OF INTEREST T True Love in a Cottage By BEATRICE FAIRFAX "Love In a cottage" is not a poet's dream; It is a real practical possibil ity. But—and there is a large BUT - —everything depends on whether the love and the cottage are both real. Ix>ve can make a rose-twined cottage out of a room in a slum tenement, and cruel indifference is capable of turning a rose arbor over the door of a beautiful little home into a hedge of thorns. If the foundatons of love are tlrm ■pnd so too are those of the little house where it comes to dwell, both will stand sturdily facing storm and tempest and all the wear and tear of heat and cold and fortune's mis chances right through life until eter nity itself. Now this is gloriously true; but you have to be fairly sure of both your love and your cottage. More, you have to be certain of them as one may be of anything in all this mutable world of ours. I am not recommending a stampede » » the altar on twelve dollars a week nor yet on fifteen and "three hundred In the bank." For some "pood man agers," for some sturdy workers with future advancement assured such sums might assure the monthly pay ments on the cottage and the bread and milk for Love's sustenance and the warm gear to keep his spark of lire burning in the world's Winter. There is a happy mean in marriage as in all other things. Overcaution does not know it—for overcaution will waste glorious years of youth trying to work beyond the "love In a cottage" state lest that little cot tage be haunted by aspects of love in rags. Xor does reckless emotion, know the happy mean for marriage. It takes sane judgment in each in dividual case. How good a manager is Lucy? How much luxury will she go without? How patient will she be when she sees other women better dressed and indulging in trips to pleasure palaces from which she is barred by lack of the price of admission? How willing is she to work to keep her cottage bright and shining and her soul radi ant and her body sweet and dainty? How much strength has she to keep on hoping and to encourage Charley Doutrich & Co.'s Pottsville Store Wins First Prize in Window Dressing Contest Word has just been received here by Doutrich & Co. that their Pottsville store has been awarded first prize in a window dressing contest conducted by the City Merchants Association of that place. The stores were divided into five classes. Glass R beinff the clothing stores for men. in which class Doutrich & <"o. carried off high honors. The prizes were awarded by the International Correspondence Schools, f Tooth Loose? Watch out for Pyorrhea! When you find a tooth that c ; ves back ana forth, even just a little, see your dentist at He will find conditions which you might overlook. He will find a gum recession, even though slight, where the gums have Sit your /entfst tvice yearly. " P from the teeth, And he will tell twtc4 daily. you that you have the dread disease pyorrhea• From pyorrhea come by far the "But Stnreto dotsmtrt. It cleanses greater part of all tooth troubles. the teeth delightfully. It gives them Unless treated and checked, it will a whiteness distinctive of Senreco result not only in the shrinking and alone. Its flavor is entirely pleasing, malformation of your gums and of and it leaves in the mouth a wonl the bony structure into which your derful sense of coolness and whole teeth are set, but in the loss of the comeness. teeth themselves. Start;the Senreco A specific for pyorrhea has been °. re p r ,rr ! , . ea . B r 'Pf y°" for discovered recently by dental sci- tube"' A«-o!S£ ?£ hfl ence, and is now offered for daily for 25c i« sufficient for 6 weeks' v" I treatment in Senreco Tooth Paste. d ? lly tre *tment. Get Senreco V jjfi Senreco combats the germ of the disease. Its regular use insures your tube and folder. Address The \ teeth against the attack or further Remedies Company J**"" f . 503 Union Central Building progress of pyorrhea. Cincinnati, Ohio. S \ niwimiimnmmni Stock Transfer Ledger 1 The Pennsylvania Stock Transfer Tax Law (Act of June f I 4, 1#15) which Is now In effect requires all corporations in the State, 5 ! no matter how large they may be to keep a Stock Transfer Ledger! | We are prepared to supply these Lad «*rs promptly at a very nominal 1 !! prloe. I The Telegraph Printing Co ij J PrtnUn* —Binding—Designing—Photo Engraving j | HARRISBCRG, PA. ON VERGE OF NERVOUS PROSTRATION Mrs. M. A. Sauble Resorts to Quaker Herb Extract (Special, York, Pa.) Owing to various complaints from which Mrs. M. A. Sauble 141 E. Maple street suffered for a long time. I was nearly a complete nervous and physi cal wreck. 1 was afflicted with every imaginable kind of stomach troubles, Has, belching, constipation and torpid liver. Hardly a day passed during which I did not have a nervous head ache, nervous chills, pains in my back fnd sides In fact I was miserable In every way. How I suffered I cannot explain. I had Indeed become melan choly and despondent and life had little interest for me. As medicines did not seem to help me what was I to do? So I continued to suffer and grow worse. X called at the drug ctore and had a talk with the Health MONDAY EVENING, to fight on In the face of failure? These are the questions she must ask herself even after she is well as sured that Charley is the man she loves supremely of all the men in this world. , And Charley must add to his knowl edge that he wants Lucy and wants Lucy to he happv these questionings of himself: "Will I love Lucy when she is tired and worn from working to make my scanty earnings cover our wants? Will I work with vim and vigor to get ahead for her? And am I sure of myself and my determina tion to suceed? Will I lie tender and kind to make up for the luxuries I cannot give. "Will I keep away from pleasures I cannot afford and forego being one of the boys and find my happiness with my wife and in her happiness? Will I aid her efforts to make me a home and not insist on miracles of housewifery from a girl who is as adept at her game as I am at mine— of earning the wherewithal for her to build us a nest?" If both will bear and forebear and work together as partners—if both will face difficulties with a laugh that marks iron determination to win above them —if both will bring unsel fishness and consideration to keep love blooming and fresh—if tender ness and strength are there to keep their romance alive—then love in a cottage is a wonderful thing. But love in a cottage is not for physical weaklings or moral cowards or Idle wasters. A year or two of emotion will for them be followed by breaking heajth, or insane jealousy of those who*do not have to say, "I can't afford that," or extravagance that leads to ruin. Love in a cottage may mean purga tory 'or "Heaven below." Each of us has to decide what it shall mean in our individual case and then file it or embrace It reverently. It will spell happiness when it houses perfect love mingled with independence and proper pride and willingness, plus ability to work and mutual confidence and trust. It needs loyal partners to keep it bright and then love in a cottage is love in a cottage over which th» roses climb and on which the sun shines. first prize being a scholarship in any department of the schools. THE BEST fIIANO j Value for the money is found In the Royal at $275. Easy payments of $6 per month. Yohn Bros., 8 North Mar ket Square. ELECTED STUDENT SENATOR Marysville, Pa., May 15. A. W. Lick, a junior at Franklin and Mar ; shall College, has been elected as a senator to the Student Senate of that institution. Lick will represent the : Harbaugh Club, one of the fraternal I organizations of the college commun ity. [Teacher, I was pleased with his very kind advice. 1 could tell from his | expressions that my critical condition worried him but he did not discourage me. He simply suggested that 1 try a treatment of Quaker Herb Extract and Quaker laxatives, but he insisted that if owing to my most weakened condition they failed to help me to call and be reimbursed for the origin al cost. How could I possibly refuse such a fair and honest proposition? I obtained the remedies and promised to give them a trial. Now I can report sensational results. 1 felt a little nauseated this morning for the first time; later a remarkable thing hap pened. I expelled a big tapeworm, and then came a wonderful relief. This monster 1 realized had been the WITH SIMPLICITY FOR SUMMER DAYS Quaint Basque Style Makes Up Nicely in Figured Silks or Cottons Design by Mar Man to*. 8799 (With Basting Line and Added Seam Allowance ) Fancy Waist, 34 to 42 bust. 8763 Sectional Skirt, 24 to 32 waist. G.O. P. COMMITTEE QUARTERS OPENED National Secretary Arranging Contests Over Delegations at Chicago Chicago, May 15. James B. Rey nolds. secretary of the Republican national committee, arrived to-day and opened committee headquarters in the Coliseum where the Republican national convention will convene on June 7. In the list of contests so far filed are- Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, i Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, South Carolina. Virginia and the Dis-1 trict of Columbia. Nearly all of the j contests involve factional disputes. In 1 the press section there are aecommo- | dations for 528 and 1,500 applications for seats have been .received. The committee on arrangements reserved 2«'o seats for the use of presidential candidates and their friends. Candidate For Legislature Suggests Rose Festival James Evans, of 84 Korth Seven teenth street, has suggested to the Telegraph a rose festival for June this ye:ir. Mr. Evans has traveled all over the country and was most impressed with such a festival at Portland, Ore. He believes Harrisburg could duplicate the pageant. Mr. Evans has for 23 years been an operator for the Pennsylvania railroad company and is now stationed at the superintendent's office at the Union station. He has submitted his name as a Republican and Washington par ty candidate for the Legislature and hopes that his friends will not forget him to-morrow. His plans for the rose festival will be printed In the Telegraph io-morrow and he hopes that arrangements may be made for a great flower show next month. Gray Hair Restored to its Natural Color In a lew applications to Its original dark, glossy ■bade, no matter how long It has been gray or failed, and dandruff removed by It is ft a Jyt—nn one will know yon are using it. '.'sc, 50c. sl. all dealers or direct upon receipt of price. Bend for booklet "Beautiful Hair." Pfailo Hay Specialties Company. Newark, X. J. real cause of all of my sufferings and Quaker Herb Extract by removing the cause made me well. I ani happv now. and extremely grateful for what Quaker Herb Extract has done for me. This is a rather remarkable case and may be doubted by many. The strictest investigation is therefore sug gested it is only unother striking proof of what may be expected from the wonderful Quaker Herb Remedies The complete line of which can only be obtained at all times from Keller's Drug Store, 405 Market street, so call to-day and obtain this wonderful Quaker Herb Extract, SI.OO per bot tle. or three bottles for $2.50. oil of Halm 25 and 50 cents a bottle. Kid ney Fills, 50c. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH THOUSANDS OF PHYS DUE TO REFINED CHAPTER 58 | The Germans, CuiiMimiiig Enormous Quantities of the Rcliiicd Foods So Popular in America. Proved by Their Complete Collapse That Thousands of Children of the Poor in the United states Owe Their Physical Defects to the Same Causes. ■ l r el>. 23, 1915, the Kronprinz Wel helm sank the French passenger steamship Guadeloupe, from Buenos Ayres to Bordeaux. There was more fresh meat aboard the Frenchman, with plenty of ham, butter, patent flour, potatoes, and canned vegetables. The Germans seized it all. Some of the crew were complaining of swollen ankles and pains in the nerves of the legs below the knees. They had never heard of the Maderla- Mamore poison squad. Many of them were complaining of# palpitation of the heart, but they had never heard that heart involvement is orte of the most marked symptoms of a severe acidosis. They seemed able to cat. sleep, and work, and apparently no plague could menace them out there on the high sea for there still remained to them plenty of meat, tons of potatoes, and enough sugar, white bread, and but ter to suffice another year. March 25, 1915, with fifty of her men "acting queerly" and all of them manifesting a depressing lack of vig or. she sank the British steamer Tamar, from Santos to Havre, selzr Ing 68,000 bags of green coffee and all the butter, lard, white flour, and canned vegetables aboard. She did not heed the fact that there is a balance of acid and base forming elements in the "ash" con tent of all food. She did not heed the fact that In the food seized by her the base forming elements had been removed for the sake of "refinement" and for the purely commercial reason that they might "keep." She did not heed the fact that after a diet of refined food a mild chronic acidosis is set up which abstracts the lime salts from the fibrous tis sues, muscles, nerves, cartilages, and bones. When the the German sail ors began to swell they did not know that the swelling was due to the ab straction of these lime salts with the increased vascularity which follows. They did not heed the fact that loss of lime salts causes irritability and weakness of the muscles with neuralgic pains. They did not know that the continued loss of lime salts causes effusion of the Joints. They did not know that following these stages In the progress of acido sis the cartilages soon become in volved, and that this condition is In turn followed by thinning and erosion, which actually destroys the nerves and evehtually terminates in paraly sis. The Germans were consuming epor mous quantities of the refined foods of high caloric value so extensively relied upon throughout the United States and they looked in all direc tions but in the right direction for the cause of their trouble. They did not know that the ab straction of lime salts is a cause of the rapid progress of tuberculosis. Their business was to raid. March 27, 1915, the German cruiser sank the British steamer Coleby, bound from Rosario to St. Vincent with another cargo of whole wheat in her hold. Hei- coal, patent flour, but ter, potatoes, and canned vegetables were confiscated, but again the precious wheat was sent to the bottom. Alarming conditions soon began to develop. Typical symptoms of paraly sis, dilated heart, swollen gums, atrophy of muscles and pain on press ure over nerves, with considerable anemia, were noted. Fifty of the men could not stand on their feet. They were dropping at the rate of two a day. It seemed that a curse had de scended upon the cruiser. The entire crew was going rapidly to pieces. It was evident that the Kronprinz Wilhelm would either be manned by 500 dead bodies in a few more weeks, or she would have to make a run for the nearest port. Her wireless had told her that Newport News had given harbor to her sister raider the Prlnz Eitel Friedrich. She would take a desperate chance against the enemy and make the dash. That is why Bhe was discovered Sunday morning, April 11, lying in the James River, with 110 dying men aboard, a floating wreck, a hospital ship, a lesson to the American ex perts who cry'"beri-beri and polished rice," "pellagra and corn meal," when meat and white bread and other acidosis producing, refined, demin eralized, debased, impoverished, food less foods are the real issues. Scientific murmurings far from the point, as we shall soon see, have long served to mislead the American public and cloud refined food in a maze of professional ignorance. Of course, there really is a disease called beri-beri that really is caused by pol ished rice, but there is no connecting link between the acidosis of the Kron prinz Wilhelm and the beri-beri of Bilibid prison other than is to be POULTRY FIELD DAY MAY 30 ' " Central Pennsylvania Associa tion Will Meet at Beaufort Farm Near Rockville The Central Pennsylvania Poultry Association with the Pennsylvania De partment of Agriculture co-operating, will hold a field meeting at the Beau fort poultry farm, near Rockville, on the afternoon of May 30. Beaufort Farms comprise over six hundred acres where practically everv branch of agriculture Is conducted along mod ern, scientific lines. On the poultry farm there are housed upward of two 1 thousand birds of various breeds, which will afford a splendid oppor tunity for a study of poultry keeping methods. W. Theodore Wittman, farm adviser in poultry husbandry, will represent the State. He will go over the plant with the visitors and with demonstra tions and short talks shorten the road to success In poultry keeping for those present. E. B. .Mitchell, who is proprietor of Beaufort Farms, invites all persons interested in poultry or any other branch of agriculture, to be present at this meeting; there will be much of interest for everyone. REVALUATION OF SNAKES By Frederic J. Haskin [Continued From Kditorlal l>agc] agreed as to wnether the snake poison was a cause of the death. Stripped of all his high qualities as a healer, the rattlesnake still has one claim to usefulness. That is his hide. The markings, especially of the dia mond-back variety, are really striking i and the skin possesses great Jura- • billty. Purses, belts, watch fobs and handbags have been made from It, and these articles are not at all un- I common in the Wjst. where some »>er- \ sons make a business of hunting j snakes and preparing the skins. It is I a commendable und«> taking from i every viewpoint. l found in the natural and inevitable results which follow an acid forming, base-free diet of any kind, call those results by any name you will. Hero was a crew of men living In the open air. eating the staple articles of diet for which American scientists claim so much, and because of which they tell us we are the best-fed nation In the world. Fresh meat, all the but ter and bread they could eat, boiled potatoes, canned vegetables, con densed milk, and tons of fancy cakes, biscuits, and sugar with all the coffee and tea they could drink constituted their diet. There may be some skeptical souls who, notwithstanding the facta re ported here, may ask: "But if German sailors eat typical American meals for 255 days and develop on such a diet of white bread and meat a condition of malnutrition that results so disas trously, why do not the Americans themselves develop the same condi tions?" Americans do develop the same dis ease, but because they eat many other offsetting foods, which were outside tl.e reach of the German sailors, the severity of the disease Is modified ac cordingly. On the Kronprinz Wllhelm the In tensity of the cause determined the gravity and rapidity of the effect. There was no outside assistance in the form of offsetting fresh vegetables and fruits to lessen that intensity. The canned vegetables consumed, although theoretically contributing base-forming elements, actually ag gravated the condition for the rea son that their Juices were consumed. These juices, heavily contaminated with salts of tin and sheet iron, acted as an additional irritant to the kid neys, already taxed beyond their ca pacity with excess quantities of sul phuric, phosphoric, carbonic, and amino acids, elaborated In the diges tion of high protein and refined carbo hydrate foods. Americans eat onions, lettuce, as paragus, cabbage, carrots, parsnips, cauliflower, celery, apples, berries, oranges, grapes, fresh milk, eggs, beans, peas, lentils, nuts, berries, and other base-forming foods which as sist nature to combat or to modify some of the evil effects of the re fined diet on which the' Germans at tempted to thrive for so long a period. Thousands of children of the poor in the United States, exactly like the crew of the Kronprinz Wllhelm, do not obtain these offsetting foods in adequate quantities, and in the case of adults of means there are thousands who, making Improper choices, deprive themselves of them needlessly. In the mean time- the acidosis does progress sufficiently to interfere with the growth of the young and to rob the body, through lowered vitality, of its natural de fense agalnßt diseases of many kinds. It places a dreadful handicap upon pregnancy and makes normal lacta tion impossible. It predisposes to tuberculosis, appendicities. and cancer. It does not pile its woes in a heap as was done on the German cruiser. It spreads them out thinly over a larger area and is followed by many prevent able ills rarely traced to their true cause. So true Is this that even the State is beginning to discriminate against the physically unfit. The chief featue of the annual report of the Civil Service Commission signed by Henry Mosko wltz, president of the board, and Com missioners Darwin R. James, Jr., and Alexander Kehoe, submitted May 6, 1916, to Mayor Mitchell of New York City, records the adoption of physical standards under which out of 22.524 applicants for municipal positions during the year 1915 7,639 were re jected. The State makes no attempt to edu cate the people concerning the mean ing of inadequate nutrition or foodless food. Yet It already signifies the ten dency of the times in throwing to the scrapheap the victims of such igno rance. "There can be no doubt," says the report of the Civil Service Commis sion, "that the elimination of the physically unfit from entrance into the city service will result in increased efficiency. There is no more reason for the city service to accept those who are so physically handicapped that they cannot render the best ser vice than for a railroad to employ men whose physical defect would render them a menace to life and property." Never were employers so keen as now In their scrutiny of the health of their employes. Yet notwith standing the higher physical stand ards now being demanded in all de partments of labor no organized effort is being made, as far as food is con cerned, to enable the workers of America to attain the physical per fections demanded. It is in this light that the facts which we are about to record merit the attention of Congress, although there is not the slightest hope that Congress will call upon them for many years. The schools must first succeed In translating them for the benefit of the rising generation. opened to-day. Licenses can be had from now until July 1. At a continued session of divorce court this morning;, witnesses told how Mrs. Eva Reinhart had entertained young men in her flat during her hus band's absence. Her husband, Weimer Reinhart, is seeking divorce on the grounds of adultery. James F. Biggan to-day was ap pointed a watchman for the Adams Express Company by the Dauphin county court. Constable James W. Haines to-day withdrew his application for a private detective's license. MUSTEROLE-QUICK ~ RELIEF! NO BUSIER! It Soothes and Relieves Like a Mustard Plaster Without the Burn or Sting MUSTEROLE is a clean, white oint ment, made with the oil of mustard. It does all the work of the old-fash ioned mustard plaster—does It better and does not blister. You do not have to bother with a cloth. Tou simply rub It on—and usually the pain is gone! Doctors and nurses use MUSTER OLE and recommend It to their pa tients. They will gladly tell you what relief it gives from Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Croup, Stiff Neck, Asthma, Neuralgia, Congestion, Pleurisy, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Pains and Aches of the Back or Joints. Sprains, Sore Muscles, Bruises, Chilblains, Frosted Feet, Colds of the Chest (It often prevents Pneumonia). At your druggist's, In 25c and 50c Jars, and a special large hospital size for $2.50. Be sure you get the genuine MUS TEROLE. Refuse imitations get what you ask for. The Musterole Company, Cleveland, Ohio. MAY 15, 1916. BIDS ARE OPENED FOR STATE ROAD .State Highway Department An nounces Figures on Six Sections Bids were opened at the State High way Department ihis morning for six sections of highway construction in the southeastern part of Pennsylvania. Four of these sections are one the old Baltimore Pike. These sections are being constructed by the State High way Department and a portion of the funds to pay for them was collected by a committee of citizens in Chester and Delaware counties, headed by A. P. Ir win, of Chadds Ford Junction. The successful and unsuccessful bidders would be notified the latter part of this week. The bids for the section in Aston and Concord townships, Delawaree county, called for reinforced cement concrete pavement 19,223 feet. or 3.54 miles. The bids: Dwyer & Co.. Philadelphia, $88,535.21; Neff Horn & Co., Slatington, $79,275.40; The Juni ata Paving Company, Philadelphia, $81,440.41. The bids for the section in Birming ham township, Delaware count, called for the construction o fa reinforced cement concrete, or bituminous and reinforced concrete pavement, 14,535 feet, or 2.75 miles. The bids: New ton Paving Company, Philadelphia, $51,908.27; Charles T. Eastburn Co., Inc., Yard ley, $60,726.61; William C. Evans. Ambler, $61,608.72; B. F. Wick ersham, Kennett Square, $56,667.83; The Juniata Paving Company, Phila delphia, $50,192.61; Eastern Paving Company, Philadelphia, $64,093.34. The bids for the section in Penns bury and Kennett townships, Chester county, called for reinforced cement concrete, or bituminous and reinforced cement concrete pavement. 17.75L5 feet, or 3.37 miles. The bids: Charles T. Eastburn Co., Inc., Yardley, $74,432.38; Newton Paving Company, Philadel phia, $64,300.63; Eastern Pacing Com pany. Philadelphia, $76,851.54; The Juniata Paving Company, Philadel phia, $64,743.13; The Corcoran Con struction Company. West Chester, $62,- 492.54; William C. Evans, Ambler, $68,057.52. On the section in Grove and Penn townships, Chseter county, the bids called for a reinforced cement concrete, or bituminous and reinforced cement pavement 10,344 feet, or 1.96 miles. The bids: Charles T. East burn Co., Etd., Yardley, $54,325.66; Parson Construction Company, Inc., Brownsville, $55,494; D. E. O'Connell & Cons, Avondale, $44,255.73; The Juniata Paving Company. Philadel phia, $47,698.75; Eastern Paving Com pany, Philadelphia. $55,189.90; R. B. Taylor, Bellefonte, $45,744.71 ; William C. Evans. Ambler, $51,441.72. Tl.e bids on State-aid in White marsh township, Montgomery county, called for the construction of 4,390 feet, or ,83 miles of bituminous con struction. The bidders were privileged to select, cither class "A" sheet as phalt; "B" Filbertlne; "C" Warrenlte, or "D" Amlesite. The bids: Paul J. Snyder & Co., Philadelphia, class "D," $15,912.48: Newton Paving Company, Philadelphia, class "A." $16,112.39; Dwy er and Company, Philadelphia, class "C." $17,954.05; Charles T. Eastburn Co., Inc., Yardley, class "D," $16,586.60; Eastern Paving Company, Philadel phia, class "A." $17,877.53; William C. Evans, Ambler, Class "B," $17,239.50; J. F. Slianley Company, Philadelphia, Class "D," $18,521.86; Parson Construc tion Company, Brownsville, class "D." $19,296.02. On State-aid In Nether Providence township, Delaware county, a vitriftedi brick block pavement 4,250 feet, or 0.8 miles, 18 feet wid£, was specified. The bids: Dwyer & Co., Philadelphia, $21.- 686.52; Gillespie & Co., Oakview, $24,- 217.35; Parson Construction Co., Brownvllle, $28,209.81; Gibbons and B'ickley, Bansdowne, Pa.. $26,301.10; iVil J. Snyder Company, Philadelphia, $-<>,915.88: Charles T. Eastburn Co., Inc., Yardley, $26,153.10; J. F. Slianley Company, Philadelphia, $19,401.41; Field, Barker and Underwood, Philadelphia. $27,469.02. Valuable Hints On Care of the Teeth Great care should he exercised in se lecting a dentifrice. Some powders and creams contain grit that scratches the teeth. Others actually eat away tlio enamel littlo by little. Others contain coloring matter that stains the teeth. Still otners are so powerfully astringent they cause the gums to shrink and re cede. Most of them have little effect on discolored films or "placques" which adhere so tenaciously and prevent many from having really white teeth, no mat ter how they rub and scrub. The very best thing to use on the tooth brush is ordinary refined avatol, which may be found in any drug store in 25 cent tubes. It is open to none of the objections named and, besides be ing so thoroughly cleansing, actually removes even tne most obstinate stains or spots. Used daily, like a tooth paste, it will keep all teeth glistening white, healthy and beautiful. Occasionally a I little of the refined avatol should be l>ut on a coarse thread and drawn be | tween the teeth, to keep the sides antl septicully clean and spotless.—Adver tisement. Round Trip NEW YORK Sunday, May 28 Special Train Leaves Harrisburg - - 5.45 A.M. RETURNING, leu VON Pennsyl vania station, Xen York, 0.00 P.M. Pennsylvania R. R. MIIHIMII TIME TABLE Cumberland Valley Railroad In Effect June 27, 1915. TRAINS leave Harrisburg— For Winchester and Martlnsburz at 6:03, *7:52 a. m„ *3.40 p. m. For Hagerstown, Chambergburg, Car lisle. Mechanlcsburg and lhtermedlat* stations at *5:03, •7:52. *11.53 a. m_ •3:40, 6:37, *7:45, *11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and I Mechanlcsburg at »:48 a. m., 2:16, B:2j 6:30. 8.36 p. m. For Dlllsburg at 5:03, *7:SJ and i •11:63 a. in., 2:1«, *3:40. 6:37 and 4:30 p. m. •Dally. All other trains dally except - Sunday. H. A. RIDDLE. J. H. TONGE. O. P. A. Try Telegraph Want Ads Don't Live in the Kit chen —Emancipate yourself from kitchen drudg ery by learning the food value and culinary uses of Shredded Wheat Biscuit. / You can prepare a most wholesome, nourishing meal in a few moments by heat ing a few Shredded Wheat Biscuits in the oven to re store crispness; then cover with berries or other fruits and serve with milk or Made at Niagara Falls, N. Y, * A .OCTT Round Trip TO [Pittsburgh Sunday, May 21 Special Train Lrnvn HARHISBURG - 12.3S A. M. Tickets srood to return In onaolirN of regular trnlus until 11.20 I*. M., Monday, Jlay -m inc. t7VI«l( Sfhrnlf.T Park and rhlpp* Conservatory with their henutlful floral dla pluyn, Inapect t.'nrneKie Ins titute with Its Interesting iniiaeum and mauiilflccnt Art tinllery, *ee "The Zoo," free to the puhlle. In at tractive Highland I'ark and enjoy n pleasant d»'» out ing in the Mctropolla of Untern Pennnylvanla. i See Flyer*. Consult Agent*. Pennsylvania R.R. ** H———— GORGAS Effervescing Phosphate Soda for Liver, Stomach and Bowels Especially recommended for a gentle morning flushing of the drainage tracts of the body. Removes sour fermenta tion, gases and poisonous waste which cause dyspepsia and other intestinal disturb ances. 25^ Gorgas Drug Stores 16 N. Third Slrcet and Penna. Station r i Eye Strain Can Only Be Re lieved By Properly Fitted Glasses A cheap poorly fitted pair of glasses do more harm than | good. If you need glasses con sult us. Gobi Optical Co. 34 N. Third Street (Where r.la««c» Are Mode flight) j ————— i i VACATION TRIPS "BY SEA." BAL.TIMORE-PHILADEL.PHIA TO BOSTON SAVANNAH-JACKSONVILLE DKI.IGHTKVI, SAIL Fine Steamers. Low Fares. Best Ser vice. Plan your vacation to Induilr "Flnf#t Coulnlar Trip* In the World." Tour Book Free on Bequest. Merchants & Miners Trans. Co., W. P. Turner, G. P. A., Baltimore. Mil. Consult any ticket or tourist agent. Resorts WILD WOOD, N. J. The Ideal Place for a Summer - Vacation WILD WOOD r c And Wiltlwootl Crest You can't help hut enjoy yourself hf>re. Never a dull moment. Lota of life. Finest bathing; beach in the country. Best inside and outside Ashing. Magnificent boardwalk. Plenty of amusements. Excellent hotels at moderate rates. Cozy cottages, bun galows and apartments now being rented. Booklet. J. WHITESEI.L. City Clerk Wildnood, N, J. Try Telegraph Want Ads 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers