I All Advertise SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY Cut Prices! Cvery Day S Special For IM-tces. Toilet Articles Special For I Every Day Toilet Speelal For | I Prices. Saturday. Saturday. Price.. Saturday. Every Day IVJL V Vil V 111 VU Special For 35c Doan's Kidney Pills 32? " udnut ' s Toilet w ater 570 53c Mercolized Wax 48? ' '*** . * 2g. § 67c Kilmer's Swamp Root 590 uc * nu * s Cold Cream I 34p Foley's Honey and Tar 280 Djer Kiss Talcum Powder 190 53c Pinaud's Lilac Water 470 '7c Carters K. &B. Tea .. 100 17c Olive Tablets 150 er Face Powder f . 1 28c Limestone Phosphate 190 38c Da SS ett & Ramsdell Cream 31 $ 34c Hind's Honey and Almond Cream 310 17c Pinkham's Sanative Wash 140 1 34c Mi-o-na Tablets 290 13c Talcum Powder 110 }sc Williams' Violet Talcum Powder 100 6? Hd - Sarsaparilla 570 ■ , , . . 18c KalDhenn Tonth 1A ~ I7c Samtol Face Cream .! 130 p . t I lc Antiphlogistine 0 j 4,g c p orn p e i an Massage Cream 430 36c Angier's Emulsion 310 I 17c Alexander's Lung Healer 110 , S Powder 140 34c p ebe co Tooth Paste 29c 71c Angier's Emulsion - 610 34c Booth's JEiyomei Liq 290 S4c Canthrox 21$ 12 c Swansdown Powder 10<s SI.OO Fellow's Hypophosphites 930 34c Pape s Diapepsin 280 " $1.34 Eckman's Alterative sl.lß I 5 1% ICY-HOT BOTTLES AT SPECIAL PRICES »♦ 65c Peruna 590 An indispensable convenience for motoring, boating, fishing, hunting, camping and picnicking, 38c Nulfey Tablets 310 34c Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur 290 Will keep things icy cold three days or steaming hot twenty-four hours. A large number of 28c Lapactic Pills - 250 49c Jad's Kidney Salts 410 these have been purchased at a figure which permits us to sell them at exceptionally low prices. 37c Phillips' Milk Magnesia 320 ■ 59c Father John's 610 Quarts and pints in various patterns, at $2.25, $3.50 and $4.50. 17c Sloan's Liniment 150 ■ 55c Swift's Specific 530 27c Sugar of Milk 250 P 56c Bromo Seltzer 55e \ ' "n 34c Cal Syrup of Figs -. 280 I 34c Williams' Pink Pills 300 $1.25 Fountain CI CQ Wof Pr O 17c Beecham ' s Pills 15 <* I 17c Atwood s Bitters 140 C /CiC X i Water 38c Rheuma 290 17c Morse's Pills 150 oyrillge BottleS 17c Tonsiline 150 I s 120 This syringe is made of good heavy red rubber, 75c Enos' Fruit Salts 570 Pi CO S 290 with extra large tubing and three hard rubber pipes. This water bottle is guaranteed for one year, made 67c Phelp's Rheumatic Elixir 570 U .1° *9O It was made up tQ sdl fQr $1 25 Qur price> Q of good heavy rubber, and is bound to give QO 75c Fruitola 590 H 630 Saturday only /OC good satisfaction. Saturday price L 17 c Beggy Musterine 140 Q 57c Wampole's Cod Liver Oil 550 [ ' 67c Sargol Tablets 550 H 23c Fletcher's Castoria .....190 ' sl.lO S. S. S SI.OO £ 50c Hall's Catarrh Remedy 450 s t -\ 34c Pinex 290 t 14c Carter's Liver Pills 120 OC Al cn Hol of fj • l 34c King's New Discovery 290 I 38c Bengue Balm 350 £>C AICOHOI 1 | "^ c Canthrox 270 otOVeS , Bl*Ush 75c Resinol Ointment 670 I Wf» mrrt an v ne Alcohol Stove, one can of Xo bath room is comp i e te without a good bath f„ A D ~ "\ Z .n 1 we meet any advertised price solid alcohol, both 1 w brush. ™. u the b« t bargain in the city oo All Rubber Goods Specially our competitors for JLM. C tor the money. Only a limited number at ««3C Priced For Saturday I Saturday Specials—KENNEDY'S—32l Market Street | FO n TW THEY BUILD OK y * & DESTROY AMAZING BUT RARELY SUSPECTED TRUTHS ABOUT THE THINGS YOU EAT By ALFRED W. McCANN CHAPTER 86. I'liere is a limit to all physical en durance, Including the endurance of vital organs and glands burden ed with excess. Many phenomena are to be found wliich indicate that it is the bombardment of refined sugars which finally causes the Pancreas to break down, destroy ing the body's natural defense against diabetes. From the increased tolerance of the Habetlc for honey, wnlch contains the mineral salts and colloids natural to he unrefined, unmanipulatod nectar )f flowers, as compared with the les sened tolerance of the diabetic for rlucose and other refined and demin sralized sugars, observed by Davidoff, vt» can draw no other conclusion than he one which has been running ACIDS IN THE SYSTEM Acids accumulating in the system in excess, poison the blood and cause a great variety of diseases, affecting the skin and other mucous surfaces, tho beart and arteries, brain and generaj nervous system, joints and muscles. Some of these diseases are Rheuma tism in its many forms, Catarrh, , cz f ma ' itching and burning >f the skin, dizziness, mental depres iion and a variety of other ailments, iou must eliminate tho acid from four system and purify your blood Bringing Up Father # (0) <$ # # MR. J AN\ l WOULD HEtfl TOU DONT 1 Ike f T" T7 " I CRAT-^t--TO j THINK - tS THt5 feiSSpH JfSKSSSU '"-"'"a SSX. »?"«-' HUH? sjy«ss« L ■' FRIDAY EVENING, through these chapters from the be ginning. Food, as supplied by Mother Na ture, according to me fixed laws which everywhere disclose their wis dom under a study of the phenomena of nutrition, simply asks to be let slope. Refining processes change its nature, destroy its integrity and rob it of the very substance for the need of which it Is consumed by the body. Our bread, our starches and our sugars teach this great dietetic truth based on the proposition that every food product in seaoon, fully matur ed and unrefined, contains all the ele ments necessary to see It safely on its journey through the body. We know that in health the circu lation can utilize only a certain fixed quantity of glucose—o.l per cent.— beyond which quantity the healthy or yon can be rid of your trouble. ■ u' k* 3 )ecn purifying and nour ishing the biood for over half a cen tor/- 11 also a vcj-y efficient tonic and being purely vegetable, it is the most efficient agent known in the cleansing of the blood and toning up •of the system. Call for it at your druggists and don t accept a substitute. If special medical advice is desired write Med ical Department 93, Swilt Specific Co, Atlanta. Ga. normal pancreas, one of the vital or gans of the body, according to the Investigations of Zulzar, Pfluger, Cohnhelm. Minkowski, Norten, Do mlnicis, Kleiner and Meltzer, seems to set up an Impenetrable barrier. Well Indeed may the scientist who Is looking for strange reasons to ex plain the origin of diabetes be asked these questions: How, even In health, can the human body profit by the consumption of enormous non-utiliz able quantities of starch, glucose or sugar? How long can the body tolerate this overload or excess? To what does this excess lead? Can It lead to disease call that dis ease by the name of diabetes or by some other name? In diseased conditions of the con trolling organ the excess or waste glucose is eliminated through the kid- , neys. yet all America Is encouraged to use refined sugars, starches and glucose In enormous quantities, not withstanding the fact that in order to pass Into the circulation at all, be yond the fixed limit of 0.1 per cent., a vital organ, the pancreas, must first break down and become diseased, or, in other words, permit diabetes to de velop. It ts well known that the body in health manufactures In a natural manner from the starches, gums, sugars and fats of vegetables, grains and fruits all the glucose It requires for its normal needs and all the glu- , cose It can utilize. "As long as the body remains in , health" the circulation possesses the ability and readiness to rid itself of a surplus of glucose, but in the case of : arrowing animals, old animals, ani mals bearing offspring, animals nour ishing their young, or animals in a feeble state of health, it Is not known i by any scientist to what extent the circulation, already overtaxed, pos sesses the power to rid itself daily ■ of a large surplus of glucose, the tol erance toward whlcn, as we have al ready seen, is decidedly limited. There is indeed much evidence to < support the conviction that under h HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH such extra burden the controlling or gan (the pancreas) must succumb to the strain, thus opening the way to the development of that disease, the origin of which seems to be so mys terious, but which all men agree upon in calling it diabetes. We see in the diminished tolerance for sugars, starches and glucose, even in mild forms of diabetes, an evi dence of the failure of the overtaxed body to function normally, where re fined sugars and starches are con cerned. Prospective mothers, nursing moth ers, .people in delicate health, the growing, the aged, certainly do not possess over a long period of time the unlimited power of disposing of the waste products of over-indulgence in refined sugars, starches and glucose, regardless of the health of the pan creas. In these cases it is apparently not the pancreas alone, but other organs as well which become involved under the strain. Pfluger concluded, as a result of his experiments, that there is a close re lationship between the liver and "Pancreas-diabetes," declaring that "the liver in diabetes works actively and is the most important seat of production in diabetic-sugar." Eppinger, Folta and Rudinger have adduced evidence to show that there is a certain relationship existing in pancreas-diabetes between the pan creas, adrenals and thyroids. They assert that it is not the pan creas alone that controls the blood content of glucose. What, then, is to be said of the oonciusions of those scientists who persist in attributing to the failure of the pancreas the cause of diabetes and who seem to look upon the glucose factor only as a symptom of the disease and never as its cause? The accidental observation of Da vidoff, who noted that when is permitted in the diet of diabetics it not only does not increase the glyco suria but actually diminishes the ex cretion of sugar, and that, therefore, honey }s a very useful article of food .n diabetes, would seem to throw all the learned discussions of the glucose factor into confusion and despair. Man is fool indeed when he forgets the commonplace at his feet and looks for consolation In vainglorious theories, the application of which re sults in vast profits to commercial institutions whose stockholders are quite content to leave all scientific questions concerning their products to the remotest of remote futures. To Penalize Dealers Failing to Pay Revenue Deputy Collector Vollmer at the Harrisburg United States Revenue of fice, is sending out a last notice that all special taxes as dealers in tobacco, manufacturers of cigars and tobacco, proprietors of pool and billiard tables, proprietors of theaters and public ex hibitions and such other taxes as are levied by the emergency revenue law will bo subject to 50 per cent, penalty if not paid before August first. Deputy Collector Vollmer reports that there is a much heavier payment of this tax for this period than for the first half of the year, owing largely to the increased number of people en gaging in the several lines of business that are subject to the tax. Light Co. Pushing Underground Conduit Work in West End Underground conduit and wire con struction work in South street, from Second to Spring, tn Green from Boas to Verbeke, and Tn Boas from Myrtle to River, is being pushed ahead with all possible speed by the Harrisburg Light and Power Company. By September 1, according to L. L. Ferree, superintendent of construction, the underground wire work in the west end of the city will be well advanced, and the city wly have taken big strides JULY 21. 1916. forward in the movement to eliminate the network of wires and poles from the streets, so far a 6 the electric com pany is concerned. City Commissioner Harry F. Bowman and Superintendent Ferree conferred this morning on the underground wire problem. A feature of the talk was the proposed lighting of Federal Square and the elimination of the poles and wires in Court street from Walnut street northward. Mr. Bowman wants to obtain the co-operation of the Fed eral authorities in solving the problem, as a big portion of the work will come Uncle Sam's Jurisdiction. To that end he will endeavor to get Postmaster Sites interested with a view to obtain ing the consent of the Washington au thorities. NUXATED IRON Increases strength hvPVWVN of deUcate. nervous, li!e riTITITII rundown people 200 H fill liUi per cent - ten days H|||| LaJ in many instances. I HAUB SIOO forfeit it It MiMHI rails as per full ex- I W*il J planatlon In large I tlj ■m B article soon to ap pear In this paper. ~Ask your doctor or druggist about it. Croll Keller and G. A. Gorgas always have It —Advertise- ment. BDUOATIOIfAA. School of Commerce Troup Building Ift So. Market SQ. Day & Night School Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Stenotypy, Typewriting and Penmanship Hell 4bi CmnberlHwi -iu-X Harrisburg Business College A Reliable School, 31st Year S2B Market St. Harrisburg, Pa. Mid Summer Tonic Red Clover Compound If the blood Is poor, weak watery or diseased. If the nerves are shattered—the body thin, taJce our remedy Red Clover Compound product that is sure to benefit and permit the good effects to remain. 500 and SI.OO the bottle Forney'sDrugStore Second St., Near Walnut FUNERAL AND EHBALMGR.! IL 1745—47 N.SJXTH ST: GEORGE H. SOURBIER FUNERAL DIRECTOR (310 North Third Street Bell Pkvne. Auto Service, Try Telegraph Want Ads 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers