8 SEE WHAT CUTICURA DOESFOEMY HAIR Al SKIN The Soap keeps my skin fresh and clear and scalp free from dandruff. The Oint ment soothes and heals any skin trouble. Sample Each Free by Mail With 32-p. Skin Book on request. Ad dress post-card "Cutirura, Dept. 17G, Roiton." Sold throughout the world. FRECKLES Now Is the Time to Get Rid of These Ugly Spots There's no longer the slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, as the prescription othine—double strength—is guaranteed to remove these homelv spots. Simply get an ounce of othine—dou ble strength—from any druggist and apply a little of it night and morning and you should soon sec that even th® worst freckles have begun to disap pear. while the lighter ones have van ished entirely. It is seldom that more than an ounce is needed to completely clear the skin and gain a beautiful clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double strength othine as this Is sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remove freckles. —Advertisement. If Everything Was as Cheap As Alspure Ice the cost of living would be as low as it was in the good old days. Be glad, however, that ALSPURE ICE is help ing to keep down the cost of living. The use of ice gives you better food and a greater variety. What a hungry, half starved nation this would be, if it were not for ice. The use of ice is an economy in that it en ables you to keep milk, meats, fruits, and vege tables that otherwise would "spoil." The waste would be considerable more than the small cost of ice. United Ice & Coal Co. Foratcr & Cowdcn St». Also Steelton, Pa. t - -- - - —« Potato Bugs MILLIONS OF THEM Are Destroying Your Crops The leaves are the lungs of the plant, while they are kept perfect and in healthy condition they con tinue to feed the tubers, keep the plant growing a longer period and thus produce larger potatoes, more of them and this means a larger crop. If the leaves are eaten or injured, the yielding possibilities of the plant is lessened and you cannot possibly obtain the big crop that healthy plants will produce. SPRAY THEM WITH FYROX It kills the bugs and prevents blight and disease. It sticks to the plant like paint and will not wash off. It is the one most satisfactory spray. Start spraying as soon as the plants are through the ground and spray every ten days to keep the new growth covered. Do not wait until the bugs come; have Pyrox there ready for their first meal—that will finish them. 1 lb. will make 5 gallons. 10 lbs., 50 gallons, enough for an acre. Prices, 1 lb., 2Sc; 6 lbs., $1.00: 10 lbs., 51.75; 25 lbs., $4.00; 50 lbs $7.50; 100 lbs., $13.50; 300 lbs"' $38.00. We also have Arsenate of Lend Paris Green, Slug Shot, Bordeaux' and all Insecticides. Walter S. Schell QUALITY SEEDS fUNERAL DIRECTOR AND EMBALMER.' Ik 1745-47 N. SIXTH ST. A Try Telegraph Want Ads MORE CASES ON CRIMINAL LIST District Attorney Stroup Places 25 Defendants For June Trial Calendar ■MMmmm Charges of de- JJA ). 11l stroylng flowers on | y/JL/r-~lU* the graves In the 1 jK city's cemeteries will have to be fac-I ed Thursday of next woek by Theodore Bowers and a June MTfIBSMnffES criminal court Jury I will hear the case, j mMllUßowers' trial is one i of twenty-five new j cases arranged on the supplemental trial list for June! quarter sessions which begins next; Monday. With the supplemental cal endar the list now comprises 106 cases. | The supplemental list follows: Tuesday Clara Brown, adultery; Warren Cochran, fornication; Laura Johnson, disorderly house. Wednesday I —Pete Atanasoff, larceny; Florita | Kurt et al., assault and battery. Thursday Clarence Maubley, assault and battery; Walter Mac Cargo, felon-j ious assault; aHrry Parker and Lee Brownawell, larceny from person; George Reed, faconious assault; Thorn- | as A. Jackson, felonious assault; John Welsh, felonious assault, two charges; Charles Hauss, fornication; Sadie! Wagner, adultery; Lester Banks and j George Scanlon, larceny; Anna Cor penny, receiving stolen goods; Hubert i£. Pagan, larceny; Charles H. Jones, assault and battery; A. L. Snyder, lar ceny; J. Bernstein, larceny as bailee; C. H. Hollenbaugh, false pretense. I Friday Bessie Kay, larceny from the j person. Viewed New Road. Despite the unfavorable weather conditions yes terday the board of viewers recently appointed by the Dauphin county court to report upon the opening of a new road through Roberts' valley east from Rockville, met yesterday on the route and heard the views of Interested property owners. The board includes Joseph Umberger, Millersburg; Paul G. Smith and IS. Clark Cowden. Barristers' Picnic. Practically the entire bar association of Dauphin county, President Judge George Kun kel and Additional .'udge S. J. M. JUc- Carrell, Prothontary H. F. Holler and Recorder James E. Lenta and visiting Judges of neighboring counties motor ed to Inglenook this afternoon to at tend the first annual picnic of the Dauphin County Bar Association. A long line of automobiles started away from the courthouse at 1.30 o'clock. One Way to Fight Tuberculosis Is to pay special attention to hygienic living and proper 'let. Science is agreed that fresh air, rest and avoid ance of food excesses constitute the most effective treatment in the early stages of this widespread and destruc tive affection. Often, however, these measures need supplementing by proper medication. I The system lacks sufficient resistance to overcome the attack, and something must be done to assist in upbuilding the patient's strength. In many cases of this sort Eckman's Alterative has been used with marked success. Also, it has proved bene ficial in relieving- bronchial troubles and asthma. Since it contains no opiates, narcotics or habit-forming drugs, it Is safe to i try. At your druggist's. ICrkman Laboratory, PhUadelphln, Advertisement. EOtl CATION AL School of Commerce j Troup Building 15 So. Market Sq. Hay & flight School Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Stenotypy, Typewriting and Penmanship I Bell Cumberland jl'j-Y Harrisburg Business College Day and Night [lookkeeplng, Shorthand, Civil Servlp* Thirtieth Year 3-0 Market St. Harrlatmrie, Pa. FUNERAL DIRECTOR 1310 North JThird Street ■ Bell Phone. Auto Service. @ Resorts ATLANTIC CITY. IV. J. ENJOY A COMFORTABLE SUMMEiTAT \ ATLANTIC.CIfr.NuF^^ THE IDEAL RESORT MOTEL I Fireproof. On the Ocean front. Capacity 600. | Hot and cold sea water in all i,»thn Orchestra of soloists. Private trara<te on premises. Ulusirated literature. Ownership management. | • —— ItF.DFOSID springs, pa. - I r E One of America's most noted = = mountain resort h for those who j = = usually co abroad. Magnesia E = waters that rival Marlenbad and eS I = = Carlsbad. Estate of 8000 acros. Easi Eg= 1200 ft. above Foa level. Golf. =B= tennis, ridingr. bowling and danc- §§*, lng. Modern hotel—-unexcelled cui- Ej= sine and service. Oarapo. Good Efct | =S| motor roods o K H. E. HEMTS, Mprr. Winter, tSI Hoyal Polnclnna, Paint ileach ' ■ ■ 12. Open for motorists May 27. .1"* WERNERSVILLE, PA. Tialen hall /L&WWrPi fountains I WERNtRSVILIf, PA. ■ Th<> Delightful figravnit. 6prln< Resort PA of the Ea.t Good roads, beautiful scenery and a high ory flne therapeutic batTis r„r.?J SP" " e P ar tro*nt. Good music. walks and trails. Dry 'L hr \ r 'r? m Phila.. Read in? R. R. 4 hrs. from N. Y.. Cent o t N. J. R.R. N. Y. Office 24.1 Fifth Avenue Alwer. open. Howard M.Wintf.Mgr. WW Mil—m MBfIWBBIHI IH Hlil WlillllllM ill IIIIIIHI Ml mi l i pSOUNE - CLEARANCE - SALE S I -pi r . i Women's and Misses' Suits, Coats and Dresses —Men's and Boys' Clothing and Child- . , T\ Ihe first week of rem' Wear—EVERYTHING TO GO Another week of our June Clearance observed rem wear lvlki milNb iU UU account unheard of bargains. Sale started off like a s l2 - 75 to s ls - 00 $15.00 to $17.50 WOMEN'd AND MISSES' $17.50 to $20.00 $20.00 to $25.00 on tbe one of the house afire. Have VALUES VALUES VALUES VALUES few to say, "I missed 1 $g. 98 $9. 9S SUITS $lO 85$1 , 98 I ford to miss it. ■ t 150 Suits to go. tpAVo tpil* early. I ——■ — ■ - DRESSES Women's, Misses' and Ciean-Up of WAISTS Women's and Misses' Wash Materials and Children ß SKIRTS entire stock at .j i-kicl COATS Silks HATS Wash Skirts, Taffetas $ | .98 Value .. . 98c n'Sffg""'""""" Dresses for women, misses and Mid-Summer Hats and and Silks $3 00 Value ... $1.48 $6.50 Coats $2.98 I 1 sr a and everyone ' at barsa,n S P° rt Hat * 1 9 C oi~: $3.98 Value . . .$1.98 $8.35 Coats . . .$3.98 I I ' $ .25 Skirts ... 79c SSM Value ##s2 4Q s]Qm Coatg _ s49g 1 H3O Dresses at 98c 75c Value at . . 39c 497)0 Skirts I*l 29 ; $12.85 Coats . .$5.98 I II 27 Dressy at- «i Qft 98c Value at . . 49c <t? 50 Skirts $1 48 Women s, Misses and $15.00 Coats . .$6.98 E lac n SCS a * llil $1.25 Value at . . 59c * * SJIS Children's r„e s prtns , y ,e, § ISO nl!!!!! 1 "L'oa f!-59X a } uea ' - $3.50 Skirts ;! :$1.98 MIDDIES Children's Dresses I |2od MN ftoov&S:: 111 8$ &l 18 Dresses at . .$5.98 $2.25 Value at. 98c $5.00 Skirts .. .$2.98 $1.50 Value .. . 98c I Worth UD to $lO 00 $2.50 Valueat. .$1.29 $ 1.50 Values .. . 98c $2.00 Value .. .$1.49 I " Hundreds to choose from. Plain colors and stripes. Wliltc and Colored Dresses. I LIVINGSTON'S MEN'S, YOUNG MEN'S AND BOYS' LIVINGSTON'S I ■ 9 S. Market Square CLOTHES AT H PRICE 9S. Market Square I Gigar Butts Scarce, Says Champion Snipeshooter Portland, Ore., June 9. Persons who regard the term "snipe-shooter" as a vaudeville joke had legal proof of the existence of the tribe in municipal court, when J. L. Hogart, arrested by Patrolman Mallon, was charged with vagrancy. Hogart claimed to be "champion snipe-shooter of America" when he j was taken into pail. and Jailors Branch and Webster found the results of the day's "shcoting" to be seventeen j cigar butts and the stubs of fifty-three | cigarets. Blood Letting Is Needed in Nation, Says Preacher Delafield, Wis., June 9. "I tell you, I young men ,this country needs a blood letting. We have grown too gross. Things worth while are wanting. We need the rumble of the cannon, and less of the music of the cabaret. We j need the sound of the marching hosts,! not the seductive shuffle and tap, tap of the foolish dance. We need the sons that once awakened a nation to glory, not the effeminate tank, tank of the ragtime youth. We need men to day, and not manikins." So spoke the Rev. S. T. Smythe, president of St. John's Military Acad emy, at the commencement exercises. Wife Threatens to Leave, He Throws Her in River St. Louis, June 9. Jacob Young blood, of Alton, was arrested, charged with throwing his wife, Cora, into the Mississippi river from a houseboat. After he saw her struggling in the! water, he jumped in and rescued her, j according to her story. He told her, | she said, he had thrown her in only to frighten her, so she would not leave | him, as she was preparing to do. Mrs. Youngblood swore out a war-j rant against her husband. She said i she had told him she was going to leave him, and when she went to the houseboat to get clothing, he followed ' her and pitched her into twenty feet of water. BUYS SI,OOO PEARL Evansvllle, Ind., June 9. Theo dore Bitterman has bought a pearl weighing twenty-four grains, from a Wabash river mussel digger, who lives near Mount Carmel, 111., that is said to be worth more than SI,OOO. The pearl is a perfect sphere. THE TWENTIETH HOLE ::::::::::::: By BRIGGS 1 SOME DRVVIE VOU ) \ <S<vox> ~X>RIV/E / ITO VA -BILLY- YOU Billy ip MAOE - SOME — / \ VJASW-T rr L«SOFTE A>C» HAUDLE I COULD MA KG \\ DRIVE!- T A? PR Q <V^^| I —— —* . /LB ,. —-— — -N / YOO BSAT ME ,<SOOC | / <S*A**D \ WBU <3RANO •* " *6O K»JO«AJ WE*Y WCU. 1 / AMD FAIR BUT I V J \ SCOUT ■ \ I VAJAWTCD TFCO HOME / IIX JH/vs BEAJ A PRIV/AWE/ I—/ / ML,"™ 6 ' EARVY. 'IBV SIT OP \ IJo PLAV WITH TTEO- J—/ FTSLL<X*/ P A T*ERS AT THAT CLOB [ / BOYS - HCRRA T«G / IIMIH ■■*' I HE " THF I ] W(TH A LOT OF SILCY I, J I FIREFTTKN- UTTLP / VTS. 'FET. ' lOr 151 FR.EMI*S AMD FO*«ERR/ I V!/1H [ | j <3 O~T HARRTSBURO TELEGRAPH Prospects Are Tiptop For Plenty of Stewed Prunes Myrtle Creek, Ore., June 9. The largest prune crop in the history of the Myi le Creek section is promised this year. Weather cotdilions have been most favorable for prunes from the very beginning of the year, the cold weather of January and February keeping the buds dormant until late Spring, while warm weather prevailed ! during the frost period and no cold i continuous rains have come to encour- I age brown rot. While there are indl-J j vidual orchards where the crop is light, | j the general yield is heavy and the fruit j | is already of large size. Barred From Boy Friends, Girl Takes Her Own Life Des Moines, la., June 9. John Briggs, a rich paving contractor, rais [ed his motherless daughter with the express order that she should not as sociate with boy friends. Laura Briggs, 15 years old, kept company on the sly with a school mate, "Chuck" Sellers, son of a prom inent attorney. Recently the father found a note book of his daughter's, and learned her secret, and the girl shot herself. "I didn't have the chance the other girls had," was her dying statement. Foiled in One Elopement, She Succeeds in Second Ashtabula, June 9. Eluding their captors, Adam Aunger, 21, and Belle McCauley, 18, of Oil City, Pa., who i were stopped here while eloping, hired lan automobile and were driven across I Pennsylvania into New York State and ! married at Westfield. | The girl's mother and grandmother ! came here to take Miss McCauley back. ! She interested them in a newspaper ' story of her foiled elopement, while i Aunger hired a machine. As her mother and grandmother | were reading the paper on the station platform the girl leaped in the ma chine. CAUGHT FISH: PACKED IX HAIL Fort Wayne, Ind., June 9. John Jackson, business manager of the Fort Way lie Sentinel, says that hail fell so thick at James lake that, three hours later, he was able to gather hailstones enough to pack his catcli | of tish. Plants Corn Three Times, Rats Won't Let It Grow • TULSA, Okla., June 9. Henry Maudlin, farmer, residing six miles southeast of Tulsa, reported that rats completely destroyed forty acres of newly planted corn on his farm. Del bert Johnson, another farmer in that locality, also reported that the because of the ravages of rodents he has been unable to get a stand of corn after three plantings. The same complaint has come from j i other farmers, who declare that rats j ! are overrunning Tulsa county. He Lived to Be Neraly 100 and Then Hanged Himself Portland, Ore., June 9. Henry Bennett, 97 years old, committed sui-j cide by hanging himself to a rafter in the woodshed of the home of his son. Brooding over the loss of his wife, who died several years ago, is supposed to have been the cause of his act. The body was found when J. M. Bennett returned home late in the aft ernoon. Mr. Bennett had then been dead about two hours. Weds Girl He Left Behind Him, After Half a Century Special to th: Telegraph Anderson, Ind., June 9. A romance of olden days was uncovered'here when Benjamin Osborn, 74, and Jane Smith, 71, applied for a marriage license. More than a half century ago Mr. Os born successfully courted Jane Butler. But the Civil War i-ast a blight on the , young couple's rosy future, and young ) Osborn responded to the call of the Union. He was one of the first soldiers to reach the front. After the war they drifted different ways. Osborn moved to Rush county and married. His former sweetheart also married. Both lost their mates a few years ago by death. AUTOS AID CHURCH IN DARKNESS Zlonsvllle, Ind., June 9.—The elec tric lights went out at the Methodist i church right in the midst of a chil- j dren's entertainment. A small thins! like that, however, was not permitted ! to interfere with the entertainment. Automobiles standing at the curb were: brought up to the door and windows;, and the headlights were turned on. j TUNE 9. 1916. Beaumont, Tex., Is Counting Number of Rats in City Beamont, Texas, June 9.—D. A. L. Lincecum, assistant state health of ficer, with three assistants and a corps of helpers, equipped with a complete laboratory outfit that includes guinea pigs and rabbits, began here a survey of the city to determine the size and Mj I Red Inner Tubes V\ |\ M: / / have a world-wide reputation for durability \ i 1,1 1 1 j for the following reasons: |(| iIU IS jl j.'.j | I st: Michelin Red-Rubber Tube» uc compounded fj 'j j!|H j ~1 ,i I ol certain quality-giving inpedients which pievent f, :jKjl ill \J \ them from becoming biittle or porous and which II w I Warn preserve theii velvety softness indefinitely. j . M" I w|Jj|k 2nd: MicheLn Tubes are not simply piece* jj; r M'J Oi straight tubing with their end. cemented. if, ■ ;/jmlij Vv but are formed on a ring mandrel to /Until exactly the circular shape of tho /f.' ENSMINGER MOTOR CO., Distributors Third and Cumb. Sts., Harrlsburg, l>a. Hell 3515 Micbelin Red Inner Tubes give the almost economy and satisfaction. character of its rat population. It is the purpose to exterminate the rodents as well as to obtain complete infor mation as to their contents of bubonic plague infection. The survey will re quire two weeks. The state health force is not <ie pending wholly upon its own efforts ir. the trapping of rats, but is paying j bounty of 10 cents ior each one deliv ercd to it, dead or alive.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers