I f~c —• 1 I BIG SATURDAY SPECIAL SALE AT PTP . DO Special on ~ CIGARS I Patent Medicines I' I 1* \ t O | 111 11 /| T A I , see Armoart Extract Beef v-.-JWo M E/| I li I II I ■ I I I SU» Ya,' '"HI 25c S«»0 Bromo Seluer S7o H ■ M ■ ■ SFM V ■ ■ B gig 1A f H H fi 7 Sweet Girl Cigars for 25c \Jltil 11 L/ U V £1 €JL L V , " wMß, ' ,oqw,te 25c 3ftc Carter's Liver Pills 11c :S»::E::S PATENT MEDICINE STORES Special on sl-50 Fellows' Syr. Hypo »Sc . m • « j a J • 1 ^ ht 306 Broad St. Toilet Articles f 3 '™ H<£tek s Malted Milk $2.75 , 25c Kolynos Tooth Paste ...... 150 25 (K-R) . i"' eou dealing with us. Do you think our goods are not fresh and genuine because we sell cheaper 50c lary Garden Talcum S7c I 25c Carter's k. b. Tea isc than any other house? Let us convince you to the contrary—a single purchase will do it. IZ- HuSrn'ol^UrAunond'ci-eamsi^ 50c William's Pink Pills 80c 75c Pinaud's Lilac Toilet Water 480 50c Ltettsrine SI.OO Mary (Jarden Fa«< Powder 7»o 25c Milk Magnesia 17c m M a ywv -w- k c • 1 T) T I* T\ 1 ■ 85c Tooth Brushes 28c 81.00 D. D. D. for Eczema r»!>o I «% /\ /% 4 #1 | m ~ A I B l D6CIBI IrtflHOllVC U63 I 15c Tooth Brushes 9o SI. OO Keller's Catarrh Remedy ....... 75c H ■i\ I Oil V I I P ■ " 38c Natural Rouge, In a vanity box l»c KOn nnan's Kidnev Pills 91( , I 1/vVlViii \f JLX X « Cakes Palmollve Soap »0c 38c La Blachc Powder 33c 50c Doan a Kidney Pills 33c ■ XT 1 .lar Palmollve Vanishing Cream 50c 43c DJer Kiss Face Powder 38c 25c St. Jacobs Oil 15c B j Bott | e p a imollve Shampoo 50c alc JXjfr lilfw T® lo 19c 25c Sloarfs Linlm<*nt 15c g T\ T% ▼▼ /A r\ LADY GRAY ASSORTED— _ 75c Liquid Arvon «7c • 1.00 S. S* Swift', Specific 55c ]U|| lIW Pound 27* $1.90 ! 11.. 1.1 2^ £| X/X\.U VTO GOOD WILL ASSORTED- ft p r « 0 ETQ,, 81J)0 Ilcsinol Ointment Wo I 23* tlllF I I'ICC »*> 15c 125 c Tonsil Ine 150 l Aromatic Spirits Ammonia 3 oz. MILLIONAIRE ASSORTED Tills may he your last opportunity to buy 25c Colgate's Tooth Paste 25c Foley's Honey and Tar 150 I rtroraallc o pirns Ammonia, J-OZ. Pound 19clan Massage Cream 29c ■ 81.00 Pinkliam's Veg. Compound 630 I v A r _ __ Pond's Vanishing Cream 15c I 25c T'li isc I 25c Ess PeDDermint 3 ozs PINEAPPLE CHOCOLATE O f\ f \ I * ■ ""T* Jess Talcum loc, 14c | 81.00 Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur 590 I "" ' COVERED Pound § I iH Hr H Pompelan Night Cream 15c It! 2S « Lb "«i pi »« MA YBELLE ASSORTED OOC 1/UrrLE I SI.OO Listerine ....* 570 I 2Sc Camphorated Oil, 3 ozs 15* I I CHOCOLATES-Pound 33* I This is certainly a delicious, II I 75c skits' '.''U'.'.'.V.V.V.* 42c | 25c Tr. Arnica, 3 ozs 15* chocolate fragrant grade of coffee. In the SOAPS I *2.00 Eckraan AitaraUve $1.19 I 25c Rose Water and Glycerine, 3-oz. CHERRIES—Pound J.J* premium stores vou oav 35c a H 81.00 Peruna 57 C PHOPOT ATF PDVlTBirn r lcuuuul slulcs y«J" V a y a , . I tV 00 n CtM I on,c,ieTab,eta - v,c I bottle CARAMELS PoiinH qq* Pound for no better coffee—some- " c Woodbury s Facial Soap 15* I Danderme soc ■ o„__ t . LAKAMELa —Found 49* f. , 15c Palmollve Soap 7* | | „ " et, 3ozs 15* MARTINIQUE. CHOCOLATE times not so good. 25c Johnson Foot I $3.00 LADIES' FAVORITE S 25 ° Spints Cam P hor ' 3 ozs NUTS, ASSORTED—Pound. .33* You can bu Y y°" r own P re " 25c Poslam Soap 15* I SYRINGE yac I Moth xj a ii_ ~ TZZ CRETONNE CHOCOLATES, miums with what you save here. 25c Resinol Soap 18* I I 2S FOITMTATM | M pf! , * ASSORTED—Pound 33* 1 1 Limit 5 25c Cuticura Soap 18*1 | cvrtmpf 4Q C I M Flake, lb. iß* I LADY MARY CHOCOLATES If* I _ , 25c Synol Liquid Soap 15* I SYRINGE | Epsom Salts, lb. 5* I —One-half pound 50* Pounds 15c Peroxide Bath Soap 8* | DISCARDED WONDERS EXPLAINED BY FOOD EXPERT CHAPTER 69 With a Simple Outfit Any School Teacher Can Initiate Her Pupils Into the Discarded Wonders of the Grain Known as Wheat The Hair of AVomen Will be Less Tliin and Luster less and the Rald-'Headed Man Will Hate More Hair to Kngage His Atten tion When Schoolcliildren, Destined to Be Our Future Men and Women, are Permitted to See and Understand the .Nature of These Neglected Won ders. As schoolteachers take their classes i on Inspection tours through the patent flour mills of Brooklyn the commer cial chemists who pilot them from printer to sifter and from sifter to bolter always volunteer the informa Doctor Says Nuxated Iron Will ' Increase Strength of Delicate People 200% in Ten Days fn many Innlnnom— Persons have iiuf- i fered untold axon? tor years dootorlnK for nervous weakurtiß, stomach, liver or kidney disease or stjue other ail ment nbfn their real trouble was lack ■>f Irou In the blood.—How to tell. New York, N. Y.—ln a recent dis course Dr. E. Sauer, a well-known spe cialist, who lias studied widely both in this country and Europe, said: If you were to make an actual blood test on all people who are 111 you would prooably be greatly as tonished at the exceedingly large num ber who lack iron and who are 111 for no other reason than the lack of Iron. The moment iron is supplied all their mul titude of dangerous symptoms disap pear. Without iron the blood at once loses the power to change food into living tissue and therefore nothing you eat does you any good; you don't get the strength out of it. Your food merely passes through your system like corn through a mill with the rollers so wide apart that the mill can't grind. As a result of this continuous blood end nerve starvation, people become generally weakened, nervous and all run down and frequently develop all ports of conditions. One is too thin another is burdened with unhealthy fat' some are so weak they can hardly walk; some think they have dyspep sia. kidney or liver trouble; some can't sleep at night, others are sleepy and tired all day, some fussy and Irritable; fome skinny and bloodless, but all lack physical power and endurance. In such rases, It is worse than foolishness to take stimulating medicines or naroottc drugs, which only whip up your fag ping vital powers for the moment, maybe at the expense of your life later on. No matter what any one tells you If you are not strong and well you owe it to yourself to make tho follow ing test. See how long you can work or how far you oan walk without be coming tired. Next take two flve- Bringing Up Father $ # # # # By McMcmus FRTDAY EVENING, j tion that white patent flour is incom i parably superior to whole wheat meal. "White flour is far more nutritious than any mulatto-coolred product ever j milled," they say. "Professor Harry j Snyder says so." The teachers, impressed by the very Immensity of their surroundings, and the really extraordinary experience of watching a battery of mills in op eration in a large plant, go back to their classes perfectly satisfied that white bread will do after all. It does not seem to occur to them that Professor Harry Snyder is em ployed by the millers, whereas Pro fessor Scott Nearing is not employed by the University of Pennsylvania. It never occurs to them that should Brain tablet* of ordinary nuxated Iron three tinies per day after meals for two weeks. Then teat your strength again nnd seo for yourself how much you have gained. X have seen dozens of nervous run down people who were ail ins all the time double, and even triple their strength and endurance and en tirely get rid of their symptoms of dys pepsia. liver and other troubles in from ten to fourteen days' time simply bv ihS nar « ,ro su ln v. th ? .Proper form; and this, after they had ln some cases been dootoring for months without obtaining any benefit. You can talk as ySu Please about all the wonders wrought by new remedies, but when you come down to hard facts there is nothing like good old Iron to put color in vour cheeks and good sound, healthy fipiv, on your bones. It is also a great ne?ve and stomach strengthener and the best blood builder in the world. The onlv trouble was that the old forms of in organio Iron like tinoture of Iron iron acetate, etc., often ruined po'onle'* teeth, upset their stomachs and were not assimilated and for these reasons they frequently did more harm th™ good. But with the discovery of the newer forms of organic Iron all this has been overcome. Nuxated Iron for example. Is pleasant to take, does not NOTB Tho manufacturers of Nux ated Iron have such unbounded confi dence In Its potency that thev author ize the announcement that they will forfeit *IOO.OO to any Charitable Insti tution if they cannot take any man or woman under sixty who lacks iron and ! increase their strength 200 per cent or over in four weeks' time, provided *1 y Il ave n ?, serious organic trouble Also they will refund your money in 0 C ? 8 ?J" w l hlc h Naxated Iron does not at least double your strength in ten days' time. It is dispensed in this city bv Croll Keller, Q. A Gor«i and all other druggist,.—Adv * *" Professor Harry Snyder Bpeak out in meeting as Professor Scott Nearing has spoken, the money invested in so called patent flour mills would have as little use for him as the University of Pennsylvania has had for the now internationally famous victim of star chamber proceedings in the person of Scott Nearing. Any schoolteacher who wants the truth can have it for herself without reference to Professor Harry Snyder. All she needs are three pieces of grits gauze known as No. 30, No. 50 and No. 60; three pieces of silk bolting cloth, known as No. 9, No. 10 and No. 13; a small Fairbank scale with weights measurable by the one-thirty second of an ounce for rough esti mates and one-grain weights for finer estimates; a magnifying glass that will enlarge ten diameters or a small microscope that will enlarge 100 diameters. With this outfit if the schoolteacher will take eight ounces of Knox Crutch field whole wheat meal or Bennett's wheatsworth whole wheat meal and put them through the simple operation suggested here some disclosures will he made that will prove little short of startling. The reason I have mentioned the Crutchfield and Bennett meal is be cause every city In the United States gives shelter to hundreds of packages of so-called entire wheat flour which, not being entire wheat at all, although they are so labeled and suffer no legal interference through their deception, will not serve our purposes. If the schoolteacher will carefully sift the eight ounces of whole wheat meal through the No. 30 grits gauze It will be found that all of the meal ex cept approximately 1 16-32 of an ounce passes through the gauze. With the magnifying glass the re sult of this first sifting will make an interesting topic for study in the class room. The teacher will discover that the 1 16-32 of an ounce left on the No. 30 grits gause consists of large particles of bran and germ with the "brush flour" that adheres to the bran. Under a powerful glass the bran is foiuid to consist of rough, eanvas-like, brownish particles, with a very re markable suggestion of woof' and warp. The germ, difficult to dis tinguish from bran with the naked eye, will be found to consist of rich, oily, cream-colored particles. A chemical analysis of this bran and germ, both of whioh take up large quantities of water and hold it In the intestines for lubricating purposes, shows that they contain the mineral salts, colloids and vitamines which we have been discussing. Both bran and germ are rich in silicon, sulphur, nitro gen, iron. lodine, potassium, man ganese, phosphorus, nucleo proteins, or phosphorized albumen, lecithins, or phosphorized fats, and the simple phytin compounds and phosphates without which, as has been conclu sively proved in the St. Petersburg ex periment no animal can be properly nourished. The woman who values the very thin a.nd luster!ess hair that remains HARRISBURG gSgjfe&fa TELEGRAPH to her, and the bald-headed man who wishes he had some hair to value, even thin and lusterless hair, will look with profound interest upon the discarded silicon which has Just been measured, and the anemic creature who seeks in vain for solace in beef-iron-and-wine will wish that the miller would not throw all this elemental food to the hogs. The teacher is now ready for op eration No. 2. By sifting the balance of the wheat through grits gauze No. 60 it will be found that 1 5-32 of an ounce will remain on the gauze. Under the magnifying glass thse par ticles, less coarse than those that were sifted out first, will be identified as J bran, germ and middlings. No handsomer breakfast food ever J appeared on the market, and yet such j breakfast food is known only to hogs. The calcium, so necessary to Mother ! Nature In her calcification of tubercu lous areas, will be disclosed under chemical analysis in these rejected keystones of the human arch. The second teacher's pupils will say, ' "Do we not eat this beautiful stuff that has just been held back by grits gauze No. 50?" and the school teacher will say, "No, dear children, this is cattle food." Electric Power Supplied By the United Electric Co. The New Bricker Bakery is one of the many Industries of the West Shore operated by the current supplied by The United Electric Company, of Le moyne. Lemoyne, White Hill, New Cumber- Hives & Rashes Quickly Soothed and Healed by 1 < SlfkCsS ( /(omforn V^POWDERy Here is Proof: Lillian F. Rice, a Trained Nurse of Holliston, Mass., says, "I have found that Sykes Comfort Powder soothes and heal 3 hives, rashes and skin soreness and irri. tation after everything else fails." This is because of the superior medi cation of Sykes Comfort Powder, which has made it the standard nursery and sick room healing, soothing and skin protecting powder of New England for more than 20 years. At Priiir and T>ep4. Stoifw, 25c. TEE COMFORT POWTIEB CO.. Boston, Mass land, Wormleysburg. West Fairview, Enola, Summerdale, Overview, Wash ington Heights, Catrp Hill, Shiremans town, Mechanicsburg and Marysville. The cars of the Valley Railways are all supplied with current from this company. Three-fourths of the in dustrial plants, large and small are all motor driven. The company otters to its customers opportunities that very few Central Stations in this section has adopted— cooking by electricity. A special rate is allowed for cooking, claiming the operation of the electric range as economical as any other methods. To start the cooking by turning a switch; to bake a cake in an oven heated by some mysterious current instead of by | open flames almost impossible, but cooking by electricity is new enough, j for every woman to be familiar with i the old-fashioned way. The woman who cooks with elec- ! tricity,' works in comfort. She builds j no fire, does not even light a match— a turn of the switch and the heat is ! on. There are no open flames and j utensils stay clean. Those who use | them say thJ> cost la surprisingly low. SUPPORT FOR LIMA BEANS. Lima beans need heavier manuring than any other kind of beans and the tall-growing ones, must have support, though in the dry climate of Cali fornia they let them tumble on the ground. X have seen one crop grown in Maryland in this way, writes W. A. Morris in Farm and Home, but it was I Pretty Teeth Add to the Natural | Beauty of All Faces 1 3 n. ,f teptk are la want mt mm y atteatltn. ?i] do* denttortry. ,h * -**-* *• ' ' .i x -<■•; ■' Hawi, Bi3o A. M. to 6P. M. Cloned on Sundays ' * , . • Open Moa„ Wad. aad Sat. KTenlasa I'alll uP. M. Bg ; DR. PHILLIPS, Painless Dentist 1 OVER Him. Bell Phone. ■ranch Gfflceai Philadelphia aad Readlnjr. Qermaa Spokea Dg> LADY ASSISTANT. TUNE 9, 1916. a confused mass of vines and hard to gather the pods. The best support for the climbing limas Is the chicken wire netting. I use the five-foot wide sort. The cheapest is that with large meshes. Stout stakes are set at ends and along thing to experiment with. if j Kgti Better not take chances with some- \ vmarrmta. fflf thing that has not proven its worth. If I ||ff it is a blood trouble of any kind that is m Hf worrying you, then it is S. S. S. you need ' M f|f to cleanse and purify your blood. j' K Hi U c Can tg ° wron S wh en you turn to || IH S. S. S., because it is purely vegetable mj wamgrnncm |||| and has curative qualities possessed by "EwEES*. ||l no other blood remedy. One bottle, has jf? j L'ttffiUlt in many cases been worth its M weight in Gold to the user. Get S. S. S. from any drug gist and start on the to health today, Jzj&r Free advice to those who VS, JGsW desire it. Write Medical Department, Room 104. TKB Swift Specifie Atlanta. G». the rows to attach the wire to and the beans are planted in a continuous row a foot apart. This support is far cheaper than poles, for the wire lasts indefinitely, if rolled up and stored la winter, and the vines take to it at once and the gathering of the crop is easy. 9