EXTREME WEAKNESS AND SUFFERING Read How Mrs. Good ling got Relief and Strength. York, Pa.—"l have used Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and llllllllllniiiiilllli found it to be all you say it is. I was so sick that I could not stand at my sink to wash dishca and I could not sit without JjOy, li a pillow under me. I had the doctor *" JltiM every few days but i since I have taken 1 the Compound I don't have to send I ' for him. I have had three children and could not raise any of them, but since I have taken the Com pound I have a bright baby boy. I advise every suffering woman to try it nnd £et relief. It has done wonders for ir ; e."—Mrs. Catharine Goodling, 138 E. King Street, York, Pa. When a medicine has been successful in bringing health to so many, no woman has a right to say without try ing it, "I do not believe it will help me." There must be more than a hun dred thousand women in this country who, like Mrs. Goodling, have proven whatwondera Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg etable Compound can do for weak and ailing women. Try it and see for yourself. If there are any complications you don't understand, write I.ydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential), Lynn* Mass. $2.00 Rail and Boat Excnrsion Tolchester Beach ojr Beautiful Chesapeake Bay Maryland's Famous Pleasure Resort. Sunday, June 25 Bathing, Boating Pishing, Crabbing J" SPBCL4I, TRAIN I*"'*** - - CM A.M. Rrtval>( itmnw leave* Tol cheater Beaek 4.M P.*. $2.00 R °™ d $2.00 n.ll. P.ininlH J., .. II CTSale of tickets limited to ca pacity of boat. j Pennsylvaniaß.R. r" _ ~"S, Suits to Order ALWAYS SIO.OO 36 N. Third St Resorts ATLANTIC CITY. !f. J. CNJOY A COMFORTABLE SUMMER AT THE IDEAL RESORT HOTH. Fireproof. On th« Ocean front. Caoacity *OO, Ho*, ani cold *«a wnter in all v.. th« OrrheMrao# *o!ot*ta. Privateparasr*on pr mises Illustrated ntgratnre. Ownership management leinTHALL; Atl an Tic C ITy. N.j. Sanatorium? Noted for its superior I 1 table and service, i F~. L .VOUlMC.GerfManayi; v. li.nvt 00u. .v 4. | The Ideal Place for a Summer Vacation , WILD WOOD And Wildwood Crest Ton can't help but enjoy yourself here. Never a dull moment. Lots of life. Finest bathlr.tr beach In the country. Best inside and outside fishing- Magnificent boardwalk. Plenty of amusements. Excellent hotels at moderate rates. Coay cottages, bun galows and apartments now being rented. Booklet. J. WHITESEIX. City Clerk Wlldwod. M. J. WILDWOOD'S LEADING HOTELS BEACHWOOD gfe GK: Mualc, Auto meets train*. Cham.il.Kuril. DORQFY Montgomery ave. it beaca. UUIVJtI Cap. 250. Prl. batha; near ocean. Booklet. Auto bus. J. JK. U bitescll EDGETON INN ™ »5«. Bookltt. Coach. J. Albert H«trl,. ClfFI DON Entire block, ocean vl«w. antLuun Cap , 50 Hot 4nd eo!d ter. Rooms with bath and en ralte. Eln. Booklet. D. J. Woods Ownewhlp-Magt. WILDWOOD MANORg£-», 0 . A salt baths; «lev.Bklt.Mr».Wro.K.L*«ter. DAYTON Optn all year. Runntnr water. 1 Private baths. Music. Booklet. Auto boa F. W. * A. McMnrray. MT. GRET.\.V, PA. Conewago «a n rn convs. Address SAMUEL H. LEWIS. MX. Greta*, Pa, MONDAY EVENING, > TELEGRAPH'S FOOD EVILS OF FLOUR CHAPTER "3 | Denatured Floor Is Not the Only Flour Evil Against the True Nature of Which the Common People Should Be Aroused—"Unsound Flour." Which Should be Vsod for Purpose* Only, Is Worked OH by the TON In Blending Plants, Which Make a Business of Collecting and Distributing for Wholesale Bakery Supply Houses the Offscourings of | the Flour Industry. Before dismissing the subject of j white flour, which attains its white ! ness through the ability of grits gauze and silk bolting cloth to separato the 1 fine white particles of the wheat ker ; nel from the rich brown pericarp and | the buttery golden germ of the grain i it is necessary to refer to two other forms of white flour against which the public needs to be protected. One is called "unsound flour." the } other "bleached flour." In this chap- j ter we shall deal with "unsound flour" ! ■ only. The public has no means of know- ' ing just how much unsound flour, sometimes called musty, sometimes ; called sunken, sometimes called Ue- 1 composed, is utilized in the production of bakery bread, biscuits, rolls, buns, cakes, cookies, snaps, and wafers. Prior o Aug. 19. 1913. the authcri i ties had never bothered about the question of unsound flour in the city of New York, although the New York Produce Exchange for years had maintained a department, the chief duty of which was to reject such flour, so that members of the ex change would be protected against the financial loss involved In purchas ing an inferior or inedible flour. The government had never made a seizure of such flour in the Empire State notwithstanding the fact that an enormous traffic in spoiled flour was being carried on. Flour men. even though they went through all the motions of rejecting such stuff, suffered no worries con cerning any possible official interfer ence with the final disposition of the j rejected product. So it was an easy matter to work off decomposed flour by mixing ten parts of the rotten products with ninety parts of sound flour, thereby avoiding waste through the medium of the public's stomach. BABY DISFIGURED ! BY INFLAMED SPOT On Cheek, Grew Larger, Itching ! Very Bad. Was Kept Awake Often, He Was Very Restless. HEALED BYCUTICUM SOAP AND OINTMENT "My baby got a very small spot on his Cheek when three months old and It grew larger until it reached the size of a quarter of a dollar. It was very red and (f «»| Inflamed and festered at times t J and if the nights were warm the Itching was very bad and I was b\ \ kept awake often. He was very ( ' l '\ restless and his face was very l| A I much disflgured. It looked / ugly and becamo red when he / rubbed it. The trouble lasted / ~1 ) about five months. ([! "My aunt toll me Cutlcura Iji Soap and Ointment had healed her little boy so I used one cake of Soap and one box of Ointment And he was healed." < Signed) Mrs. H. C. Kistler, Carlisle, Sept. 3, 1915. Sample Each Free by Mai] With 32-p. Skin Book oo request. Ad dress post-card "Cutlcura. Dept. T, Bo*. ton." Sold throughout the world. COST OF COAL It will be higher next Winter. That is an as sured thing. It will be needed next Winter. You can fill your bins now and escape paying this higher price. While interested, phone your order to KelleY. I J H. M. KELLEY CO. 1 North Third Street Tenth and State Streets EDUCATIONAL School of Commerce ■ Troup Building 15 So. Market Sq. Day & Night School Bookkeeping. Shorthand. Stenotypy. I Typewriting and Penmanship Bell 41)5 Cumberland :4t-V The OFFICE TRAINING SCHOOL Kaufman 31tlg. 4 S. Market So. Training That Secures Salary Increasing Positions In the Office I Call or send to-day for Interesting I : oook'.et "The Art of Getting Along la tbe Worli." Bell Dhone (94-R. Harrisburg Business College Day and Night Bookkeeping. Shorthand. Civil Service Thirtieth Year S-D Market Si. ilarrlabnrg. Pa. Vacation Trips "BY SEA" Baltimore-Philadelphia to Boston Savannah-Jacksonville Delightful Sail. Fine Steamers. !.<>« Fires. IleM Serv ice. Pino your vneatlon to Include ••The Flueet Co««l«lse Trips la the World." T««r Book Free on Keqneat. i MERCHANTS A MIXERS TRASI. CO. ' W. P. TURNER, G. P. A.. Balto.. Ltd. i Consult a*r ticket oc tourist ascot. I This unsound flour always sold at a ridiculous price, but the public al ways paid the regular market price for the finished breadstuff from which it was made. Such was the situation Aug. 19, 1913 on which day. in order to bring : the issue to a crisis as far as the au thorities were concerned. I arranged with Dr. William H. Allen, director of the New York Bureau of Munic ipal Research, to have some of his men make an investigation with me j of the grain piers of Jersey City. Accordingly, Dr. W. H. Deaderick j and J. H. Kirsh'man of the New York Bureau of Municipal Kesearch accom- j panied me on an Inspection of the ; I.ehigh Valley flour and grain piers. There we discovered 58.800 pounds of ; unsound, musty, and inedible flour j i packed in the regulation 196-pound j | cotton bags. These bags are porous. All flour t 'is shipped In them. Hats run over i 'them. They are subject to many un-j speakable forms of contamination in j ' the freight yards. But that is still | 'another matter relating not to.nutri tion but to sanitation. Notwithstanding the regulations of the New York Produce Exchange, ! which require flour to be marked ! 1 "Sound" or "Unsound" according to the .facts, none of this flour bore any I mark indicating its true nature and no satisfactory explanation could be made of this phenomenon by Flour Inspector W. J. Taylor, in charge of Piers I, G. and E, Lehigh Valley Railroad. Jersey City. I notified the Xew York station of : the bureau of chemistry. Department of Agriculture, of our findings, where upon Federal Inspectors Lind and Ford were dispatched to the scene. The government men were denied ac cess to the flour by the railroad offi cials. It is not generally known that Con gress has not endowed federal food inspectors with the power of research. They can be kept out of any factory | ; where the that factory does not want him to enter, thereby mak ing their ability to obtain evidence exceedingly difficult For a period of twenty-four hours j the government men believed that | they could do nothing with the stuff I which in the meantime, I was able to prove, had been rejected as "unsound" by Messrs. Hewer smokes Murad V ''•i*»V , i. .»#• !#'•• '^J m. Turkish not SO d " ~ is the world's most 1 mHE^I^Mh MIND EDUCATION GIVEN ADVANTAGE Physical Education Being Ne glected Declares Dr. Samuel G. Dixon in Statement The present system of education In 1 Pennsylvania is not giving enough at tention to the development of the body and unless more education of the body is supplied, the youths being turned out by schools and colleges will j not be as well equipped as they should ! to fight the battles of life declares Dr. Samuel G. Dixon, State Commissioner of Health. Dr. Dixon devotes his f week-end talk on health to the dls-! cuss'.on of the "uneducated graduates" ! and says that currlculums are not j planned so as to make physical de vclopment easy. Dr. Dixon says in his talk: "A great essential has been ne-! glected in the educaUon of the tens j of thousands of young men and wo-j mer who are graduating from the | high schols and colleges of the coun try. They are presumed to have been fitted to meet the responsibilities and problems of life. In the majority of instances they have had mental but not physical education. "Some few have devoted them selves to a greater or less degree to ; competitive sports. This number is but a small fraction of those who P&sl through our schools. Our currl- : culums are often so planned that they make physical development difficult or Impossible. To lay the foundation of health there should be proper plijslcal training under the supervision of specially trained medical men be ginning in the elementary school and. going through the college course. A | few years of training in youth and' early manhood and womanhood would serve to Instill habits of personal hygiene which would add inestimably to our future welfare, individually and as a nation. "In every activity of life good health Is a primary essential. No mental attainment can make up for i a puny, ill-nourished, ill-developed body. Lack of well-developed pijsluue almost invariably proves a handicap to achievement. Our pres ent system has failed to bring about a balanced education of mind and body. Individual efficiency and preparedness for the uncertainties of life depend upon this. j "To-day Sweden is leading the j world in systematic education with a resulting high average of citizens in dividually prepared to take their part in the defense of their homes. Three thousand years ago the Greeks ap preciated and practiced in the educa- Uon oX their joutb tUis happy com- bination. It was this training that produced the scholars and heroes i whose names live In the world's his ! tory." William Penn Highway Association Meets on Wed. The William Penn Highway Asso ciation of Pennsylvania will hold an j Important meeting Wednesday morn-1 lng at the William Penn Hotel, Pitts burgh. Members of the board of gov- j : ernors from the fourteen counties i along the route and several delega tions of road enthusiasts from differ ent towns- along the road wlll.be there. > One delegation In particular repre-1 sents the Cambria County Pomona | Grange, which has endorsed the Wil liam Penn Highway, and which will | go to Pittsburgh to suggest a minor change in the route from Altoona to : Ebensburg. At noon Wednesday J. W. Donahey, I William Penn governor for Allegheny county, will entertain the other mem bers of the board at luncheon at the : William Penn Hotel. The board of S i governors Is composed of the follow- ! lng: William Jennings, of the Common- I wealth Trust Company, this city, presl- i ; dent; E. M. C. Africa, of Huntingdon, j first vice-president; Frank M. Graff, of Blalrsville, Indiana county, second j vice-president; David Barry, of the i First National Bank, Johnstown, i 1 treasurer; W. L. Plack, of Phlladel- i phla; Joseph D. Finley, of Altoona; H. M. Mlnker, of Reading; A. A. Welmer, of Lebanon; Senator William Manbeck, of Mifflin; James Macklln, ] of McVeytown; S. H. Jackson, of Wil kinsburg, and J. G. H. Rlppman, of 1 Millerstown. On of the best Hair Tonics and Dan druff Remedies can be prepared at ; home by getting a bottle of Jabrequ ; Compound from your druggist and following directions In package. Jabrequ is an exquisitely refined prepa ration for application on the scalp. Used In proper manner, It will supply - the natural oil to the hair. It will , effectually prevent the appearance of I scalp diseases such as dandruff and falling out of hair For sale by all Druggists. 25c.—Adv. THE FERARI SHOW S WILL OPEN TO.MGHT FOR WEEK The Colonel Francis Ferarl Shows carnival train arrived safely about 5 I ip. in. yesterday, and was immediately switched over on to the Reading tracks ! and taken out to the grounds at Sev- I ! CASTORIA • For Tnfafita and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Signature o» JUNE 19, 1916. enteenth and Chestnut streets, where ' the sfcow was unloaded. The numerous red wagons, all spick j and span with fresh paint, were as ] large as the ordinary circus wagons, . and created considerable comment from the crowd of onlookers; nobody ex- | pected the carnival to be so large or as j attractive in appearance as it is, even 1 though the members of the Royal Fire j Company, No. 14, had in a measure pre- | pared everyone for a spllndld show. j All the animals were looking line. The lions were no sooner unloaded from the train than they began roaring. They ! knew that feeding time was at hand: j so did the leopards and pumas and the rest of them. The much advertised Whip was there, S too. By this time it is all set up ready j for the riders, who like novel sensa tions, and It makes a very good show ing. The Rose electric fountain is a massive thing. A number of men work ed steadily for many hours setting It ! up In place ready for the beautiful dis play which will take place this evening. These and many other shows are all j set up and ready for the public on the | old showgrounds at Seventeenth and j The Importance of Skin Care In the Springtime Infections akin diseases are irritat ing, unpleasant, unsightly and dan gerous. There never was a greater mistake made than trying to cure such disorders with pastes, lotions, or creams, rubbed on the outside. You can't cure skin diseases that way, be cause they are the direct result of in fected blood, and you can't rub or eoak poisons out of the blood. The annoyances of skin troubles are worse in spring than any other time. The perspiration that starts with the first warm days,intensifies the smart ing, burning sensation, and makes the trouble almost unbearable. There Is only one way to relieve Uiem, and that is through the blood, which must be thoroughly cleansed and purified. is only one remedy that you can rely upon to io this, and that is Quality in every loaf " 'brings wagon. PENBROOK RAKERY Chestnut streets, and every one come* up to the mark in appearance, making up a regular city of tents and bright, j red wagons. j All the fronts of the shows are con structed of wagons, that of the trained ! wild animal arena being by far the i handsomest, with its rich carving de -1 signs, and decorations. | The 300 or more peojjle connected with the Francis Ferari Shows conduct ied themselves in a businesslike and | courteous manner, which made a good ! Impression on the crowds who were ! out to watch the big train unload. Judging by appearances the members i of the Royal Fire Company have every -1 thing in their favor for a good week. ! All they need are the smiles of the | Weather Man now. The live contests are coming along ! well. The homely man Is the most popular so far. Some well-known citi zens of Harrlsburg have entered it and j they all seem determined to win, so It : looks like a close run. The boys who have entered for the bicycle and watch are busy, too, gathering In votes, in i their efforts to obtain one or the other , of these two useful gifts.—Advertlse j ment. S. S. the surest and bttt blood cleanser known. S. S S. acts with sure effect directly upon the blood —taken internally, it goes right into the blood vessels, drives out every bit of poison of what ever nature, kills the germs that starve and impoverish the blood, re stores the skin to its proper condition and srives you healthy hone and tissue building blood. Even the worst cases, such as scrofula and blood poison, yield promptly to this efficient vege table remedy. It doesn't matter how long you have had skin trouble, or if it has developed into chronic sores that you had given up all hope of cur ing. Take S.S. S. when all else fails. It brings relief. Write our Medical Department, Room 4, Swift Specific Ccfl\pany, Atlanta, Ga. | 9