Who Not Have Real Good Hair Cuticuia Will SuieluHelpYou If yon have dandruff your hairwill be dry and thin. Try one treatment with Cuti cura. Rub spots of dandruff with Oint ment. Next morning 6hampoo with Soap. Sample Each Free by Mail With 32-p. book on ths skin. Address post-card: "Cutlcura, Dept. SF, Boston.*' Soldersrywhsrs. lOTHE HOT WATER I W TOD BESKE A ROSY COMPLEXION Baya we can't help but look better and feel better after an Inelde bath. To look one's best and feel one's best Is to enjoy an Inside bath each morn ins to flush from the system the pre vious day's waste, sour fermentations and poisonous toxins before it is ab sorbed into the blood. Just as coal, when It burns, leaves behind a certain amount of incombustible material In the form of ashes, so the food and drink taken each day leave in the ali mentary organs a certain amount of Indigestible material, which, if not eliminated, form toxins and poisons which are then sucked into the blood throagn the very ducts which are in tended to suck in only nourishment to sustain the body. If you want to see the glow of healthy bloom in your cheeks, to see your skin get clearer and clearer, you are told to drink every morning upon arising a glass of hot water with a tea t-poonful of limestone phosphate in it, which is a harmless means of washing the waste material and toxins from the ctomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, thus cleansing, sweetening and purify ing the entire alimentary tract, before putting more food into the stomach. Men and women with sallow skins; liver spots, pimples or pallid com plexion, also those who wake up with • n coated tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, others who are bothered with headaches, bilious spells, acid stomach or constipation should begin this phos phated hot water dr.inking and are assured of very pronounced results in one or two weeks. A quarter pound of limestone phos phate costs very little at the drug store but is sufficient to demonstrate that Just as soap and hot water cleanses, purifies and freshens the skin on the outside, so hot water and limestone phosphate act. on the inside organs. We must always consider that internal sanitation is vastly more important than outside cleanliness, because the skin porta do not absorb impurities Into the blood, while the bowel pores do. We Had 1000 of These Eyeglass Mountings at SI.OO each ISK Gold Filled There are only a few left. They are going fast and cannot be duplicated for less than $2.00 each after these are sold. If you need a good mount ing now or think you will in the fu ture, It will pay you to buy now. Your lenses can be put in now or later free of charge. This price does not Include lenses. 302 Market St., with H. C. Cluster Best Furnace Ceal Our Wilkes-Barre Stove is the kind and size of coal used in most furnaces in this city and vicinity. Its quality hasn't varied in years, and it produces a longer burning bed because it is cut from r mammoth veins—and is the heart of anthracite. These days of higher priced coal you want all coal. Be par ticular and order Kelley's famous Hard Stove for your furnace. H. M. Kelley & Co. Office: IN. 3rd St. Yards, 10th and State Sts. Use Telegraph Want Ads MONDAY EVENING, vnnnc they build or A V/ Vi JLW & DESTROY AMAZING BUT RARELY SUSPECTED TRUTHS ABOUT THE THINGS YOU EAT xit& rl sV<S&s By ALFRED W. McCANN That Portion of the Public Which PerslstenUy Refuses to Believe That the Milk Industry Is In a Demoralized and Dangerous Condition Is Con fronted by the Public Act of a Gov ernor of New York State, Whose State ment, (Issued to the Press March 6, 1914, Reveals in a Pew Words More of the Underhand Activities of Uie Dairy Products Business Than all the Public 1 *roseditions of Recent Years —Overnight This Statement Succeeded in Opening Eyes That Were Seemingly Closed Forever. When the facts, proved by docu mentary evidence, concerning the manner in which Governor Glynn was deceived into appointing a "padded" Milk Commission, were laid before him, he took into his own hands the treachery by which it was proposed to use the office of chief executive of the State to prevent the exposure of gross irregularities in the milk in dustry and to interfere with all legis lation aimed at the milk abuses not only of New York but of the entire country. March 6, 1914, the Milk Commission was reorganized and the governor is sued the folowing statement: "At the time I appointed the com mission, as. the result of a cleverly executed trick on the part of certain milk dealers, I did not know of their operations in connection with the paid lobbyists of certain scientific labora tories to defeat all legislation for bet ter and cleaner milk. "I did not know that members of my commission had attended the con ference at Buffalo, December, 1913, with officers of the New York State Ice Cream Manufacturers' Associa tion, at which conference it was de cided that no standards should be adopted to control the sanitary char acter of ice cream. "I did not know that one week later at the annual convention of the New York State Dairymen's Associa tion at Syracuse, an attorney for one of the trade journals was shoved Into the program to read a paper on 'Meddlers and Muddlers." "I did not know that two members of my commission had warned the Syracuse dairymen that there was likelihood of reform legislation in 1914, which would have to be blocked because it might prove dangerous to pasteurize dirty milk, as is now be ing done, if such legislation were en acted. "I did not know that one of my members had three men thrown off the committee on resolutions of the New York State Dairymen's Associa tion, in order to substitute three men of his own crowd, when it became known that the New York Milk Com mittee intended to ask for an en dorsement of standards that would better the milk supply. "I did not know that in appointing one of my commissioners I was ap pointing a man who the farmers think ia active in representing their interests, but who has shown marked signs of sympathy with the milk deal ers. "I did not know that I was ap pointing a person to the commission who had charged Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, in writing with taking $20,000 graft, and who had repeated these charges to club women of the Gen eral Federation of Women's Clubs all over the country. "I did not know that this person when charged by Dr. Wiley with these accusations denied them, al though in the meantime two of the written charges with signatures at tached have been placed in my pos session. "I did not know that there were such strong motives on the part of some of my advisers for heading off an Investigation which would reveal one of the most infamous conspira cies against public health ever re corded in this State. "I did not know that I was ap- Lumbago Lets Go and He Feels 0 K Once More He Felt So Stiff and Worn Out He Thought His Usefulness Was Gone— But Master Medicine Sent Him Back to Work ''l was a fine example of 'every pic ture tells a story'," says John N. Jones, of 12 20 Camden street, Harrisburg. "1 was that, crippled up with lumbago that I couldn't straighten myself up and I felt sc worn out that I thought my days of usefulness were about done. "I suffered agonies. Why, I couldn't even bend over to tie my shoes with out feeling as if a streak of fire was running up and down my back, and when 1 did get down X couldn't get straightened up again. "I tried a lot of different kinds of medicines without any results so far as I could see and I had a picture of my self out of work and not able to lift a hand- to earn my living. It wasn't such a very pleasant outlook for a man of ray ago, was It? "Then one day 1 read about Tanlac in my paper and X came right down and got a bottle, for, said I, 'lf it will do so much for other people, it looks as if it would help me." Did it? Al most before you could say How-de-do I was feeling better, and from that time on my improvement has been steady until now I am back on my job again and feeling five years younger. "Now I feel absolutely O K and am back on my old job again and I can truthfully say that Tanlac put me there." Tanlac, the famous reconstructive and Invigorating tonic that works such wonders in the restoration of run-down rystems, le now being specially Intro duced here at Gorgas' Drug Store, 16 North Third street, where the Tanlac man Is dally explaining this master medicine to many interested listeners. Tanlac is also sold at the Gorgas Drug Store in the P. R. R. Station. fetiHarfranfl l Like everything | else tobacco has I I soared in price. A the quality of Gen. m Hartranft cigars re il mains unchanged and I ,j| the price is still a | I n After nil these yean 1 I B of effort to make a | I jgj nickel cigar worthy Its 9 I H distinguished name, we 9 I I ar ® to ° P r<>u <l of its 9 ■ni sncceßß 10 make any | ■fflj changes that would ef- I ifflf feet its quality, regard- H | UH less of the Increased IV ra cost of tobacco. 1 f pointing seven creatures who by their conduct have indicated that they were ready to jeopardize the dignity of the executive chamber to obtain their ends, not stopping at the betrayal of the chief executive himself. "The necessity of studying the milk situation was urged upon me through channels which I trusted implicitly. The creation of a milk commission was proposed as the best means of inquiring into the facts concerning milk production and distribution as they relate to the producer, the dis tributor, and the consumer. "When a list of names was handed to me as the moat disinterested and efficient group obtaiinable under the indorsement of the New York State Agricultural Society, there was noth ing left to do but to make the ap pointment. "It was not explained to roe at the time that there was already on file scientific data concerning milk ob tained from nearly every State in the Union, as the result of investigations and conferences conducted under the auspices of the National Commission on Milk Standards. "I was not informed that the pro posed milk standards had been in dorsed by the American Public Health Association, the American Medical Veterinary Association, and the In ternational Milk Dealers' Association, as well as by numerous other civic oganizaiions interested in the purifi cation of our national milk supply. "Now that I learn that some of the members of the commission have openly boasted that they have plenty of money to use for the purpose of interfering with legislation and in tend to use it for such purpose, it may be possible that serious bribery charges will grow out of the evidence now accumulating. "In the moantimie the friends of pure milk may be assured that the governor's milk commission will never accomplish the work which it has made such a brazen effort to un dertake." So ended the milk commission as a body, but the activities of its former members did not end, as we shall see. Saturday Was Birthday Anniversary of— IBSI K,: jHH ipf Ji HLJr WBSm HUH ' -ft J|®HH ■HHgg EARLE E. RENN, Young attorney of this city who is already beginning to make his mark in the legal world. During the last session of the Legislature Mr. Renn was an assistant in the State Legisla tive Bureau. He is taking an active interest in politics and is quite a stump speaker for such a youngster. City Briefs Socialist to I.eeture. W. Scott Ben nett, of Australia, will lecture on Sat urday evening at Third and Verbeke streets, under the auspices of the So cialist party. Pair Held For Court. Charged with stealing clothing, a watch and a locket, Clarence and Keitina Williams were held under S3OO bail for court by Alder man Hilton on Saturday night. Wreck Delnvn Trains. A rear-end collision of freight trains seven miles north of Kenovo late last night, de layed all passf-nger trains from the north into Harrlsburg over.the North ern Central railroad. Camp (nrtln Firemen to Meet. Members of the Camp Curtin Fire Com pany will hold a special meeting to morrow night to arrange plans to at tend the State Firemen's convention at Scranton next week. Overheated Stove Starts Fire. An overheated oil stove in the home of Georgo Good, 1722 Nprth Fourth street, started a small fire yesterday after noon. District fire apparatus respond ed to an alarm from Box 62, Fourth and Hamilton streets. The damage was slight. Drops liquor; .Tailed. When Rob ert Burnley, colored, dropped two quarts of liquor on the pavement at Fourth and Market streets, Saturday night, his wife began quarreling with him, according to tho police. Roth were cent to Jail on disorderly conduct charges. l.nhor Union* to Meet. An open meeting of all labor organization mem bers to discuss political conditions will be held next Sunday evening at 7.,'HJ In White's Hall, Verbeke and James streets. HUGHEY DOUGHERTY IS BACK IN PHIUA... A I'VBUC CHARGE Philadelphia, Sept. 2 s.—Haunted by hallucinations and broken in health and spirit, more blind than when he went West and practically penniless, Hughey Dougherty, the veteran Phila delphia minstrel, arrived in this city yesterday in the custody of a Dos An geles court officer. He had been sent back to his old home at the direction of a judge of the Superior Court of California because he had become a public charge in an insane asylum of that state. Harpoon Dated 1861 Found in Swordfish Tx>s Angeles. Sept. 25.—The body of a large swordfish was washed up on the shore near the mouth of To pango canyon. Tho fish had been dead but a short time. Firmly im bedded in its back was part of a har poon, It was badly rusted, but when extracted the name "Leed" and the figures 1861 were discernible. The flesh had grown firmly around the head of the harpoon, and the ex posed part had rusted and crumbled away to a great extent. Razor, Used Twice a Week for 72 Years, Still Sharp Hagerslown. Md„ Sept. 25. To shave with the same razor twice a week, without honing or grinding, for seventy-two years, is something that Joseph Kuhn, of Hancock, chn boast about. Mr. Kuhn, who is now R5, when 13 years old, was presented with Ihe razor, which ho has used regularly twice a week, and which, he says, Is latin la excellent condition. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH A Great Stroke to Stop the Terrible Fire Loss A great move by a great fire-fighting organization takes place today. A direct factory branch of the Pyrene Manufac turing Company goes into operation at once. It is a great institution for fire protection. A large, select, highly trained, well-equipped organization of fire-prevention specialists. Any factory, any building, will be inspected and reported on by men who know how best to equip establishments to prevent fire and to save lives. This inspection service is under the direct personal supervision of Chief Guerin, widely known as the man who organized the New York Fire Prevention Bureau. The fire loss in this territory must be cut down 50 to 75 per cent. Horrible fires, paralyzing industry and destroying property and human life, must cease. This stroke of the Pyrene Company opens the way. It is equivalent to putting a fire stationin each home, factory, school, church, hospital and office building. Pyrene can be operated by any man, woman or small child. It puts out fires quickly, surely, when they start. Pyrene Manufacturing Company j Makers of a Complete Line of Fire Appliances SEPTEMBER 25, 1916 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers