WOMEN'S STOMACH TROUBLES The Great Woman's Medi cine Often Just What Is Needed. We are so used to thinking of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound as a remedy exclusively for female ills that we are apt to overlook the fact that it is one of the best remedies for disorders of the stomach. For stomach trouble of women it is especially adapted, as it works in com plete harmony with the female organ ism, since it contains the extracts of the best tonic roots and herbs. It tones up the digestive system, and increases the appetite and strength. Here is what one woman writes showing what this medicine does: Newfield, N. Y.—"l am so pleased to say I can recommend Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound as an eco nomical and beneficial remedy in most ailments pertaining to women. At least I found it so by only taking two bottles. I had indigestion in a bad form and I am now feeling in the best of health and owe it all to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound."— Mrs. BURR WILLIAMS, R.D.N0.29, New field, N.Y. Many women suffer from that "all gone feeling," and "feel so faint," j while doing their work. Ten chances ; to one their digestive system is all out of order. A tablespoonful of Lydia E. j Pinkham's Vegetable Compound after each meal shouldcompletelyremedy this condition in a few days. MONKEYS WEAR GLASSES AND RUIN THEIR EYES Hospital Experiment of Worldwide Interest BALTIMORE. Ml).:—At Johns Hop- | kins Hospital, they are putting glasses , t>n monkeys for the purpose of upset ting their vision. This will cause a severe eye strain, and impaired vision, which in turn affects the thyroid glands and is expected to produce sucli dis eases as nervousness, insomnia, melan cholia. irritability, headache, goitre, palpitation of the heart, protruding eyeballs, and mild forms of tubercular affections. You must admit that if glasses on monkeys will cause such conditions, they will do the same on human beings. Eyeglasses in many cases are unnec essary and even dangerous. Many think because they see well with their glasses | that they lit. but this is not always true. | Misfit glasses have ruined the eyes of I thousands of peonle, for at times nearly every wearer of glasses wears glasses which do not fit. In the l.'nited States alone there are over 300,000 blind peo ple, thousands of whom can trace their misfortune to neglect, as neglect has caused more blindness than any other one thing. You value your eyesight above everything, therefore you should know something about your eyes, and what to do to strengthen and preserve them. Leading druggists are now author ized to distribute free to those interest ed, a valuable book pertaining to eyes and eye saving, entitled "How To Get Rid of Eye Troubles." This book should be In every home. It tells of a highly tlficacious home remedy, which has enabled many to strengthen their eye sight 50 per cent, in one week's time, end by so doing they are able to discard their glasses. Through its use, many others have avoided the necessity of re sorting to these windows. If you are p wearer of glasses and want to get rid cf them! if your eyesight is weak and you wish to strengthen it. if you would Tike to test the remedy, go to any drug store and get 5 grain optona tablets, put one tablet in a quarter glass of Water, allow to thoroughly dissolve, and with this refreshing solution, bathe the eyes from three to four times dally. Everyone, whether they wear glasses or not. will be greatly helped through this method of eye saving. Since this formula has been published H. C. Ken nedy, of this city, has been kept busy filling It. If you tollow this method, vour eyes will clear up perceptibly right from the start. It sharpens vision even In old eyes, and its use will tone and strengthen the eye muscles and nerves so they quickly become healthy and strong. If you would over come bloodshot eyes and red lids, if you would have good eyesight, and eyes free from blurring, inflammation, smarting, itching, burning and aching due to eyestrain from overworked eyes try this solution at once. Don't put It off until to-morrow, as delays are dan gerous and the sooner you take care of vour eyes, the better it will be for you.—Advertisement. To End Catarrhal Deafness and Head Noises Persons suffering from catarrhal deafness and head noises will be glad to know that this distressing affliction can usually be successfully treated at home by an Internal medicine that in many instances has effected complete relief after other treatments have fail ed. Sufferers who could scarcely hear a watch tick tell how they have had their hearing restored to such an ex tent that the tick of a watch was plain ly audible seven or eight Inches away from either ear. Therefore. If you know of someone who is troubled with head noises or catarrhal deafness, cut out this formula and hand it to them and you will have been the means of saving some poor sufferer from perhaps total deafness. The prescription can be prepared at home and Is made as fol lows: Secure from your druggist 1 oz. Par mint (Double Strength), about 75 cents worth. Take this home and add to it U pint of hot water and 4 oz. of granu lated sugar; stir until dissolved. Take one tablespoonful four times a day. Parmint is used in this way not only to reduce by tonic action the Inflamma tion and swelling In the Eustachian Tubes, and thus to equalize the air pres sure on the drum, but to correct any excess of secretions in the middle ear, und the results it gives are nearly al ways quick and effective. Every person who has catarrh In any form should give this recipe a trial and free themselves from this destructive disease. Vacation Trips "BY SEA" Baltimore-Philadelphia to Boston Savannah-Jacksonville Delightful Sail. Fine Steamers. Loir Fare*. Beat Serv ice. Plan your vucntlon to Include "The Fluent Coaatvrlae Trlpa In the World." Tour Hook Free on Requeat. MKnOHANTS A MIX BUS THANS. CO. W. P. TIIWEB, G. P. A., Balto., Md. ( onault any ticket or tourlat agent. Try Telegraph Want Ads ' FRIDAY EVENING, 1 BIG BALLET FOR KNIGHTS TEMPLAR! Los Angeles Planning Big En- i tertainmcnt Program For Conclave June 17 Los Angeles. Cal.. June 9.—An cording to the estimates of the trans- j continental railroad companies, Los j Angeles will be hostess city to 45,000 i Knights Templar from all parts of; the United States and also from abroad for a week beginning June 17. The thirty-third triennial conclave j of this great Masonic body will be the j most important delegate assemblage ever held in the Queen Convention j City of the Pacific Coast, bringing here j a most i-epresentatlve body of men, I leaders in business, professional and j social life from all parts of America. Representatives of the command- I erics In Alaska, Hawaii and the I Philippines, as well as of the grand j priories of Ireland and Canada, like- i wise will be present. The conclave will be made note worthy from the fact that it will be the j centennial gathering of the Templar j Order of America. In recognition of this, a special devotional celebration j will bo held Sunday, June 18, which will be attended by the most dis tinguished body of Masons ever to as- j semble In the United States. In preparation for the conclave, an : eight-day program of entertainment ' has been provided, the most elaborate, I probably, in the convention history of j Los Angeles. Besides the great | Knights Templar parade in which will appear commanderles from California to Maine and from Minnesota to Texas, there will be a dazzling series of electrical pageants and a floral pro cessional in honor of Music, in which will appear thousands of school chil dren. This last will be a production unique to America. A series of brilliant social affairs will feature conclave week and Shrine auditorium will be tbe scene of a ballet In honor of the host of visiting Templars. A wonderful scheme of decorations for conclave week has been adopted by the executive committee of ar rangement. The city will be draped In black, white and red, the Masonic colors and welcome to sir knights will flash from thousands of electrlo de signs throughout the business section of tlie city. Sessions of tlie grand encampment Will be held at Scottish Rite Cathedral j and here grand officers for three years, or until the next conclave, will he elected and Installed. The executive sessions will be presided over by Lee Stewart Smith, Pittsburgh, acting grand master. Sidelights on War Lands It is said that the German Govern ment has made provision whereby young women who were engaged to ! soldiers killed in action can legally | take the name of their deceased fiance and alsp prefix the title of Frau. This law Is to protect the "war babies'' and make their births legitimate. British soldiers discharged as "no longer physically flt for war service" will be granted temporary allowances while their claims for pensions are considered. The rate will be 20s. a week for men with dependents; for other men 10s. Berlin papers report that Count von Sehlieffen, a captain In the White Cuirassiers, and his Intended bride, Claire Haecker, an operatic singer, shot at one another with pistols, neither desiring to live longer on ac count of the refusal of the count's parents to consent to their marriage. Having left a letter to their fami lies expressing their wish to be buried together, they fired simultaneously at a few yard's distance. Neither was killed, but the woman was hit in the cheek and the man In the forehead. Both are expected to recover, but the officer remains blind. Dr. Barthe de Sandfort, a French surgeon, has perfected a treatment for the burns inflicted by the new boiling tar shells of the Germans. The cure j sounds as painful as the wound. The patient's burns are sprayed first with Sterilized water and then with almost boiling paraffin wax. Next day the wax Is peeled oft like a glove and a new layer is sprayed on. In from two to eight weeks an entirely new skin takes the place of the burned and destroyed tissues. London letter In Manchester Guar dian:" There are Bohemian cafes and tcashops in the heart of London 1 where young men are persuaded to be | conscientious objectors by enthusiastic I women who feel and think danger- j ously. Such young men are talked to and flattered by fiery-eyed females un til they more than half believe In the German as being more truly a brother than In the man In lthakl. True cour age, they are assured, lies not in flght l Ing for their country—a poor thing not worth the sacrifice of a drop of young blood—but in refusing to fight: true nobility dooes not kill, but cherishes and preserves Its young men with the glorious possibilities of youth still before them. And so on, and so on. Most of the young men capable of being Influenced by this stuff are dreamy, poetic creatures, actors and artists without much backbone. On the crown of Dolis Hill Park, one of London's "lungs," there is a small mansion with an old-fashioned walled garden and a charming bowling green. Back in the eighties this was used as a summer residence by the Marquis of Aberdeen. Gladstone was then an old man, who needed an oc casional quiet retreat as near as possible to Downing Stree, and as he was an intimate friend of the Aber deens. the house was placed freely at ! his disposal. In 1897, Lord Aber- i deen gave up Dolis Hill House, and It passed into the possession of the late J i Sir Hugh Gllzean Reid, a newspaper proprietor. One summer the house was occupied by Mark Twain. It is now used as a war hospital. YOUR DAUGHTER'S CONFIDENCE. The best way to shut a girl's mouth, when she comes to you with confi dences about her lover, is to show that, you are disturbed or offended by what she tells, says a writer In P'arm and Home. The very fact that she has told you is a thing to give thanks to God for, for it gives you a notion of what you must prepare to combat. If you ob ject to what she has told you, convey your objections indirectly, make her condemn herself or him from her own mouth, call her own common sense in to play, teach her to think for herself in this, as in other matters. A hasty outbreak may cost you her confidence forever and a day. Patience and tact, and tender, everlasting love will do for you and her what no amount of storming and force could do. SHOT SEVEX WEASEI.9 Special In the Telegraph Blain. Pa.. June 9.—Samuel Henry, of Jackson township, shot seven weas- ! els. four of them at one shot. In a board I pile. The bounty on weasels is SI.OO ! cac. MWMMBBBMWMWHMMWiMMM——MB—— "The Live Store" "Always Reliable" To the Man Who Is tliey ,e|| "' ' " Kuppenheimer True Economy avoids cheap goods as carefully as it does exhorbitant prices, and steering a middle course arrives eventually at this "Live Store" where only mer chandise of known high quality is sold—not at less than it is worth, but the best at the lowest possible price. I Ever Since Webster placed the Imagine you're from Missouri. world's supply of adjectives at the disposal of Start out in a "show me" frame of mind. And the public, clothes have all been pretty much don't buy anything, anywhere, until you've alike in the newspapers. If there's any doubt seen what this "Live Store" has to offer you. in your mind as to where to go for that Sum- We invite comparisons and thrive upon them, mer Suit the only satisfactory way to settle Our most loyal and best satisfied customers that question is by personal investigation. appreciate the style, quality and price ad- Compare our suits with the highest priced gar- vantages found here, because they've been on ments you can find elsewhere. both sides of the fence. sls $lB S2O $25 Sweaters Underwear Pajamas For Women and Children, made of Men '» and Union SuJt » M en '« Pajamas in plain colors and 50c stripes— Fiber and Silk, light weight Wool Black mixed Union Suit. SI.OO. SI.OO and $1.50 and Silk and Wool. Price range— B. V. D., Rockingchair and Munsing Boys' One-piece Pajamas, plain jh.* AA . h/% underwear color and stripes, 4to 14 years— ss.oo to $37.50 SI.OO and $1.50 Suit 50c Bates Street Shirts Manchester Shirts Fulton Shirts Boys' Blue Chambray Waists 25c */■ » ni i, */i* jit • M Percale and Madras Shirts SI.OO and 50c; Boys' K& E Waists and ® ~ .. . Mercerized and Satine Shirts $1.50 Shirts with regular or sport collar — suits, all sizes, Fiber Silk Shirts . * CI no All Silk Shirts $3.50 50c to SI.OO | Crepe Silk Shirts $5.00 "Anchor" and "Hsme" Brand Shirts 50c Best "Black Satine" and "Blue Chambray" Shirts 50c 304 B Harrisburg, Market St. Penna. L J HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JUNE 9. 1016. 15
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers