablets. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets—a sub- [ stitute for calomel—were prepared by 1 Dr. Edwards after 17 years of study ! with his patients. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil. You will know them by their olive color. If you want a clear, pink skin, bright eyes, no pimples, a feeling of buoy ancy like childhood days, you must get at the cause. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets act on the liver and bowels like calomel—yet have no dangerous after effects. They start the bile and overcome con- i stipatlon. That's why millions of boxes are sold annually at 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. Take one or two nightly and note the pleasing results. The Olive Tablet Company. Colum bus, Ohio. nuwii———a»n||H IB 1 (Little Benefactors of Mankind 1 Cascaßfcal Pilli a ■aanHEBSE3XZaBMBsnoBi Constipation Ills H Neglected—Kills ■ , -■ "'■^^'T^)Tiitrni lt OTigTn7iwiiiiiiMiTrii. ftorff will receive them. H. F. Kohr j I will be chairman. Fairview township j. schools, York county, will accept the | flags and Bibles in behalf of tho schools. Military Course Is Adopted by Princeton , Princeton, N. J., April 14.—Prince-| ton took a step toward preparedness | yesterday when tho board of trustees j at the regular Spring meeting ap proved a plan for a one-year course in military instruction as a part of tho regular curriculum. The course, which will begin with the next academic year, will include i a general discussion of military his- J tory, the theory of tactics and ele- I mentary strategy. Although the course is to be elective, it is expected that it j will be in great demand because of the fact that credit will be allowed for completing it successfully. Students taking the military course will be i passed or flunked just as in any other university course. His Jaws Grow Together, Cannot Eat Solid Food Ashland, Ky„ April 14. William Blanton, aged 25, a laborer, has gone to Louisville, where he will undergo an operation. Blanton's jaws are | grown together so closely that he is ! unable 1o eat any solid food other than that which he can force through j his teeth. For over seventeen years nothing as large as a grain of rice j has entered his stomach, yet he has worked and supported a widowed ! mother. j A local dentist extracted his eleven I teeth and raised enough money to pay ! his way to Louisville, where he will jbe operated on. So far as Is known ; here. Blanton's affliction is the only | one known of its kind. Fair Maid's Kick Causes Riot at Society Swim Denver, Col. One little kick of a I [ fair bather's "tootsie" caused a I veritable tidal wave of explanations at a society swim in the Denver pub- J lie pool. A wagonload of police and stretcher j bearers rushed to tjie pool and walked right in without knocking when a re port came that an accident had oc curred. Willowy debutantes screamed and slipped into the water. Society mat rons, not so willowy, screamed and i splashed into the water, i And It was all because Mrs. Mollle | Green had been kicked unconscious | by another bather. REFUSED FTirFR, TIF SMOKES WHILE HAVING OPERATION j Brockton, Mass.—Because Jeremiah \ Murphy was so stout, weighing 300 i pounds, surgeons at the Brockton Hos- S pital declined to administer ether in an operation for a mastoid abscess, requiring the removal of three inches \ of bone. Murphy lighted a cigar and smoked i throughout the operation. He never [ flinched while three surgeons cut j away the bone and tissues. MRS. SEILER HOSTESS Special to the Telegraph Dauphin, Pa., April 14. The Ladies' Aid Society, of the Lutheran church, was entertained by Mrs. Daniel Seller at her home, in South Erie street. After the business meet | ing, a social time and refreshments ' were enjoyed by Mrs. H. I. Garberich, Mrs. Elizabeth Weltzel, Mrs. W. F. I Reed, Mrs. W. H. Ege, Mrs. H. B. Greenawalt, Mrs. George Kinter, Miss Anna Hoffman, Miss Clara Berg- I streoser and Mrs. Seiler. COUNTY HAS 2,000 DOGS Mlfflintowil, Pa., April 14.—Juniata county, with a population of 15,000 | has, according to the County Commis ! sioners' dog tax record, within its borders over 2,000 dogs, and the tax will run nearly S7OO. The constables t arc enforcing the law und killing all i uosa not taxed. FOODS THEY BUILD OR DESTROY Amazing but Rarely Suspected Truths About the Things You Eat. (Copyright. 1916, by Alfred W. McCann.) CHAPTER 15 Wlillc Bread, Biscuits Crackers, Farina, lie fined Hrcakl'ast Foods, Pearled Barley.' Corn Makes, Corn : Sfareli, Polished Bice, Maslied Pota toes, Kellned Cereals, and Sugars of I Kvery Kind are Aeld Producers I Sueli Arid-l''orming Foods, Unless | Accompanied liy (,1M- Bases Natural to | Tlieni, Arc Beiiind Most Preventable ! Diseases. It has been clearly established that under certain kinds of diet, contain ing actually twice the number of cal ories figured by the scientists to be necessary to the life of the body, the man or animal fed on such a diet per ishes. It has also begun to dawn upon the scientific mind that there is a bal ance between the acid and the base forming elements of food and that the ash content or mineral content of food, heretofore ignored as unim i portant, is, after all, the most im ; portant of food factors. | Sherman and Mettter reported in i May, 1912, as a result of experiments conducted in the laboratories of; Columbia University, their estimate of j the acid and base-forming elements I in the ash of the mineral content of I forty-seven different kinds of food. Meats, including fifth, showed a de cided preponderance of acid-forming J elements. The lean flesh of different I species, whether of young or mature animals of the same species, showed ' similar results. [ The white of eggs was found to be an acid-former. Milk, on the con trary, showed a slight preponderance lof base-forming elements. Vegetables I and fruits showed a marked predom inance of base-forming elements. Kxperiments of several days dura tion upon healthy men snowed that where foods with a. preponderance of acid-forming elements were substitu ted for foods with base-forming ele i ments the increase of ammenia excre tion in the urine accounted only for I one-fourth to one-third of the acid involved. I The sulphates and phosphates in the urine, which were evidences of the ] fact that the dangerous sulphuric and phosphoric acids elaborated in the body had been neutralized, as they I should have been, were not con i sidered. j Sherman and Mettler did succeed, | however, in stampeding the self-satis- I fled scientists, who were unite con tent to let the world think that they ! knew all that was to be known about i food, and that the proper way to attack all the diseases in the world | was to invent the proper serum or use the light kind of saw and knife. It has never occurred to these I scientists that white bread, biscuits, j crackers, farina, refined breakfast | foods, pearled barley, corn meal, corn J flakes, cornstarch, polished rice, mashed potatoes, and refined cereals and sugars of every kind are acid formers, and that their constant, ap pearance on the tables of the nation is rapidly bringing about a national condition of acidosis. Pure proteins, pure carbohydrates, and pure fats, while containing all the calorie value of the food from which they are derived, retain only j a minimum of the chemical agents, j reagents, and base - forming sub j stances necessary to the healthy ac tivity of the organs of digestion, as- I simulation, and elimination. All meat j consumed must have its proper vege j table bases at hand. So must all [other forms of protein. So also with I all forms of carbohydrates, yet these bases arc lost to the American peo- Rich Boston Man Enlists as Private in Canada Toronto, Can. —It is said that the wealthiest man In the Canadian army enlisted as a private in the ranks of the American legion, now 700 strong, in barracks at Toronto. His name is Nathaniel Leavitt Fran cis and 'he is a Boston shoe manu facturer. On one of the first days of enlistment Francis called at the camp. "Can I pass here?" he asked. "You must, lie examined." He was, and found that he could pass. "I'll be back as soon as I get my business fixed up," he said, as he went away leaving his address in Boston. Tt was on on£ of Boston's finest residential streets. The officers smiled. "He's putting one over," they said. A few days later in walked Francis. He went as a private. TRAGEDY OF A WASHDAY EXPOSED BY AUTO JAUNT | Oklahoma City, Okla. "What j sort of pennant was that?" a friend j asked Miss Mabel Atkins after she j had returned from a trip downtown j in her motorcar. The girl said she j did not have any pennant on the car, j but the other insisted. So she went j out to look. Fastened to the rear of the car was j a union suit which had been hanging I on the line. It became entangled with j the back end of the car when she{ backed it out of the garage. All the way downtown and back that union ; suit had flapped In the breeze. KEEP HAY FROM TAKING FIRE "To keep hay from taking fire in the barn by spontaneous combustion an lowa man recommends four quarts of salt to the load when It is put in the mow."—Farm and Fireside. I FOR a "whole meal" dish, nourish- I in cost, serve curried I r t fo,^K " v lWll'||llaMllMlWl I I B ■x-i ■ 14! ' z '. Hotel Astor Rice with Curried Beans H Wash a Quart of dried beans and soak over night in plenty of cold water. Drain, put in stew pan WPfl enough cold .'ater to cover them well, bring to boiling point in this water, then drain. Return to stew pan, cover withi boiling water, cook slowly until tender. Fry I chopped onion, one grated H M J*"" 01 Md one chopped apple in butter or drippings, add I cup water, 1 teaspoon curry powder, I ■■ teaspoon curry paste, / 2 teaspoon salt,'/? cup tomato sauce, simmer 10 minutes, add beans (drained). Senre »ety hoi in border ol Hotel Attoi hot boiled rice. Ho tm! Attor Rica it told in ttaltd car font only. 10c for a full pound in thm yellow carton. At Bo.t cod ,r«er>. If mn cuuot»apply m Mmd 10c l»r fall paad cut), to] I ■ pic in large measure by the very abuses we have been considering. In the British Medical Journal, April 12, 1913, Barr declares: "Rheu matoid arthritis is not due to the action of bacteria or their toxines or of the toxines developed in the in testines as a result of stasis. The cause is a mild chronic acidosis which extracts the lime salts from the fibrous tissues, muscles, nerves, car tilages, and bones. The extraction of lime salts from fibrous tissue causes it to swell and its vascularity to increase. "IJOSS of lime salts causes irritable weakness of the muscles, tinder such a loss the muscles waste and contract readily. They frequently cramp and deep reflexes are exaggerated, often accompanied by rhythmic tremor. Neuralgic pains result from the ex traction of some of the very small amount of lltne present in the nerve tissue. With the continued absorp tion of the lime the particular tissues swell and there is effusion into the joints. "The cartilages soon become, in volved and this is followed by thin ring and erosion. The lime and other bases are so necessary to the neu tralization of the acids elaborated by the acid-forming foods that they sur render themselves to the actual de struction of the bones and tissues in order that, as long as possible the un natural condition may be tolerable. K\en when all the bases are with drawn from our food the phosphates and sulphates continue to appear in the urine, showing that the body has had to steal the alkaline bases from its own tissue in order to carry on life's processes. Surely no one in so blind as to assume that this stealing can go on continuously without en countering disaster. "The fact that the disease is pres ent chiefly among the poorer class and in the female sex between the ages of fifteen and thirty-live years lends support to this view," con tinues Barr, "for in these there is a deficiency of lime intake, and during the active menstrual period there is a tendency to an increased lime meta bolism. "The relative absence of lime and potassium in the refined food of the poorer classes leads to a deficient mo tility of the stomach, and this in turn results in obstinate constipa tion with acid fermentation. "Apparently foods from which the lime ant! potassium are largely re moved will not provide the intake of these substances necessary to normal metabolic processes." In these comments Barr has suc ceeded as much as any other investi gator in making clear the mystery which has heretofore obscured the origin rtf cancer, berl-beri, pcllegra, tuberculosis, rheumatism, neuralgia, neuritis, and other forms of malnutri tion in which resistance to disease is destroyed. Herman Hille in "Facts of Modern Science and Their Value in the Pre vention and Cure of Disease" says, "No vital process is possible without the presence of mineral constituents, as these elements and salts are gen erators of energy and are all equally important with protein, carbonhy drates, fats, oxygen, and water, the great calorie producers. The human organism cannot exist without min eral elements and salts in true or ganic form, as they are Indispensable foods." "Slowly but surely we begin to per ceive the folly of removing the bases from all our prepared cereal foods and hreadstuffs and from the vege tables cooked at home. Picks Six Yale Men to Watch Minds Grow New Haven, Conn.—Exactly what effect a course at Yale University has upon the mentality of the average un dergraduate will be determined by a series of tests being made on four freshmen, a sophomore and a student of the School of Music at that institu tion. These men have been placed un der the care of Professor Roswell An gier, director of the psychological laboratory, who will examine their minds and try to detect evidences of growth. Once a week, from now to the con clusion of their college careers, the chosen six will suffer their mental de velopment of retrogression to be de termined by the professor. They have been selected with no regard to their scholarship at present. Four years hence Yale will be able to determine whether its courses are really worth while. Members of the squad are Rudolph Willard, 'l9; T. J. Sheehan, 19; L. A. Bektlle, 'l9; J. E. Fravel. 'l9; John Sucftert, 'lB, and Antonio Pascale, Mu sic School. A similar experiment was tried at Harvard several years ago by Hugo Munsterberg. Couple Totall Blind, Yet Manage Big Farm Jet, Okla.—Despite the fact that both are totally blind, Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Hubbard successfully operate the farming part of a half section of land they own in Alifalma eountv. Both are retired musicians and expect to spend the rest of their days on the farm enjoying life. They have traveled extensively all over the United States giving con certs, but three years ago settled down to rural life near here. Meriden Pastor Bars Teasing of Young Lovers Meriden, Conn.—The Rev. R. M. Hancock, pastor of the South Meriden Episcopal Church, Is haled as a local authority on love, courtship and mar riage. His views, as given In a lec ture before the Women's Christian Temperance Union, are as follows: "EoVe making should be encouraged by parents under proper restriction. "Young people should not be teased about being in love. "Many girls mistake love for fasci nation. "A man should not court a girl during the best days of her life if he doesn't love her. "Hasty marriages should be dis couraged. "Second marriages sometimes are more successful than first. Moreover, what's a man to do with four chil dren and no wife? "A man should have a home for his wife and not ask her to live with elder or younger people in the first stages of her wedded life. "It's becoming harder every day for a woman to catch a man. Men are not marrying like they used to." CEMETERY SO QUIET THAT EMPTY COFFIN IS BURIED Lynchburg, Va.—Eager for busi ness and as his business was dull last month, the keeper of the old Metho dist Cemetery buried an empty coffin, thinking it contained the body of a negro infant. An undertaker had sent an empty coffin to the cemetery, and jpretty soon a well-dug grave was ready. With all proper dignity and solemnity, the coffin was lowered into the grave and covered with soil. In a short time the undertaker had oc casion to use the coffin and couldn't find it. The gravediggers then had to dig up the coffin and return it to the undertaker. "Some Breakfast, You'll hear that cheery a^er the first mouth i ful tomorrow—if you will &* ve him Cream of Barley. * s not a mere excuse ffflfer' or cream anc * su S ar - it is a real food—because it vi J is made by a wonderful new process from the most nutritious and digestible of grains—from It is "some" breakfast. For B ' tomorrow try || Cream °f B&rfey IB And begin the evening meal with a bowl of rich milk and those crisp Sunshine Graham Crackers. My! but they're good. Just try 'em. Remember Sunshine Grahams are one of tb' Biscuits You'll always find the biscuit you like best under the Sunshine name. In each package of Takhoma Biscuit is a paper doll in colors. Other packages of Sunshine Biscuits contain pretty dresses for her. See the list in Takhoma package. joosE-W"LES giscurr (OMPANY < BaAer.i^ Kingan's 'Reliable' Sugar Block Cured Shoulder SKIN AND FAT REMOVED Serve Boiled, Fried or Broiled Ask Your Grocer For Kingan's Shoulder and see how fine it tastes . Kingan Provision Co. HARRISBURG, PA. Your Ninety-First Birthday how arc you going to celebrate it? You can live to celebrate it by eating the. right kind of foods. Give Nature a chance. Stop digging your grave with your teeth. Cut out heavy meats, starchy foods and soggy pastries and eat Shredded Wheat Bis cuit. It supplies all the nu triment for work or play with the least tax upon the Made at Niagara Falls, N. Y. TELEPHONE HONORS Cleveland lias the honor of having more telephones In proportion to its population tiiun any other city In the United States, says "The Indianapolis News." New Orleans draws the booby prize. 19