CROSS, FEVERISH CHILD IS BILIOUS OR CONSTIPATED Look, Mother! See if tongue is coated, breath hot or stomach sour. "California Syrup of Figs" can't harm tender stomach, liver, bowels. Every mother realizes, after giving her children "California Syrup of Figs," that this is their ideal laxa tive, because they love its pleasant taste and it thoroughly cleanses the tender little stomach, liver and bow els without griping. When cross, Irritable, feverish, or breath is bad, stomach sour, look at the tongue, mother! If coated, give a teaspoonful of this harmless "fruit laxative," and in a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, sour bile and undigested food passes out of the bowels, and you have a well, playful child again. When the little system is full of cold, throat sore, has stom* ach-ache, diarrhoea, indigestion, colic remember, a good "inside cleansing" should always be the first treatment given. Millions of mothers keep "California Syrup ot Figs" handy; they know a teaspoonful to-day saves a sick child to-morrow. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs," which has directions for ba bies, children of all ages and grown ups printed on the bottle. Beware of counterfeits sold here, so don't be fooled. Get the genuine, made by "California Fig Syrup Company." A CLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy Cheeks Sparkling Eyes —Most Women Can Have Sa>6 Dr. Kdwards, a Well-Known Oliio Physician Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 years treated scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription i made of a few well-known vegetable lnsredients mixed with olive oil, nam- j ing them Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, j you will know them by their olive 1 color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a ! normal action, carrying off the waste and poiosnous matter in one's system. If you have a pale face, sallow look. ! dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, headaches, a listless, no-good feeling. ' all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tab- j lets nightly for a time and note the pleasing results. Thousands of women as well as men take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets—the successful substitute for caloml—now and then Just to keep in the pink of * condition. 10c and 25c per box. All ' druggists. High Cost of Coal VARIOUS things have contributed to, and j made necessary the ad vanced coal prices. Consumers, therefore, should be more careful than ever in selecting fuel to in sure their getting full value for every cent paid for coal. Kelley's coal is Mammoth Vein fuel all carbon and no slate and is delivered all coal. Nothing paid for that doesn't burn and give heat. H. M. KELLEY & CO. Office, 1 North Third Yard*, Tenth and Mate GeaHartranfi i m The brand that sells so fast that the cigars- never dry in , i the case. , I Why don't you get I Jj the same smoke en fjj joyment out of life Jfl that thousands of I!| other men do? jug t They know the UIU significance of a IllS 6°°d name. , That's Gen. Hart iJi? ran^< Sold every wß where. I _ ■■ ! Use Telegraph Want Ads MONDAY EVENING. HXBMBBURO tfsf&t- TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 9, 1916. GO TO SEE THIS REAL COUNTY FAIR All Induslri.il Clubs of Y. W. C. A. Are Making Money For t Camp Nepahwin A genuine county fair will bo staged in the Y. V". C. A. building on Friday and Saturday of this week. There will be exhibits of various kinds of foods and produce, sideshow 3, fancywork, art galleries, booths of various kinds, vaudeville and a series of faked-fakes which will keep the visitors laughing from the time they enter until they leave. Opening hour is 7 o'clock Fri day night. Saturday thehours will be from 10 in the morning until 10.30 at night. Music, lemonade, cake, pie, sand- j wichet and hot drinks are some of the I gastronomical detairc being worked out, along with such substantial as a , 25-cent lunch at noon Saturday for I those who want to put in the entire ' day there or have a good, clean meal i without much exertion or expense. j The work is being done by more j than 160 members of the industrial and high school girls' clubs for the 1 purpose of raising funds to help pay ! the 5C.900 mortgage on the girls' sum- 1 nier camp in the mountains near Wil- • liamsport where girls from Maryland, I Delaware, Pennsylvania and Washing- j ton, D. C.,_ may spend vacations at a ' cost of $4.50 a week during the sum- 1 mer months. The various committees and their members are: Gerteral committee Mrs. Mabel Cronise Jones, Mrs. John German, Jr., Mrs. John W. Reily, Miss Florence Carroll. Miss Julia Stanun and Miss Sylvania N'agle. ft Publicity and tickets—Miss Florence Carroll and Miss Sylvania Xagle. Program Miss Marian Leib and Miss Frances Acuft. Decorations—Miss Dora Coe. Miss ■ Julia Stamm, Miss Bessie Failor and i Miss Helen Runkle. Fntertainment—Miss Suzanne West- j j brock. Miss Katherine Dubbs, Miss ! ; Pauline Miller and Miss Mary Heikes. i Sideshows—Miss Kit Morgan, Miss Marjorie Bolles. Miss Elizabeth Kit- | ' linger, Miss Ruth Spotz, Miss Ruth j Starry. Miss Mildred Runkle. Miss ! Irene Burns. Miss Anna Harris. Miss i Miriam Brown. Miss Pearl Yahn, Miss ■ Marjorie Wall. Miss Mabel Charles. | Miss Bertha Motter, Miss Margaret I i Pollock and Miss Clara Wolf. Cake—Mrs. John German, Jr.. Miss Thclnia Klaiss. Miss Bertha Shunk, ! Miss Mary Walborn, Miss Margaret , Hause. Miss Viola Bird. Miss Ethel ! FUiher, Miss Edith Eisenhart, Miss i i Delia Fox. Miss Anna Fry, Miss Minnie ! Biough. Mrs. Emma Miller, Miss Min ; nie Sachs, Miss Grace Fillmore, Miss j j Fanny Albert. Miss Hazel Snow. Miss ! ! V$ y ver stick. Miss Adelaide Yingst, i Miss Mary Longenecker. ' Mrs. Bertram Saul, Mrs. | Gillispie, Miss Bertha Adams, Miss I Mary Fenstemacher. Miss Mvrtle ' ! Shure. Miss Lizzie Fraelich, Miss Car- ! I rie Gabel, Miss Grace Brown, Miss Mae ! Patterson, Miss Anna Gerhart. Mrs. | Raber, Mrs. Hazel Massamore, Miss < Beulah Staley, Miss Esther Adams, Miss Buth Bishop, Miss Marguerite Reynolds and Miss Mary L/Oudenslager. Groceries—Miss Anna Margaret Mil ler. Mrs. Haehnlen, Miss Edith Rohler. Miss Edna Kessler. Miss Anna Adams. Miss Martha Farmer. Miss Minnie Boak, Miss Ruth Gilbert, Miss Mav Freet, Miss Fanny Reynolds. Mrs i Elsie Eckert. Mrs. Mary Hess, Miss ! j Edith Wilson, Miss Mary Miller, Miss i Myrtle Bierbower. Miss Ethel Klinger Miss Helen Regar. Miss Cecil Smith! I Aliss Leola Shope and Miss Elsie Con dron. I-ancywork—Miss Elizabeth Garner Miss Irene Orem. Miss Mabfl Leigh Miss Nancy Kline. Miss Alleta Oyler, Miss Hazel Bowman. Miss Gertrude Zeider. Miss Muriel Oyler, Miss Anna r aimer. Miss Esther Smith. Miss Anna Blocker. Miss Sadie Magruder, Miss Mna Jacques, Miss Belle Fortney. Miss Anna Staley, Miss Anna Dare", Miss Fleanor Jones and Miss Margaret Hill. Popcorn and salted peanuts—Miss Alverda Hertzler. Miss Frances Acuff Miss May Yingling. Miss Maude Gil bert. Miss Helen Capello, Miss May Myers, Miss Mary Carpenter. Miss Jes sie Cummings, Miss Marian Matchner Miss Sarah Beard. Miss Esther Craft Miss Sarah Crown, Miss Mary Peiffer! r.i rS ' u I l ' Mlss Fann >' Benson, Miss Olive Hocker. Miss Miriam Goshorn Miss Louise Baer, Miss Katherine Roeaer and Miss-Ida Stine ~f d flowers Mi ss Carrie fu ¥, is ; £ loren <-e Richter. Miss Martha Mahaffev, Miss Marie Sturm Miss Helen Miller Miss Fanny M C L.™n. Miss Lea Lusk, Miss Rose Lynch, Mrs. Black. Miss Helen Hunter, Miss Blanche Donnelly. Miss Ruth Hart man. Miss Edna Frank. Miss Anna Hhoads. Miss Bertha Ward. Miss Kathcryn Carl. Miss Gertrude Konnev Miss Margaret Geisking. Miss Mildred Burkholder, Mrs. May Bard and Miss Jean Matter. Pink lemonade Miss Mae Crouse Miss Lottie Ziegler. Miss Flora Hol singcr. Miss Ada Kepford. Miss Clara Lichtenberger, Miss Catherine Miller Miss Daisy Mateer. Miss Aletta Ovler" Miss Mabel Rudy. Miss Chariotte Grass, Mlss Carrie Orem, Miss Anna alz. Miss Catherine Keen, Miss Mar garet Hassler, Miss Roda Peters. Ice cream cones—Miss Edna Mell Mrs. Mary Griffle, Miss Lillian McUiin' Miss Mabel Shellhamer. Miss Marv Meade, Miss Ruth Fisher Miss* Ida Pimm.. Miss Jessie Bishop, Miss Freda Tennis, Miss Ruth Anderson Miss I.oretta Sprueebank, Mis* Anna Por ter. Mrs Esther Enney. Miss Miriam Hiines. Miss Lydia Weigel, Miss Mil dred Gallasrher. Miss Irene Nye, Miss Kathryn Hepschmidt and Mrs' Ara Lusk. One feature of the proeram on Fri day evening will be a stunt given bv the Seiler school girls, the program of whtoh is "T.ord UMin's Daughter," read bv Miss Fleming; Lord X'llin, Alice Thomnson; Lord Ellin's daughter Dorothv Rurlock; the chieftain. Eliz nbfth Zieeler: boatman. Mary Hawes- Lord T'llin's followers. Annette Steele and Judith I,ee Dismukes: waves Dor othy Cox. Martha Bullitt, Louise Plank and Helen Davis. Rud Face With Amonizsd Cocoa And Watch Wrinkles Go Brnuty Dortor Sn> Any Ytoman May Hove Clear, Smooth, Skin, Free From and Wrinklra If you have wrinkles or crows feet and want to remove them don't stick plasters on your face or apply danger ous lotions or creams which may injure your skin, nor resign yourself to the idea that you must continually he em barrassed by these marks of time, but go to any good druggist and get a little ordinary amonized cocoa and apply this over the wrinkles for a few nights and you will he surprised to see how quick ly they disappear and how nicelv it brightens up the old dead skin and con tracts the enlarged pores. Winifred Grace Forrest who is an au thority on Beauty culture, recently stal ed In the New York World that an* woman who has wrinkles, enlarged pores or flabby, loose skin could posi tively and quickly overcome these d'e stroyers of beauty by the use of this simple yet delightful and natural beau tifier. Furthermore the cost is so little that it is within the reach of all The above coming as it does from such a Connoisseur of Beauty should appeal strongly to every ladv 'who ap preciates what a fair face means to tH gentle sex.—Advertisement. "gfc. aip CLIPPING Clip R M mggJL W MM * Mm ■ With Thin Clipping. 25c value. f • V J fV S 10c value. Ladies' Brassieres, m mV •% Mw *% Children's Hose 15c Wfip Llip Supporters, With l liih Clipping. Q/• 15c value. W • Jlffl/ _ _ , with Thi. < n PP i BK Tight-fitting Cor- | .fIV) fI f% 15c value. set Covers, Vlf 1/ f| 1/ Hair Nets, with 9c " aii At r clastic, 3 for clip tom OR R 0 Cl 'p "Ar wnh Thi nipping Tomorrow brings to you another of these monthly events that have been gaining in popularity,month Wlth T j?,, C „ l lot 50c value by month. From every corner of the store scores of exceptional values have been gathered together /i,,, Ladies' Ruff, f or this one day event—values in which you will want to share. But you must come tomorrow— Fancy Ribbon! Tr Prices Are For To-morrow Only Tuesday, Oct. 10th Pearl Buttons, 10c and 15c values. 25c value. 25c value. _ ~ 35c value. 25c value. 1 lot 10c value k -5C rancy buttons, pi ate d Ladies' and Chil- German China Ladies' Muslin Frames Pictures, ish Rath Towels, r\pn 5c Waist Sets, Black and Oatmeal Sets, Drawers, * 10//-_ .... 7hite Checked* 01 small sizes 1 /2C """ ciin..m g CARD' 7C Belts, small sizes, 21 C 1 £ with n.i, cm,. wm, TI,I cupping. value. With IhU Cllpplnic with Thla Clipping. 15c I ' Wl#li ThU Clipping. 19c value. value. Ir\ 15c value* 25c value ti.u cupping. 1 lot 19c value j Stamped Light and Dark 19c Ladies' Dressing Ladies > Purses> ] lot ~ vah ~ Odd China Plates, . Corset Covers, Outing Flannel, c oi bs ' i4c Frillings, yard, 9c Towels, with lace 10c 10c Rvalue. 9C w , th Cllppl „ 5 C win. t iippinit edges, W|th Th(>| Cllllplllit . . utc 1 . Uits, wm. T hl , 1 uv w„ ~u,p,ng. 10c to 25e values. 15c 50c value. ljot 6c value lUC 1 lot 10c value Sheet Music, 1 lot 15c value Short End Cur- wm, n.i, c upping. Children's Curtain Goods, wh Thi. cupping. Stickerci Edges, " o' Dinner Plates, tain Scrims and 50c value. Stamped Made up 3 J /2C 25c value. " lnr 7c HALF PRTCF Stamped Turkish Crowns, with Thi clipping. Children's Dresses, 5c , " ,v,. T '. 2 5 C v..-,. 15c ■ w " b Tl "" ' "P"' l "* , 1 lot Tin Canis- 15c value. wuh Tl.i cupping. Boys' Shirtings, with Thi. cupping. 19c value. Ho'seTizes 5 and ters tor Coffee, 36-inch Figured """ 1 ' """'"I.. 50c value. ' and dark 8c value. i Ladies Black -j. Sugar, Tea, Oat- Satins, 25c and 50c values. 36-inch Stamped colors, Torchon Laces, vd., Fabric ( doves, meal, etc., lOc c Children's Centerpieces, with 10c r OC *7 ~,. Stamped Made-up Scarfs to Match, 3C With ThU riinnins • C win. Thu flipping. Dresses. w " h v,,1 " r,,nn,,,,r - W,> ThU cupping "" Th,. C„pp, nc . W„h T .„, C„pp, n ,. 12,/'ic value. IC r 10c vahu , value. r vale - Gingham Aprons, 1 lot Tin Spice 36-inch Brown wm, im. clipping. W '"'. """ """"" Apron and Dress Crepe and Swiss Cus noii Lords, _ _ Canisters for Cotton Serges, ,ci i; i • = '® c va 'ue. Ginghams, Edges, 5c Cloves, Pepper, C r Jr mi "q -f j| 1C Stamped Made-up f* r- with Thi. clipping. Allspice, etc. OC Slightly Soiled Chemise, OC OC with ThU Clipping Q With ThU Clipping Library Books, A— With Thi* Clipping. - wi.h ThU t lipping. 5c value. values. wm, thi, i n i.. D A /2C \ with thu cunning Lie value. iOc value Beautv Pins, Children's Dresses . Ready-made 1 lllow with thu nipping ____________ Curtain Scrims, Vonirian r!nH c 2 on'card. Children s Dresses, value. Cases, . j lot 50c va]ue 1 lot 2..c value hemstitched, plain cm lan bands, 19 c L.np Luiich Boxes, JQ C Young Men'stFlan- framed Pictures, or colored borders. "OC \Mh ThU Clipping 15c with Thi Clipping nclette Sleepers, 15c 1 Or, With Thi, rapping. wm. ThU cupping. 50c value With 1 hi, clipping. _, sc vri]n(j 25c with Thin . lipping. with ThU Clipping 1 lot 25c value 25c value. Ladies' Slightly 25c value. German China wm, T h u clipping. 25c value. - 25c value. Men's Silk Gold Plated Soiled White German China Ash Salt. Pepper and 19c value. Stamped Readv- Hand-crocheted :\eckwear, Brooches, Waists, Trays, Toothpick Holders, Black Aprons '"ade Workbags, Doilies, 15c 9c 25c 15c 15c 9c 15c 12fec With ThU Clipping. With ThU Clipping With ThU Clipping. Will. ThU Clipping. With ThU Clipping. With ThU Clipping. With Thi. Clipping. With ThU Clipping. Soutter's 1c to 25c Department Store Vk DEPARTMENT )j h&VG EvCVy 215 Market Street Opposite Courthouse Says Fish Signaled Him Acme Trucks Introduced to Reel in Lost Purse In Local Territory Toms River, X. J., Oct. 9. —How a 1 fish returned a lost pocketbook from the Toms river is the strangest story that has come from this section, noted as it is for piscatorial yarns. Edward Crabbe. a wealthy cranberry grower, was fishing yesterday from his pier near Beachwood wnen, he says, he felt a sharp tug at his line. The fish got away, but as Crabbe reeled in to re bait his line he was surprised to see a dripping pocketbook hanging to the hook. He opened the purse and found a ont-dollar bill and a dollar in silver. Crabbe was telling friends of his catch when the pocxetbook was iden tified by Mrs. Mary Schwartz, who conducts the Beachwood laundry, as' her property. How the purse came to be in the channel'of the river is a mystery as puzzling to her as it is to Crabbe, who declares the fish appar ently hung the purse on his hook, pulled the line and then swam away. Typhoid Convalescent Dies From Congestion of Brain New Cumberland, Pa., Oct. 9.—How ard Gribble, aged 20 years, died at the home of his parents in Eutaw street this morning about 5 o'clock. Young Cribble had been ill with typhoid fever for several weeks, but had recovered from that disease. Yesterday he was .seized with an attack of congestion of the brain and died this morning. He ia survived by his parents, five sisters and two brothers. Funeral arrange- • ments have not been made. MRS. REBECCA KIHX DIES Hummelstown, Pa., Oct. 9. Mrs. Rebecca S. Koon, aged 73 years, died! yesterday at the home of her daugh ter, Mrs. Henry Gerber. She is sur vived by four daughters. Funeral j services will be held at the home of her daughter, on the Robert Walton farm to-morrow afternoon at 1 o'clock the Rev. Robert Bausch officiating, j NEW SANCTUARY DEDICATED Waynesboro. Pa., Oct. 9.—The new and enlarged sanctuary of the Church of Christ, the Rev. C. A. Frick, pas tor, was dedicated yesterday morning with sermon by the Rev. Harry F.. Lutz. • BOY HI RT BY Al'TO Waynesboro, Pa., Oct. 9. Harold Harmon, two and one-half-year-old so nof Mr. and Mrs. George Harmon) was struck by an automobile of John Hepfer Friday. The child's face was badly bruised but there were no in-1 ternal injuries. FORTY DOZEN SHIRTS STOLEN Florin, Pa.. Oct. 9.—Forty dozen shirts were stolen Saturday night at the Florin shirt factory. The thieves had carried about one hundred dozen j from the building, but were evidently i frightened away, as sixty-one dozen I . were left behind in the set-away. E. S. Harnden, factory representa tive for the Cadillac Auto Truck Com pany, has delivered an Acme two-ton truck to H. A. Hartman, of Steelton, Pa. This truck is of the standard moving van type. The Acme is made in one and two-ton models with body specifications to suit almost any re quirement. Mr. Harnden has estab lished headquarters and service station at the Shaffer Garage and from this city his territory extends over the Central Pennsylvania district. THE STOKY OK CHEATIOX j As found in the Popul Vuh, the sac red book of the Quiches, who were the prehistoric people of what Is now Hon duras and Guatemala. In World's Out look for October. j "Then the word came to Tepeu Gucu matz In the shades of night; it spoke to Gucumatz and said to him: It is time to consult, to consider, to meet and hold counsel together, to join speech and wisdom to light the way and for mutual guidance. "And the name of this is Huracan, the Voice which sounds: The voice of Thunder Is the first; the second is the Flash of Light; the Lightning is the third. These three are the Heart of Heaven, and they descended to Gucu matz at the moment when he was con sidering the work of creation, j "Know that this water will retire and j give place to land which shall appear i everywhere, there shall be light in the heaven and on earth; but we have yet made no being who shall respect and honor us. They spoke, and the land ap , peared because of them." There Is nothing omitted in the story of the creation. After the gods had brought Into existence the sea and the ! land with Its mountains and plains and rivers, these celectial beings proceeded to form man. Before the final perfect creature was ' evolved, there was several unsatlsfac ! Tory experiments. The first attempt was from mud, but the first severe rains dissolved him into i his former elements. The mysterious power of un canny magicians was then cTlled into 1 consultation, and upon their advice, it I was decided that man should be made | of wood and woman of the bulrush. The second experiment was little better than the first. The creatures were ( stifT and lacked intelligence. Their eyes did not turn towards he\ven, and their tongues did not glorify their maker. In the third and successful attempt to create a human being maize was em ployed to form both the blood and the flesh, i 1 rom it nine beverages were concocted from which the nine humors of the body were formed. In their first attempt four men came into being, and while they slept their helpmates were given life from the portions of the original materials that were still unused. 1916 Record Year to Date For Engineering • and Building Projects ! If the ever-increasing growth of building and engineering operations since the first of the year continues, j 1916 will go down in the history of ! "big dongs" ?.s a record-breaker, ac cording to the figures compiled by the F W. Dodge Company for eastern Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey, Marland, Delaware, District of Colum bia and Virginia. From January 1 to October 1, the operations totaled $119,7 73; in 1915, it only* $71,140. The nearest ap proHh to this record was made in .1912 when the total was $108,092. : Other figures are: 1914, $71,003; 1913, $68,947; 1911, $76,127.50; 1910, SBO,- 341. Daring Commander of Moewe Killed Fighting in France London, Oct. 9.—Count von Dohna- Schlodien, commander of the German ! cruiser Moewe, has been killed in I France, according to a Milan dispatch jto the Chronicle. He was in command j of n battalion of the Thirty-fifth in i fantry regiment. • A dispatch from the British front in France on October 2 stated that among prisoenrs taken by the British were sailors from the Second German naval division. These sailors were said to have been rushed to the Somnie front from Belgium, where for two years they had been guarding the ! coast with big naval guns. The German cruiser Moewe escaped from the British blockade sohie time ' toward the end of 1915 and for several ' months successfully raided allied ships, (capturing or sinking fifteen steamers, iOn February 1, 1316, the British I steamer Appam arrived in Hampton road* with a German prize crew from ! the Moewe on board. Her arrival caused a profound sensation, since It I was the first intimation the German | commerce raider was again on the I high seas. On March 6 the Moewe I concluded her exploits by running the Pritish blockade for a second time and safely reached a German port. Pledge Themselves Against Perjury an<| Obscene Speech Philadelphia. Oct. 9.—Fifty thou sand men marched along the principal thoroughfares of the city yesterday, carrying banners of Holy Name societies and giving a visible demonstration of their pledge against "perjury, blasphemy, profanity and obscene speech." Instead of having one parade, as in former years, fifteen section demonstrations were held. In each section the paraders concen trated at one church, where they heard a sermon an the objects of the Holy Name societies. The benedic tion of the most blessed sacrament also was bestowed. Nearly 200,000 persons, including the women and chil dren. attended the services. JOHN A. SHKAFFER BURIED Mechanicsburg, Pa., Oct. 9.—Funeral services for John A. Sheaffer, a life long resident of Silver Spring town ship, were held this morning at 10 o'clock. He was aged 73 years and is survived by his wife. Burial was made in the graveyard adjoining the StcJne Church. VALUE PROVED BY 60 YEARS'.SUCCESS How Father John's Medicine Got Its Name—Facts That Everybody Ought To Know b A, | o In ,hc carl >" da y s of Lowell, Mass., one of la'WV' I | I j lhe most P rominellt figures in the life of the 4rm n>' _ cit y was Rev - Father John O'Brien, of St. Patrick's Parish. 'Through overwork and devotion to his ; '• '£> C parishioners, Father Jtlin, as he was affection j ' 71 f ately called by all who knew him, became very 111 uc h run down and was attacked by a serious co 'd anc * throat trouble. His illness did not p.l it . y ' e ' d t0 t ' le ordinary remedies. Finally he a her John Devotion To secured from a learned doctor, ti prescription which he took to the old drug store of Carleton £ Ilovey where it was compounded on June 9, 1855. This prescription produced such excellent results that Father John was soon able to resume his labors among the people and every where he went he would recommend tfr *. —' —\ the medicine to his parishioners. &LXJ \ People soon acquired the habit of going to the old drug store and asking .jfjjjf. 1 for "Father John's" medicine. In this 11 "tHm I 1 way the medicine was named by the m 0 g:Pur people and because of the results which IS g.. J I it accomplished, it soon became the 1. family remedy in countless homes. From this small beginning more than sixty years ago, Father John's Medicine has becoms more and more The aid Itr,,n widely known, until today it is the Drug Store standard family remedy in thousands of homes all over the country. Mothers especially recognize its V lue because they know it is a pure and wholesome . - m *°. C " 1 medicine which makes flesh and strength ill iXTW without using alcohol or dangerous drugs and is ' therefore . safe for children as well as . °'der people. Every druggist carries Father ISA'I,I vS 5 John's Medicine in stock. Many families Ji) l ' 1 \l keep on hand constantly. i I \\ As a guarantee that all of the facts re- IT"M l yarding the origin of Father John's Medi \ c ' ne * as s,ated above, are absoluely true, the \ manufacturers of Father John's Medicine will . c 7I „ „ £' ve ?25.0ca00 to any charity, if it can be A Safe Family Remedy shown othcrwii^ XKW TRIAI, ASKED Sunbury, Pa.. Oct. 9.—Pending tha disposition of an application for a new trial, Dong Lee, of Shamokin, who was convicted of attacking a small boy in Lee's laundry at Shamokin, has 'oeen released on bail. Lee's counsel alleges that the verdict was against the evidence. 5