4 Tomorrow's the Big Day For Men and Boys at Kaufman's A Free Watch or Ever-Ready Safety Razor For Men, With Every Suit BW A Free Guaranteed Watch For Ihe Boy With His Suit ~W| And you don't have to buy any particular kind of suit or pay any special price to receive one of these .% splendid and useful Easter Gifts. Neither do you pay any more for your suit. Prices are as low as al- Wftf ways, in fact lower, and that makes the offer doubly attractive. Hundreds of new arrivals on sale to morrow. All sizes for lean men, big men, little men, stout men and in-between. Cl 1 7CF° r Men ' s an( l Veung Men's* Men's and Young Men's Newsl O 7C / M * '''EASTER SUITS BELTERS, siß Values,s * '*> i jrfC ftSßss£*' fj v Values to SIB.OO This season's most popular model. A new line just arrived, JffSa,; V ■aMJ'i' £4 These Suits come in Rood variety of those popular new Eng- goes on snle to-morrow at $12.75; made of the latest English I ; | 1 lish Mixtures, Blue Serges, Worsteds and Casslmeres. All the Mixtures, Blue Serges and Flannels, Homespuns, Worsteds and E VtV' c ?JKii Trl season's newest models, colors and all sizes and a watch or Cassimere; all sizes. An Ever-Ready Safety Razor or Watch AJ Ever-Ready Safety Razor FREE. Y*L. MM-? it'l \ [Popular Dressy Blue Serge tfn 7C| [Men's and Young Men's (tjlyfl 7c \ SUITS For Men ..... New Easter Suits $ 11 /<';! 515.00 Values These are all high grade, handsomely tailored, distinctive < ■'i' 3f\'"iin '* n ' rre P roac hahle offer. These Suits can not he duplicated models which the most particular dresser would he glad to have Ester , 35 'I W,4 J1 f° r less than $15.00 anywhere e ' s c. Made of a Sun-Proof, fcade- j n wardrobe. All the latest all wool materials, colors and kJ: '■ ©■} i'.'iJ Proof Blue Serge and All Wool Worsteds and Casslmeres, in a _ „ " u Sg b host of very handsome patterns; all sizes; choice of a watch or styles. Choice of a Watch or Ever-Ready Safety Razor FREE I'' Ever-Ready Safety Razor FREE with each Suit. j MEN 'S sl-50 PANTS, 90c MEN S s2 ' so PANTS ' 49 MEN'S $3.00 PANTS, <|» jgg 1 JbsV Good, strong worsteds and casslmeres, fin- _ .. , ~. _ . Wiv' tl if Good, strong Cassimere Pants, made with | S hed with belt loops and side buckles; 30 Just 50 P» lr s of these fine worsted Pants Hsu! M JPMBfi, V?' belt loops and side buckles; sizes 32 to 42. to 44. ' n sizes 32 to 46. ®te l Kl?S® : 1% "D A "DT7TVTTC I You'll Save Money if Your BOY'S EASTER SUIT W* WiMmk ' AIVJLIN XOl IS BOUGHT AT KAUFMAN'S ■ftl 11 fy Maw V Not only that, but you'll secure a much better garment than the price you expect to /■ IflKv' pay will buy you anywhere else. Kaufman's Boys' Suits are the best in the world and M • All ' Kaufman's Underselling Prices are always lower than quoted anywhere else. I Alterations Guaranteed Watch With Every Boy's $2.95 Suit or Better I Required Handsome Norfolk Suits dJO QC Kovs' Newest tfO QQ Boys' Smart <CA 8Q flflif \ la] wj® WJll Dp For Boys, at Norfolk Suits, nt «P0.0J7 Norfolk Suits, at Rlf H Wg\ J \]\ -W m M d ' WnUh FREK WHh Ea, ' h S,,U A ° U \™tli C Ea<A\ °it FreC A Guaranteert Watcb Free P/i' i' BkM T_ •*»«»»«•»» ~else" won't buy you any- rics; pants lined, coats K itm U'lllUrruW yj Dp-J thing in the Suit line to sewed with silk; come in \ \ I fft'jfy ■ ijljßjjl __ J C,.!f equal these unmatchable Sun-Proof Blue Serges, \l / n VjSB v 1 BW/H ■ ''lif/fflffl anu fv J Rlmicpc Fnr values; all new fabrics Worsteds and Casslmeres; H i MS j HIU ' nl^ orlp ' g ' all sizes and nrw patterns. tcriols terns and colors; all sizes; newest mixtures, in sizes FOODS THEY BUILD OR DESTROY Amazing but Rarely Suspected Truths About the Things You Eat. (Copyright. 1918, by Alfred W. McCann.) CHAPTKR 18 I'IIP Erroneous Idea.* of tile Modern Dietitian Concerning the Importance of and "Balanced Ra tions" Are Not Only at Work Un dermining the Health of Men, ; Women and Children, but Tliey Aro Also Disastrously Affecting the Dairy Industry, Which Reacts Upon the Quality of Milk and Moat That Now Come to Market. In New York City Armour & Co. have had to discontinue the killing of dairy cows because of the tre mendous losses sustained through the ! excessive number of condemnations resulting; from a generalized tuber- i culosls. Even while on the killing floor, awaiting slaughter, these cows could be milked, showing that they had been producing right up to the day of slaughter. In one certified dairy herd In New i S A VE-A-C EN T Soft Scouring Compound jji does everything any scouring powder does, does it ji more easily and lasts as long as any three 10c cans, because it does not waste. Yet it costs only 4c, while cans of scouring powder cost 5c and 10c.. Uw FOUR CENTS At All Good Grocers J^vwwwAV^/«'.sw < yif^yyyyyyrtY;VVWW'^vvvsiWrtv.v.v.%%%%vwvw FRIDAY EVENING, 1 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH! APRIL 21, 1916. Tork State 124 of 125 cows were found in a state of malnutrition clearly j indicative of the unfitness of their I food. The daily dietary of these cows con- I sisted of: Ten pounds beet pulp (the ex- I hausted residue of the beet sugar in- ! dustry). Ten pounds alfalfa (good food). Two to ten pounds degerminated cornmeal and brewer's grain (brew er's grain is the exhausted refuse re sulting from the production of beer). To this mixture was added from one-half to one pint oilmeal or glu ten feed. Oilmeal is the residue of the process employed In the produc tion of cotton seed oil. Gluten feed is the residue of the process employed in the production of glucose. Many of these cattle foods, as re ferred to by Funk, correspond to the I polished rice, pearled barley, deger- minated cornmenl, patent flour, and other neuritis-producing food of the refined type as consumed by men, women and children. They are Impoverished foods, yet they appear on the formula of the certified dairy by reason of the fact that they satisfy modern dieti tian's erroneous idea of the proper percentage of carbohydrates, proteins, fats and calories necessary to form a "balanced ration." They are so labeled. The certified dairy con scientiously follows the scientific analysis printed on the sacks in which the desiccated cattle food is sold. November 15, 1912, all of the cows In the dairy herd referred to here were tuberculin tested. Two were found to react to the test and were withdrawn from the herd in order that they might not spread the dis ease to the other cows. On May 20, 1913, the herd, having been on the "scientific calorie diet" for nearly one year produced fifteen reactors. The condition was begin ning to alarm the owners of the cows. In the meantime the stable superin tendent had placed his delivery horses on the impoverished cow food. He was anxious to mak«t a record for him sefl and, as the cow food was cheaper than the horse food, he made the change. Between the fifty-sixth and seventieth days the horses on the de based food began to show the same symptoms of acidosis, emaciation and anaemia what were characteristic of the cows. The horses were at once put back on whole grains and grasses, where upon they promptly recovered. The cows were continued on the same re fined diet until a veterinarian, noting the experience of the stable superin tendent with his horses, declared that the condition of the cows, favorable to the rapid development of tuber culosis, was directly due to the character of the food consumed by them. He • immediately ordered a change, notwithstanding the high calorie value and the scientific pro portion of carbohydrates, proteins J and fats with which the certified milk 1 producers w r ere being nourished. A contrast to this episode, concern ing which more will be said later, re garding the disastrous results of the use of demlneralized food on milk producing cows, is to be found in the experience of David T. Arrell, Youngs town, Ohio, breeder of thoroughbred American trotting horses. Arrell has bred, broke, trained and developed prizewinners on four points —food, pasture, shade and stable. He so keenly recognized the fact that the quality of his horses, their health, vi tality, endurance, resistance to dis ease, and general physical perfection depended upon their food that he went so far as to provide No. 1 unbleached oats for which he paid, prior to the outbreak of the war, $1 a bushel, laid down in Youngstown. As a practical horsebreeder he had noticed that his animals fed on un processed or nonbyproduct foods remained practically immune to all the equine diseases with which the average horsebreeder is plagued. As against this observation con cerning the vitality of the horse, properly fed, officials of the Bureau of Animal Industry estimate that i from 35 to 50 per cent, of all the milk* | producing herds In the United States J are affected with tuberculosis. All of these herds are fed more or less on exhausted or refined foods. These diseases of disfured me tabolism not only with respect to i cows and horses, but also with respect to the human being, are as prevalent | as the deaths of nearly 400,000 chll i dren under ten years of age in the United States every year might indi cate. Lovelace reports 936 cases of peri pheral neuritis in a railroad hospital In North Brazil. Heizer, Fraser, Aaron. Higet and others, ns we have seen, have demon strated the Insufficiency of demineral ized foods of high calorie value In the r*ullon Colony, the Straits Set tlement and Bilibid Prison. Caapari and Mosykowskl report practical experiences In New Guinea nnd Berlin which caused them to conclude that human neuritis Is a widespread disease of disturbed me : tabolism caused principally by re fined carbohydrate foods, the high calorie value of which Is not disputed, i Human neuritis is one of the many symptoms of acidosis. Tn probing Into the evils respon sible for the death of 1,500,000 chil dren vinder ten years of ace In the United States during the past four years and in the rapid Increase of or ganic heart disease, cancer. Bright'* disease, dlahetes, hardening of the ar teries. and other rapidly Increasing disorders of ndult life, are we to dis miss or confront the foodless foods of high calorie value now so popular among the American people and their i milk cows? 20 Dead and 100 Hurt in Western Tornadoes Kansas City, Mo., April 21.—Twen ty persons were killed, more than 100 injured and property damage esti mated at $750,000 entailed by the tor nado which swept the border sections of Kansas and Missouri. Many per sons escaped death by taking to storm cellars trie moment they were warned of the approaching disturbances. Reports from several towns in the path of the tornado state that five separate storms occurred in rapid suc cession. Stover, Morgan county. Mo., still was cut off from communication to day and it was impossible to confirm Bright Eyes light up a wom Bright eyes belong to the woman who and fit. For women who lack bright is well, lively and buoyant —who has eyes—whose cheeks are pale, whose red blood in her veins, the glow of steps are leaden, who feel depressed health in her cheeks, and who is fresh and listless, blue and out of sorts— BEECHAM'S FILLS are the remedy they may take with the bodily functions, tone the stomach, utmost confidence. They have proved stimulate the liver, purify the blood, and their worth to thousands of women. act kindly on the kidneys and bowels. When you seek relief from headache, New strength, better spirits, a clear backache, nervousness and low spirits, complexion and bright eyes soon follow Beecham's Pills will help you back to their use. No other remedy will so buoyant health. They regulate the surely relieve and benefit, and so quickly improve a woman's "The Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the World" At AH DruggUta, 10c., 25c. Direction* of epeeial valam to women are with every box Km. ■ W* • ifltt Savings 1 J| Easter Fixings J|2ZI ; M For Men Jfe, ';, ly® Hundreds of NewjHpii" , Shirts Neckties, j Underwear, Stockings, Gloves & Collars # Save Money 6|, r^r 9 j I Thousands of New Easter TIES I 24c I 1- AND § Bow and Four-in-Hand TIES, at I 48c | All the latest stripes and figures; scores of plain J I colors and combinations of different colors; all silk; % all made for service, all new. 1 Buy Your New Easter Shirts | lat Kaufman's & Save Money | Handsome New Qg* Newest EASTER DRESS J Dress Shirts, at .... t/OC SHIRTS for 1 Q C J $1.50 Values Men, at X • O m Attractive new styles of fine $2.50 Values f madras and percales; all the latest Made of the new crepe weaves, % colored striped effects, coat style, fine madras, corded effects and r properly proportioned; made to beautiful new stripes. Classy pat- ' fit perfectly, in all sizes. terns in great variety; coat style, ————————————— so ft or laundered cuffs; alt sizes. 8. ML LATEST STYLE EASTER DRESS SHIRTS 95 £* a. . . $3.45 \) $5.00 Value H j Jap Silk Shirts; also fine crepe You'll need a new shirt for Eas- g m effects and mercerized materials ter; why not silk? A wide assort- 1 K with silky sleeves but made for ment of newest stripes Just ar- I W service. Scores of new patterns, rived: all sizes, soft cuffs and all R f soft cuffs and laundered styles; all silk of a grade that will stand H M sizes. many tubbings. «K ARROW BRAND COLLARS, all the latest styles | O //• II and J4 sizes. A collar to suit every taste X /& C| jf Grey Silk Gloves "| Notaseme Silk Hos- fJr For Men, pair .. Ip 1 eV/vr iery For Men, pair.. OV/C j With the black stitching. All . Guaranteed for long service, f ... . . , beautiful sheer all pure silk Stock- I sizes and the season s most popular i n g S . Black, white and colors; all B f shades; reinforced finger tips. sizes; other grades up to SI.OO pr. K % <■—Wgip^—i—■——— r ! reports that six persons were killed ] there. Pellets in Soft Drinks Give Them Strong "Kick" Tacoma, Wash. Threatening to enforce the prohibition law themselves if the city and county authorities do not stop the alleged sale by soft drink saloons and drug stores of raw alcohol and other poisonous intoxicants, mem bers of Longshoremen's Union, Ta eoma local No. 58, adopted resolutions demanding law enforcement and naming a committee to take whatever action was necessary. "The -prohibition law is being vio lated on all sides," said M. E. Wright, of the longshoremen, who presented the protest. "Little white pellets, i which the saloons call 'while you wait ■ tablets,' are being sold. One of these in a soft drink produces all the ef fects of several glasses of whisky, but the victim is paralyzed both mentally and physically." DO YOU "EARN" OH "MAKE" YOUR LIVELIHOOD?^ In the May Woman's Home Com panion Anne Bryan McCall says: "It is not arrogance that I see upon the tired faces of men and women go ing home at night from the day's work; it is, rather, a self-respect, a, gentle and quiet pride that lights tip even the very plain and very pain faces. And if this quiet pride is not there visible: if the faces are merely jaded and dull and hopeless, «firn t know that, however hard they may work, those men and women are only making, not earning, a living." WRITES WILL, BEQUEATHS $2,000,000, FAILS TO SIGN Pittsburgh, April 21.—The appraise ment of the estate of Alexander Dempster, a wealthy coal operator, was filed in the register of wills oltice vesterday showing his holdings to lie nearly $2,000,000. While a will had been written, it never had been sign ed by Mr. Dempster and letters of ad ministration had been taken out In order to make a distribution of the estate.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers