6 ■ WEE LAXATIV! ED A I ■ Remember Sentanel B I Physic, Liver Toner, I Blood Purifier I Sample Free, B The Sentanel Remedies Co.fl (I incorporated) ■ 503 Union Cent. Bldg., URGES EVERYONE TO QUICKLY GET ON WATER WAGON Drink glass of hot water before breakfast to wash out poisons. To see the tinge of healthy bloom In your face, to see your skin get clearer and clearer, to wake up with out a headache, backache, coated tongue or a nasty breath, in fact to feel your best, day in and day out. Just try inside-bathing every morning for one week. Before breakfast each day drink a glass of real hot water with a tea spoonful of limestone phosphate in it as a harmless means of washing from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the previous day's indigestible waste, pour bile and toxins; thus clean.-sing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. The action of hot water and limestone phosphate on an empty stomach is wonderfully in vigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases and acidity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast. A quarter pound of limestone phos phate will cost very little nt the drug store, hut is sufficient to demonstrate that just as soap and hot water cleanses, sweetens and freshens the skin, so hot water and limestone phos phate act on the blood and internal organs. Those who are subject to con stipation, bilious attacks, acid stom ach, rheumatic twinges, also those ! whose skin is sallow and complexion pallid, are assured that one week of ;. inside bathing will have them both looking and feeling, better in every I, way.—Adv. LADe! DARKEN YOUR GRAY RAIR Use Grandma's Sage Tea and Sulphur Recipe and Nobody Will Know. The use of Sage and Sulphur for re- j »toring faded, gray hair to its natural j color dates back to grandmother's time. She used it to keep her hair j beautifully dark, glossy and attractive. Whenever her hair took on that dull,! faded or streaked appearance, this simple mixture was applied with won- j derful effect. But brewing at home is mussy and ; out-of-date. Nowadays, bv asking at any drug store for a 50 cent bottle of "VVyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com pound," you will get this famous old preparation, improved by the addition | of pther ingredients, which can be de pended upon to restore natural color *nd beauty to the hair. A well-known downtown druggist says it darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears, and after an other application or two. it becomes beautifully dark and glossy. Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com pound is a delightful toilet requisite for, those who desire a more youthful appearance. It is not intended for the cure, mitigation or prevention of dis ease. —Advertisement. EDUCATIONAL, School of Commerce Troup Building 15 So. Market Sq. Day and Night School 22d Year Commercial mid Stenographic Coarsea Bell Phone 1040-J Harrisburg Business College Day and Night Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Civil Service! Thirtieth Year 330 Market St. Harrlnhurg, Pa. The OFFICE TRAINING SCHOOL Kaufman Bldg. 4 S. Market Sq. I Training That Secures Salary Increasing Positions In the Office Call or send to-day for Interesting booklet. "The Art of Getting Along la the World." Bell phone 694-R. miiriHlliM Non-gr«a*y Toilet Cream Keeps the Bkin Soft and Velvety In Rough Weather. An Exquisite ToUet prep aration. 25 c. GORGAS* DRIIO STORES 16 !«■ Third St.. an.l P. H. H. Station^ WEDNESDAY EVENING, INDUSTRIAL BOARD DISCUSSES CODE Many Men Active in Industrial Affairs Attend Meeting at the Capitol Today A general discussion was held by the State Industrial Board yesterday in the House Caucus Room on the adoption of the boiler code, many sug gestions being made. The following persons were present: F. O. Sanssure, representing the Slemund Wenzel Electric Welding Company of New Tork; Edward A. Wlldt, of the Lacka wanna Grate Bar Company, Scranton; J. A. Rose, Huber Manufacturing Company, Harrisburg; George F. Sel lers, Protective Association, Gap; C. N. Bisecker, Emerson Brantlngham Improvement Company, Waynesboro, Pa.; Samuel K. Vance, riiperimental engines, Pennsylvania Steel Company; W. F. Hovetter, Frick Company, Har risburg; L. B. Sexton, Rome. Brad ford Co., Pa.; S. F. Jeter, hclef engi neer' Hartford Steam Boiler Inspection and Insurance Company. Hartford, Conn.; R. W. Robinson, general man ager, James Rees % Sons Co., Pitts burgh; Howard Ash. chief draughts man, Coatesvllle Boiler Works, Coates ville; G. C. Franz, American Radiator Co., Chicago, 111.; E. L. Harmon, Am erican Road Machinery Company, Cro ton, N. Y.; Thomas E. Durban, Erie City Iron Works, Erie, Pa.; William P. Eales, supervising inspector, Phila delphia; R. M. Pennock, State Insur ance Fund, Harrisburg; Oscor E. Thomson, mechanical engineer, De partment of Labor and Indutry, and Lew R. Palmer, chief inspector. De partment of Labor and Industry. A meeting was hel dthis afternoon by the examining committee of the Bureau of Inspection to pass upon the plan of examination of insurance and approved boiler inspectors. Permanent Peace Tribunal Is Endorsed by Taft Sfecial to the Telegraph New Tork, May S.—The world court which the World Court Congress in ses sion here would create was outlined in an address by William Howard Taft, honorary president of the congress. The aim of this proposed permanent world tribunal, Mr. Taft explained, would be to settle differences such as are settled to-day by a domestic court on principles of law and equity and as they arise between nations. Mr. Taft emphasized a distinction be tween arbitrations and the suggested world court. "The general rule in arbitration is that the decision is a compromise—It is not clear-cut judgment on questions of law and equity." the former Presi dent exclaimed. "i*artles are not given their rights or subjected to their ob ligations as fully and as completely as they ought to he and as they are in a domestic court of law. Offer German Liner to Placate Holland London, May 3.—The evidence pre sented by the Dutch Shipping Coun cil and the pieces of metal found In the ship's boat have convinced the Berlin Government that a German torpedo sank "the Dutch steamship Tubantia, says a dispatch from Amsterdam, quoting the Handelsblad. "Negotiations regarding the com pensation for the sinking of the ves sel are proceeding," the dispatch adds. "Meantime Albert Ballin director gen eral of the Hamburg-American Steam ship Company has offered to transfer to the Dutch company a large Ham burg-American Line ship to take the place of the Tubantia." Three Killed, Seven Hurt in Oilcloth Plant Explosion Special to the Telegraph | "Trenton, N. J., May 3.-—The finish ! ing department of the Chandler Oil Cloth Company's plant at Yardville was demolished about 5 o'clock yes terdayafternoon by an explosion I which killed three workmen and in : jured seven others. The building, a ! one-story structure 140 feet long, was reduced to a mass of scattered wreck ! age in a few seconds. The property j loss is placed at $20,000. ASSOCIATED CHARITIES FINDS HOMES FOR 12 CHILDREN The children's bureau of the Asso ciated Charities at a meeting yester day heard the report of Super intendent Yates, showing that during the month he had found homes for seven destitute children in private families, for three in the Industrial Home-and two in the Nursery Home. During the month 307 visits were made. 34 to homes in the country roundabout to see how children en trusted to the rare of families were being treated. The bureau authorized a new system of office records to-day. Mrs. Berne Evans was elected a member of the bureau. WILIJ QUESTION IiECTURKR Dr. Harry W. Laidler, of New Tork, will lecture at 8:15 to-morrow evening at the Public library on "Socialism and Christianity," .and a number of Harrisburg ministers will attend in order to question him on the subject. During his stay in Harris burg he will be entertained by the Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Appleton. J isi—■aft* | I <4 i 1 I Dal Cal-o-clde It am some stuff | Fo feet data aching, sore and rufT < It makes dem feel so pow'ful fine Yo wants to dance mos all de time. ! 1 ' l' (' /mi . 1 For Aching, Burning, and fa I A.rinO Sweety Feci, Callouses, i yql " vluw Corns, and Spre Bunions. Instant Relief 1 Results positively guaranteed. Get a box from | any druggist 25c. Remember the came. < FLORIDA $31.80 D $31.80 Jacksonville From Philadelphia every Wednesday and Saturday. Including meals and choice of state room accommodations. All outside roonis. Fin* steamers. Best service. Tickets limited to May 31. Merchants A Miners Trans. Co. City Ticket Office. 105 S. 9th Bt.. Phila. Pa. Consult any ticket, or tourlat agent. Come Parks **SBURLINGTON Come—the Government of the United States invites you! Come to the greatest possession of the American people—the unsurpassed, unequaled nine great National Parks. Your Government is spending hundreds of thousands of dollars just to tell about the surpassing recreation wonders which have been set aside for you — and to any and all of which you can go via the Burlington. Anywhere West in our country —to the Coast, to the Northwest, to the Sierras, the Black Hills, the Rockies and the Parks you can go via the Burlington. Take any road to Chicago or St. Louis, but from either of these points West insist that your ticket reads via the Burlington. Its comfortable through-trains—its model dining cars— the fact that it goes anywhere West —makes travel a convenience and a delight. When you go to the Parks, take the Burlington. Yellowstone National Park Glacier National Park Rocky Mountain National-Estes Park is Nature's own playground and workshop. Here with its 60 living glaciers, its 250 lakes—its for- with its 100,000 pine-scented acres, is the delight you can see great geysers and petrified forests — est?, mountains and pleasant places offers you the of fathers and mothers, the playground of Young bottomless colored pools and high waterfalls. You best things Switzerland offers and many which America. It is the ideal army post for the Boy can see big game, canyons riotous with color— Switzerland cannot hope to equal. Rest and true Scout—the perfect place for the Camp-Fire Girls, you can see the Devil's Kitchen, his Watchfob, recreation—indoor pleasure and outdoor sport— And it is more—it is the ideal playspot for people and Jupiter* s Terrace. In one hour in Yellow- the places and opportunities for them are all here of all ages. Here you can play golf or tennis, stone you can read a hundred thousand years of in the most desirable forms. You can live on you can travel old trails or blaze n: w ones. There natural history—just as Mother Nature wrote it. any scale you prefer, at magnificent mountain inns are bronchos and burros to ride, you can live in And you can go there at a low rate, on a luxu- in Swiss chalets, tepee, tents —wherever, how- palatial hotels or moderate priced hostelries, or rious through-train, via the ever you please. You can go there at a low rate have the sky for a roof. You can go there at a Burlington. on a luxurious through-train, via the Burlington. low rate on luxurious trains via the Burlington. Begin the Joy of Your Western Tour j lill ll Next to the joy of touring is the pleasure of planning the tour. And now is the time to begin to plan !| I' jjJfMHx what places you wish to visit, what Parks you wish to see —and let me help you plan. lam here for that j | yflWll IfS purpose, as a part of Burlington Service. Let me submit estimates of the expense of trips, of the charges 11J11 IjUß' at hotels and hostelries —about the cost and nature of ranch accommodations. Let me tell you about the low I f ate round-trip Burlington tickets to anywhere West —about Burlington through-service. Let me assist you in arranging for tickets, sleeping car accommodations, baggage, etc. I j Write meTorltterature about these great National Parks. Just say which one you wish to visit and let \ pfwjgiKr me y° u how you can make the most of your trip bjTtaking the Burlington. (€Wr WM. AUSTIN, General Agent, Passenger Department jurf C. B. & Q. R. R. Co., 836 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. ' 111 ■ —-* UHLER FOR STUDY OF WAR AND ROADS Thinks That Results of War Traffic Should Be Noted by State Authorities The necessity for definite knowledge in road building that will withstand war traffic is brought out with em phasis in the leading article" in the March-April article In the March- April issue of "Pennsylvanl Highway News," to-day's bulletin of the State Highway Department. The article embraces the ideas of W. D. Vhler, hcief engineer of the department, who recommends that R State or Federal Commission should be sent abroad to study the effect of war traffic on highways. This issue of "Pennsylvania High way News" was printed prior to the death of the late State Highway Com missioner Robert J. Cunningham. It is a forty-four-page magazine con taining the usual departmental re ports and filled with Instructive ar ticles on road making. In addition to the article on high way preparedness, the Issue contains papers by Julius Adler, engineer of tests; W. D. Uhler, chief engineer; George H. Biles, second deputy State highway commissioner; W. R. Main, C. P. A., auditor, and W. A. Wynn, en gineer of Bureau of Township High ways. CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always beam Signature of HA RRISBURG fTELEGRAPH Powderless, Smokeless, New Gun Will Disharge 48 Shells at One Time Special to the Ttltiroph New York, May S.—An army gun that will hurl forty-eight three-pound shells at one time without the aid of powder and making no smoke or noise is an Invention which has been of fered to the government by Mrs. Frank McMillan Stanton, whose hus band is a copper merchant of this city. Mrs. Stanton said she had financed the inventor of the revolutionary weapon, her principal object being to aid the United States Government in being prepared to meet any foe. One model of the gun has been made and is now under test by army officers. They have thought, so well of it they have asked for another model, which is being made in a New York factory. Each of the models is costing Mrs. Stanton $5,000 and she said she was prepared to spend $200,000 in seeing that the United States army Is fully equipped with the new weapon. "At present the details of this gun are secrets," said Mrs. Stanton this afternoon. "We could have had a great price for the weapon from the allies, but it is our desire to give the United States a weapon which is so far ahead of any other kind of artillery that the army equipped with it must have a decided advantage. "This gun has no barrels, yet it will shoot so straight up in the air that the shots will fall back upon the gun. For that reason it will be an excellent weapon to attack aircraft. No powder will be used, but I cannot tell what the propelling force Is. It is silent and smokeless and will not be over heated." OKLAHOMA TURNED OVER' Special to the Tele graph Philadelphia, Pa., May 3. The Oklahoma, the latest superdread naught to be added to the United States navy, was formally turned over to the Government at the Philadelphia Navy Yard yesterday afternoon and with Impressive ceremonies was com missioned as a ship of the line. i Mother Burns Her Three Children and Kills Self Special to the Telegraph Pennsgrove, N. J., May 3. —Because ; her husband had left her, Mrs. Mary Sclnkovitrh yesterday morning; burned i to death her three children and then cut her throat with a knife. She died early in the evening at the Delaware Hospital at Wilmington. The woman was the wife of Stephen Scinkovitch, who came to Pennsgrove three weeks ago and obtained work in a powder plant. He was arrested for drunkenness and his wife took i money which she had to pay his fine. The next day, it is said, he left her, I and she and her children were with-1 Mrs. Wm. Kendig Saved Her Life By Taking Quaker Herb Extract (Special York, Pa.) Joyful news can be imparted to our readers to-day. Health Teacher an nounces in these columns that the life of another York resident has been saved by the most wonderful Quaker Herb Extract. Just think of it in less than one month hundreds of start ling results has been produced. Mrs. Wm. Kendig lives at No. 222 East Prospect St. Not only is she well known throughout the city but that she was a miserable sufferer from various complaints was also univer sally known. Her stomach was in a wretched condition, subject to bloat ing belching and pains of all kinds every Joint In her body ached her, hands and feet would swell and she for the past three years or longer did not experience on* weU day. It is MAY 3, 1916. I out food in a shack In Diver's lane. The woman took a can of kerosene yesterday morning and going to the | bedroom of her two boys, 6 and 5 I years old, respectively, and a girl, 6 months old, saturated the bed and set : fire to it. The mother then cut her throat. . KPWOKTH LEAGUE OFFICERS Special to the Telegraph Duncannon, Pa., May 3. Epworth League of the Methodist Episcopal Church has elected these officers: Preeident, Miss Sarah Page; first vice president, Miss Edna Mader; second vice-president, Mrs. John T. Miller; i third vice-president. Miss Meta Har per; fourth vice-president, Mrs. Chas. W. Silg; secrettary. Miss Rebecca lOwen; treasurer. Miss Ruth Raissure; true she took various medicines and treatments but no good results fol lowed. After reading about the many startling results obtained from the use of the now famous Quaker Herb Ex tract she wisely concluded to call at the drug store. How lucky she was for having done so, she now realizes. She obtained a treatment of Quaker Herb Extract took according to direc tions. Was it a failure like all the many useless but expensive treatment she had previously taken? No, indeed not, she expelled a monster tapeworm over 40 feet long. That is what Quaker Herb Exyact accomplished. From that moment her life was saved, her trouble vanished and she now en joys perfect health. Do you not be lieve it T ASK her AND let lier tell you the facts. chorister, Mrs. W. W. Sholl; pianist. Miss Ireen Kent and Miss Martha Miller. AGRICUL/TURAL bill passes Special to the Telegraph Washington, D. C., May 3. The Agricultural bill carrying $24,500,000 and a rider providing a new cotton futures law, a uniform federal grad ing law, and a Federal warehouse system was passed yesterday by the House, It now goes to the Senate. NINE TAKIvEN INTO CIU RCH Dillsburg, Pa., May 3. —Communion services were held in the St. Paul's Lutheran church Sunday. There were present about three ljundred persons, of whom 153 communed and 9 were baptized and taken Into the church. Can you suggest more convincing proof? Good, dear parents. If your children are suffering may not worms be the cause? Do you wish to relieve them? Give them the Quaker Herb Extract it cannot harm them, tt is eas.v to take and has produced quick and startling results. If you have rheumatism. catarrh, stomach troubles, kidney or liver complaints, constipation or indigestion, just think of the numbers and numbers of Har risburg people alone, who have been cured by Quaker Herb Extract, SI.OO per bottle, or three for $2.50. Oil of Balm 25 and 50 cents a bottle. Kid ney Pills 50 cents a box. You can al ways obtain these Remedies at all times from Keller's Drug Store, 405 Market street.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers